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This chapter is a collection of facts, ideas, and techniques regarding the analysis of boundary value, initial and initial boundary value problems for partial differential equations. We begin by deriving some of the representative equations of mathematical physics, which then give rise to the classification of linear, second order, constant coefficient partial differential equations into: elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic equations. For each one of these classes we then discuss the main ideas behind problem with them and the existence of solutions: both classical and weak.
A central goal of scientists and engineers is obtaining solutions of the differential equations that govern their physical systems.This can be done numerically for large and/or complex systems using finite-difference methods, finite-element methods, or spectral methods.This chapter gives an introduction and the formal basis for these methods, with particular emphasis on finite-difference methods.Second-order partial differential equations are classified as elliptic, parabolic, or hyperbolic, and the numerical methods developed for such equations must be faithful to their mathematical properties.
In the paper, we develop and analyze a new mass-preserving splitting domain decomposition method over multiple sub-domains for solving parabolic equations. The domain is divided into non-overlapping multi-bock sub-domains. On the interfaces of sub-domains, the interface fluxes are computed by the semi-implicit (explicit) flux scheme. The solutions and fluxes in the interiors of sub-domains are computed by the splitting one-dimensional implicit solution-flux coupled scheme. The important feature is that the proposed scheme is mass conservative over multiple non-overlapping sub-domains. Analyzing the mass-preserving S-DDM scheme is difficult over non-overlapping multi-block sub-domains due to the combination of the splitting technique and the domain decomposition at each time step. We prove theoretically that our scheme satisfies conservation of mass over multi-block non-overlapping sub-domains and it is unconditionally stable. We further prove the convergence and obtain the error estimate in L2-norm. Numerical experiments confirm theoretical results.
A posteriori error estimates of semidiscrete mixed finite element methods for quadratic optimal control problems involving linear parabolic equations are developed. The state and co-state are discretised by Raviart-Thomas mixed finite element spaces of order k, and the control is approximated by piecewise polynomials of order k (k ≥ 0). We derive our a posteriori error estimates for the state and the control approximations via a mixed elliptic reconstruction method. These estimates seem to be unavailable elsewhere in the literature, although they represent an important step towards developing reliable adaptive mixed finite element approximation schemes for the control problem.
In this article, a fully discrete finite element approximation is investigated for constrained parabolic optimal control problems with time-dependent coefficients. The spatial discretisation invokes finite elements, and the time discretisation a nonstandard backward Euler method. On introducing some appropriate intermediate variables and noting properties of the L2 projection and the elliptic projection, we derive the superconvergence for the control, the state and the adjoint state. Finally, we discuss some numerical experiments that illustrate our theoretical results.
A quadratic optimal control problem governed by parabolic equations with integral constraints is considered. A fully discrete finite element scheme is constructed for the optimal control problem, with finite elements for the spatial but the backward Euler method for the time discretisation. Some superconvergence results of the control, the state and the adjoint state are proved. Some numerical examples are performed to confirm theoretical results.
Cancer has recently overtaken heart disease as the world’s biggest killer. Cancer isinitiated by gene mutations that result in local proliferation of abnormal cells and theirmigration to other parts of the human body, a process called metastasis. The metastasizedcancer cells then interfere with the normal functions of the body, eventually leading todeath. There are two hundred types of cancer, classified by their point of origin. Most ofthem share some common features, but they also have their specific character. In thisarticle we review mathematical models of such common features and then proceed to describemodels of specific cancer diseases.
In this paper, we discuss the a posteriori error estimates of the mixed finite element method for quadratic optimal control problems governed by linear parabolic equations. The state and the co-state are discretized by the high order Raviart-Thomas mixed finite element spaces and the control is approximated by piecewise constant functions. We derive a posteriori error estimates for both the state and the control approximation. Such estimates, which are apparently not available in the literature, are an important step towards developing reliable adaptive mixed finite element approximation schemes for the control problem.
In this paper, we investigate the superconvergence results for optimal control problems governed by parabolic equations with semidiscrete mixed finite element approximation. We use the lowest order mixed finite element spaces to discrete the state and costate variables while use piecewise constant function to discrete the control variable. Superconvergence estimates for both the state variable and its gradient variable are obtained.
We study a Ramsey problem in infinite and continuous time and space. The problem is discounted both temporally and spatially. Capital flows to locations with higher marginal return. We show that the problem amounts to optimal control of parabolic partial differential equations (PDEs). We rely on the existing related mathematical literature to derive the Pontryagin conditions. Using explicit representations of the solutions to the PDEs, we first show that the resulting dynamic system gives rise to an ill-posed problem in the sense of Hadamard. We then turn to the spatial Ramsey problem with linear utility. The obtained properties are significantly different from those of the nonspatial linear Ramsey model due to the spatial dynamics induced by capital mobility.
