Two cell-centered finite difference schemes on Voronoi meshes are derived and investigated. Stability and error estimates in a discrete H 1 -norm for both symmetric and nonsymmetric problems, including convection dominated, are proven. The theoretical results are illustrated with several numerical e
Voronoi-based finite volume methods, optimal Voronoi meshes, and PDEs on the sphere
β Scribed by Qiang Du; Max D. Gunzburger; Lili Ju
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 469 KB
- Volume
- 192
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0045-7825
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β¦ Synopsis
We first develop and analyze a finite volume scheme for the discretization of partial differential equations (PDEs) on the sphere; the scheme uses Voronoi tessellations of the sphere. For a model convection-diffusion problem, the finite volume scheme is shown to produce first-order accurate approximations with respect to a mesh-dependent discrete firstderivative norm. Then, we introduce the notion of constrained centroidal Voronoi tessellations (CCVTs) of the sphere; these are special Voronoi tessellation of the sphere for which the generators of the Voronoi cells are also the constrained centers of mass, with respect to a prescribed density function, of the cells. After discussing an algorithm for determining CCVT meshes on the sphere, we discuss and illustrate several desirable properties possessed by these meshes. In particular, it is shown that CCVT meshes define very high-quality uniform and non-uniform meshes on the sphere. Finally, we discuss, through some computational experiments, the performance of the CCVT meshes used in conjunction with the finite volume scheme for the solution of simple model PDEs on the sphere. The experiments show, for example, that the CCVT based finite volume approximations are second-order accurate if errors are measured in discrete L 2 norms.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A new resolution of parabolic and elliptic partial differential equations (PDEs) based on the mixed finite element approximation on triangles has been recently developed [24,25]. This new approach reduces the number of unknowns from fluxes or Lagrange multiplier defined on edges to a single unknown
## Abstract We give here an error estimate for a finite volume discretization of the Stokes equations in two space dimensions on equilateral triangular meshes. This work was initiated by an analogous result presented by AlamiβIdrissi and Atounti for general triangular meshes. However, in this latte