4.5 Article

Efficient computation of bifurcation diagrams with a deflated approach to reduced basis spectral element method

Journal

ADVANCES IN COMPUTATIONAL MATHEMATICS
Volume 47, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10444-020-09827-6

Keywords

Spectral element method; Reduced basis method; Reduced order model; Deflated continuation method; Bifurcation diagram; Steady bifurcations

Funding

  1. Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati - SISSA within the CRUI-CARE Agreement
  2. European Union Funding for Research and Innovation - Horizon 2020 Program - European Research Council Executive Agency [681447]
  3. INDAM-GNCS project Advanced intrusive and non-intrusive model order reduction techniques and applications, 2019

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Most physical phenomena can be described by PDEs with strong nonlinearities, leading to multiple solution branches studied using bifurcation theory. Practical scenarios often require numerical methods to compute solutions, where deflated continuation method combining classical and deflation methods can efficiently compute bifurcation diagrams with multiple parameters and bifurcation points. This approach allows for online computation of diagrams with multiple parameters, ensuring computational efficiency.
The majority of the most common physical phenomena can be described using partial differential equations (PDEs). However, they are very often characterized by strong nonlinearities. Such features lead to the coexistence of multiple solutions studied by the bifurcation theory. Unfortunately, in practical scenarios, one has to exploit numerical methods to compute the solutions of systems of PDEs, even if the classical techniques are usually able to compute only a single solution for any value of a parameter when more branches exist. In this work, we implemented an elaborated deflated continuation method that relies on the spectral element method (SEM) and on the reduced basis (RB) one to efficiently compute bifurcation diagrams with more parameters and more bifurcation points. The deflated continuation method can be obtained combining the classical continuation method and the deflation one: the former is used to entirely track each known branch of the diagram, while the latter is exploited to discover the new ones. Finally, when more than one parameter is considered, the efficiency of the computation is ensured by the fact that the diagrams can be computed during the online phase while, during the offline one, one only has to compute one-dimensional diagrams. In this work, after a more detailed description of the method, we will show the results that can be obtained using it to compute a bifurcation diagram associated with a problem governed by the Navier-Stokes equations.

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