We study existence and approximation of non-negative solutions of partial differential equations of the type $$\partial_t u - \div (A(\nabla (f(u))+u\nabla V )) = 0 \qquad \mbox{in } (0,+\infty )\times \mathbb{R}^n,\qquad\qquad (0.1)$$where A is a symmetric matrix-valued function of the spatial variable satisfying a uniform ellipticity condition,$f:[0,+\infty) \rightarrow[0,+\infty)$ is a suitable non decreasing function, $V:\mathbb{R}^n \rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ is a convex function.Introducing the energy functional $\phi(u)=\int_{\mathbb{R}^n} F(u(x))\,{\rm d}x+\int_{\mathbb{R}^n}V(x)u(x)\,{\rm d}x$,where F is a convex function linked to f by $f(u) = uF'(u)-F(u)$,we show that u is the “gradient flow” of ϕ with respect to the2-Wasserstein distance between probability measures onthe space $\mathbb{R}^n$, endowed with the Riemannian distance induced by $A^{-1}.$In the case of uniform convexity of V, long time asymptotic behaviour and decay rate to the stationary statefor solutions of equation (0.1) are studied.A contraction property in Wasserstein distance for solutions of equation (0.1)is also studied in a particular case.
The topological sensitivity analysis consists in studying the behavior of a given shape functional when the topology of the domain is perturbed, typically by the nucleation of a small hole. This notion forms the basic ingredient of different topology optimization/reconstruction algorithms. From the theoretical viewpoint, the expression of the topological sensitivity is well-established in many situations where the governing p.d.e. system is of elliptic type. This paper focuses on the derivation of such formulas for parabolic and hyperbolic problems. Different kinds of cost functionals are considered.
This paper provides new results of consistence and convergence of the
lumped parameters (ODE models) toward one-dimensional (hyperbolic or parabolic) models for blood flow. Indeed,
lumped parameter models (exploiting the electric circuit analogy for the circulatory system)
are shown to discretize continuous 1D models
at first order in space.
We derive the complete set of equations useful for the blood flow networks,
new schemes for electric circuit analogy,
the stability criteria that guarantee the convergence, and the energy estimates of the
limit 1D equations.
We discuss the problem of the uniqueness of the solution to the Cauchy problem for second-order, linear, uniformly parabolic differential equations. For most uniqueness theorems the solution must be uniformly bounded with respect to the time variable $t$, but some authors have shown an interest in relaxing the growth conditions in time.
In 1997, Chung proved that, in the case of the heat equation, uniqueness holds under the restriction: $|u(x,t)|\leq C\exp[(a/t)^{\alpha}+a|x|^2]$, for some constants $C,a>0$, $0\lt\alpha\lt1$. The proof of Chung’s theorem is based on ultradistribution theory, in particular it relies heavily on the fact that the coefficients are constants and that the solution is smooth. Therefore, his method does not work for parabolic operators with arbitrary coefficients. In this paper we prove a uniqueness theorem for uniformly parabolic equations imposing the same growth condition as Chung on the solution $u(x,t)$. At the centre of the proof are the maximum principle, Gaussian-type estimates for short cylinders and a boot-strapping argument.
We prove a logarithmic stability estimate for
a parabolic inverse problem concerning the localization of unknown
cavities in a thermic
conducting medium Ω in ${\mathbb R}^n$, n ≥ 2, from a single
pair of boundary
measurements of temperature and thermal flux.
We consider complex-valued solutions uE of the Ginzburg–Landau equation on a smooth bounded simply connected domain Ω of $\mathbb{R}^N$, N ≥ 2, where ε > 0 is a small parameter. We assume that the Ginzburg–Landau energy $E_\varepsilon(u_\varepsilon)$ verifies the bound (natural in the context) $E_\varepsilon(u_\varepsilon)\le M_0|\log\varepsilon|$, where M0 is some given constant. We also make several assumptions on the boundary data. An important step in the asymptotic analysis of uE, as ε → 0, is to establish uniform Lp bounds for the gradient, for some p>1. We review some recent techniques developed in the elliptic case in [7], discuss some variants, and extend the methods to the associated parabolic equation.
We study the asymptotic behavior of a semi-discrete numerical approximation for a pair of heat equations ut = Δu, vt = Δv in Ω x (0,T); fully coupled by the boundary conditions $\frac{\partial u}{\partial\eta} = u^{p_{11}}v^{p_{12}}$, $\frac{\partial v}{\partial\eta} = u^{p_{21}}v^{p_{22}}$ on ∂Ω x (0,T), where Ω is a bounded smooth domain in ${\mathbb{R}}^d$. We focus in the existence or not of non-simultaneous blow-up for a semi-discrete approximation (U,V). We prove that if U blows up in finite time then V can fail to blow up if and only if p11 > 1 and p21 < 2(p11 - 1), which is the same condition as the one for non-simultaneous blow-up in the continuous problem. Moreover, we find that if the continuous problem has non-simultaneous blow-up then the same is true for the discrete one. We also prove some results about the convergence of the scheme and the convergence of the blow-up times.
We consider in this article diagonal parabolic systems arising in the context of stochastic differential games.We address the issue of finding smooth solutions of the system. Such a regularity result is extremely important to derive an optimal feedback proving the existence of a Nash point of a certain class of stochastic differential games.Unlike in the case of scalar equation, smoothness of solutions is not achieved in general. A special structure of the nonlinear Hamiltonian seems to be the adequate one to achieve the regularity property. A key step in the theory is to prove the existence of Hölder solution.
We illustrate how some interesting new variational principles can beused for the numerical approximation of solutions to certain (possiblydegenerate) parabolic partial differential equations. One remarkablefeature of the algorithms presented here is that derivatives do notenter into the variational principles, so, for example, discontinuousapproximations may be used for approximating the heat equation. Wepresent formulae for computing a Wasserstein metric which entersinto the variational formulations.
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