4.6 Article

Radial Basis Function Methods for the Rosenau Equation and Other Higher Order PDEs

Journal

JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING
Volume 75, Issue 3, Pages 1555-1580

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10915-017-0598-1

Keywords

Collocation method; Radial basis function; Fictitious point; Pseudospectral; Resampling; Rosenau equation; Multiple boundary conditions

Funding

  1. European Commission CORDIS Marie Curie FP7 program [235730]
  2. National Science Foundation DMS [1552238]
  3. Division Of Mathematical Sciences
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1552238] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Meshfree methods based on radial basis function (RBF) approximation are of interest for numerical solution of partial differential equations because they are flexible with respect to the geometry of the computational domain, they can provide high order convergence, they are not more complicated for problems with many space dimensions and they allow for local refinement. The aim of this paper is to show that the solution of the Rosenau equation, as an example of an initial-boundary value problem with multiple boundary conditions, can be implemented using RBF approximation methods. We extend the fictitious point method and the resampling method to work in combination with an RBF collocation method. Both approaches are implemented in one and two space dimensions. The accuracy of the RBF fictitious point method is analyzed partly theoretically and partly numerically. The error estimates indicate that a high order of convergence can be achieved for the Rosenau equation. The numerical experiments show that both methods perform well. In the one-dimensional case, the accuracy of the RBF approaches is compared with that of the corresponding pseudospectral methods, showing similar or slightly better accuracy for the RBF methods. In the two-dimensional case, the Rosenau problem is solved both in a square domain and in an irregular domain with smooth boundary, to illustrate the capability of the RBF-based methods to handle irregular geometries.

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