학술논문

SMOOTHNESS-INCREASING ACCURACY-CONSERVING (SIAC) POSTPROCESSING FOR DISCONTINUOUS GALERKIN SOLUTIONS OVER STRUCTURED TRIANGULAR MESHES.
Document Type
Article
Source
SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis. 2011, Vol. 49 Issue 5/6, p1899-1920. 22p.
Subject
*GALERKIN methods
*SMOOTHNESS of functions
*COMPUTATIONAL complexity
*HYPERBOLIC groups
*ERROR analysis in mathematics
Language
ISSN
0036-1429
Abstract
Theoretically and computationally, it is possible to demonstrate that the order of accuracy of a discontinuous Galerkin (DG) solution for linear hyperbolic equations can be improved from order κ+1 to 2κ+1 through the use of smoothness-increasing accuracy-conserving (SIAC) filtering. However, it is a computationally complex task to perform this in an efficient manner, which becomes an even greater issue considering nonquadrilateral mesh structures. In this paper, we present an extension of this SIAC filter to structured triangular meshes. The basic theoretical assumption in the previous implementations of the postprocessor limits the use to numerical solutions solved over a quadrilateral mesh. However, this assumption is restrictive, which in turn complicates the application of this post processing technique to general tessellations. Additionally, moving from quadrilateral meshes to triangulated ones introduces more complexity in the calculations as the number of integrations required increases. In this paper, we extend the current theoretical results to variable coefficient hyperbolic equations over structured triangular meshes and demonstrate the effectiveness of the application of this post processor to structured triangular meshes as well as exploring the effect of using inexact quadrature. We show that there is a direct theoretical extension to structured triangular meshes for hyperbolic equations with bounded variable coefficients. This is a challenging first step toward implementing SIAC filters for unstructured tessellations. We show that by using the usual B-spline implementation, we are able to improve on the order of accuracy as well as decrease the magnitude of the errors. These results are valid regardless of whether exact or inexact integration is used. The results here demonstrate that it is still possible, both theoretically and computationally. to improve to 2κ+1 over the DG solution itself for structured triangular meshes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]