Adaptive Finite Element Methods for Differential Equations - Wolfgang Bangerth, Rolf Rannacher

Adaptive Finite Element Methods for Differential Equations

Buch | Softcover
VIII, 208 Seiten
2003 | 2003
Springer Basel (Verlag)
978-3-7643-7009-1 (ISBN)
69,54 inkl. MwSt
These Lecture Notes have been compiled from the material presented by the second author in a lecture series ('Nachdiplomvorlesung') at the Department of Mathematics of the ETH Zurich during the summer term 2002. Concepts of 'self adaptivity' in the numerical solution of differential equations are discussed with emphasis on Galerkin finite element methods. The key issues are a posteriori er ror estimation and automatic mesh adaptation. Besides the traditional approach of energy-norm error control, a new duality-based technique, the Dual Weighted Residual method (or shortly D WR method) for goal-oriented error estimation is discussed in detail. This method aims at economical computation of arbitrary quantities of physical interest by properly adapting the computational mesh. This is typically required in the design cycles of technical applications. For example, the drag coefficient of a body immersed in a viscous flow is computed, then it is minimized by varying certain control parameters, and finally the stability of the resulting flow is investigated by solving an eigenvalue problem. 'Goal-oriented' adaptivity is designed to achieve these tasks with minimal cost. The basics of the DWR method and various of its applications are described in the following survey articles: R. Rannacher [114], Error control in finite element computations. In: Proc. of Summer School Error Control and Adaptivity in Scientific Computing (H. Bulgak and C. Zenger, eds), pp. 247-278. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1998. M. Braack and R. Rannacher [42], Adaptive finite element methods for low Mach-number flows with chemical reactions.

"Most graduate students in engineering and physical sciences should be able to handle the material without excessive difficulty. The presentation is very much a tutorial approach promoting a hands-on experience, reinforced with practical exercises at the end of each chapter, aimed towards practitioners.... [The] present book provides a gentler introduction for the beginning graduate student or nonspecialist practitioner."

- SIAM Review 

 

Erscheint lt. Verlag 23.1.2003
Reihe/Serie Lectures in Mathematics. ETH Zürich
Zusatzinfo VIII, 208 p. 151 illus.
Verlagsort Basel
Sprache englisch
Maße 170 x 244 mm
Gewicht 420 g
Themenwelt Mathematik / Informatik Mathematik Analysis
Naturwissenschaften Physik / Astronomie Mechanik
Schlagworte differential equation • Differential Equations • Differenzialgleichungen • eigenvalue • fluid mechanics • Mechanics • Numerical analysis • Ordinary differential equations • Solution
ISBN-10 3-7643-7009-2 / 3764370092
ISBN-13 978-3-7643-7009-1 / 9783764370091
Zustand Neuware
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