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This book collects up-to-date papers from world experts in a broad
variety of relevant applications of approximation theory, including
dynamical systems, multiscale modelling of fluid flow, metrology,
and geometric modelling to mention a few. The 14 papers in this
volume document modern trends in approximation through recent
theoretical developments, important computational aspects and
multidisciplinary applications. The book is arranged in seven
invited surveys, followed by seven contributed research papers. The
surveys of the first seven chapters are addressing the following
relevant topics: emergent behaviour in large electrical networks,
algorithms for multivariate piecewise constant approximation,
anisotropic triangulation methods in adaptive image approximation,
form assessment in coordinate metrology, discontinuous Galerkin
methods for linear problems, a numerical analyst's view of the
lattice Boltzmann method, approximation of probability measures on
manifolds. Moreover, the diverse contributed papers of the
remaining seven chapters reflect recent developments in
approximation theory, approximation practice and their
applications. Graduate students who wish to discover the state of
the art in a number of important directions of approximation
algorithms will find this a valuable volume. Established
researchers from statisticians through to fluid modellers will find
interesting new approaches to solving familiar but challenging
problems. This book grew out of the sixth in the conference series
on "Algorithms for Approximation", which took place from 31st
August to September 4th 2009 in Ambleside in the Lake District of
the United Kingdom.
This volume contains contributed survey papers from the main
speakers at the LMS/EPSRC Symposium "Building bridges: connections
and challenges in modern approaches to numerical partial
differential equations". This meeting took place in July 8-16,
2014, and its main purpose was to gather specialists in emerging
areas of numerical PDEs, and explore the connections between the
different approaches. The type of contributions ranges from the
theoretical foundations of these new techniques, to the
applications of them, to new general frameworks and unified
approaches that can cover one, or more than one, of these emerging
techniques.
This book collects up-to-date papers from world experts in a broad
variety of relevant applications of approximation theory, including
dynamical systems, multiscale modelling of fluid flow, metrology,
and geometric modelling to mention a few. The 14 papers in this
volume document modern trends in approximation through recent
theoretical developments, important computational aspects and
multidisciplinary applications. The book is arranged in seven
invited surveys, followed by seven contributed research papers. The
surveys of the first seven chapters are addressing the following
relevant topics: emergent behaviour in large electrical networks,
algorithms for multivariate piecewise constant approximation,
anisotropic triangulation methods in adaptive image approximation,
form assessment in coordinate metrology, discontinuous Galerkin
methods for linear problems, a numerical analyst's view of the
lattice Boltzmann method, approximation of probability measures on
manifolds. Moreover, the diverse contributed papers of the
remaining seven chapters reflect recent developments in
approximation theory, approximation practice and their
applications. Graduate students who wish to discover the state of
the art in a number of important directions of approximation
algorithms will find this a valuable volume. Established
researchers from statisticians through to fluid modellers will find
interesting new approaches to solving familiar but challenging
problems. This book grew out of the sixth in the conference series
on "Algorithms for Approximation", which took place from 31st
August to September 4th 2009 in Ambleside in the Lake District of
the United Kingdom.
This volume contains contributed survey papers from the main
speakers at the LMS/EPSRC Symposium "Building bridges: connections
and challenges in modern approaches to numerical partial
differential equations". This meeting took place in July 8-16,
2014, and its main purpose was to gather specialists in emerging
areas of numerical PDEs, and explore the connections between the
different approaches. The type of contributions ranges from the
theoretical foundations of these new techniques, to the
applications of them, to new general frameworks and unified
approaches that can cover one, or more than one, of these emerging
techniques.
Over the last few decades discontinuous Galerkin finite element
methods (DGFEMs) have been witnessed tremendous interest as a
computational framework for the numerical solution of partial
differential equations. Their success is due to their extreme
versatility in the design of the underlying meshes and local basis
functions, while retaining key features of both (classical) finite
element and finite volume methods. Somewhat surprisingly, DGFEMs on
general tessellations consisting of polygonal (in 2D) or polyhedral
(in 3D) element shapes have received little attention within the
literature, despite the potential computational advantages. This
volume introduces the basic principles of hp-version (i.e., locally
varying mesh-size and polynomial order) DGFEMs over meshes
consisting of polygonal or polyhedral element shapes, presents
their error analysis, and includes an extensive collection of
numerical experiments. The extreme flexibility provided by the
locally variable elemen t-shapes, element-sizes, and element-orders
is shown to deliver substantial computational gains in several
practical scenarios.
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