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This volume gathers contributions reflecting topics presented
during an INDAM workshop held in Rome in May 2016. The event
brought together many prominent researchers in both Mathematical
Analysis and Numerical Computing, the goal being to promote
interdisciplinary collaborations. Accordingly, the following
thematic areas were developed: 1. Lagrangian discretizations and
wavefront tracking for synchronization models; 2. Astrophysics
computations and post-Newtonian approximations; 3. Hyperbolic
balance laws and corrugated isometric embeddings; 4. "Caseology"
techniques for kinetic equations; 5. Tentative computations of
compressible non-standard solutions; 6. Entropy dissipation,
convergence rates and inverse design issues. Most of the articles
are presented in a self-contained manner; some highlight new
achievements, while others offer snapshots of the "state of the
art" in certain fields. The book offers a unique resource, both for
young researchers looking to quickly enter a given area of
application, and for more experienced ones seeking comprehensive
overviews and extensive bibliographic references.
Substantial effort has been drawn for years onto the development of
(possibly high-order) numerical techniques for the scalar
homogeneous conservation law, an equation which is strongly
dissipative in L1 thanks to shock wave formation. Such a
dissipation property is generally lost when considering hyperbolic
systems of conservation laws, or simply inhomogeneous scalar
balance laws involving accretive or space-dependent source terms,
because of complex wave interactions. An overall weaker dissipation
can reveal intrinsic numerical weaknesses through specific
nonlinear mechanisms: Hugoniot curves being deformed by local
averaging steps in Godunov-type schemes, low-order errors
propagating along expanding characteristics after having hit a
discontinuity, exponential amplification of truncation errors in
the presence of accretive source terms... This book aims at
presenting rigorous derivations of different, sometimes called
well-balanced, numerical schemes which succeed in reconciling high
accuracy with a stronger robustness even in the aforementioned
accretive contexts. It is divided into two parts: one dealing with
hyperbolic systems of balance laws, such as arising from quasi-one
dimensional nozzle flow computations, multiphase WKB approximation
of linear Schroedinger equations, or gravitational Navier-Stokes
systems. Stability results for viscosity solutions of
onedimensional balance laws are sketched. The other being entirely
devoted to the treatment of weakly nonlinear kinetic equations in
the discrete ordinate approximation, such as the ones of radiative
transfer, chemotaxis dynamics, semiconductor conduction, spray
dynamics or linearized Boltzmann models. "Caseology" is one of the
main techniques used in these derivations. Lagrangian techniques
for filtration equations are evoked too. Two-dimensional methods
are studied in the context of non-degenerate semiconductor models.
This volume gathers contributions reflecting topics presented
during an INDAM workshop held in Rome in May 2016. The event
brought together many prominent researchers in both Mathematical
Analysis and Numerical Computing, the goal being to promote
interdisciplinary collaborations. Accordingly, the following
thematic areas were developed: 1. Lagrangian discretizations and
wavefront tracking for synchronization models; 2. Astrophysics
computations and post-Newtonian approximations; 3. Hyperbolic
balance laws and corrugated isometric embeddings; 4. "Caseology"
techniques for kinetic equations; 5. Tentative computations of
compressible non-standard solutions; 6. Entropy dissipation,
convergence rates and inverse design issues. Most of the articles
are presented in a self-contained manner; some highlight new
achievements, while others offer snapshots of the "state of the
art" in certain fields. The book offers a unique resource, both for
young researchers looking to quickly enter a given area of
application, and for more experienced ones seeking comprehensive
overviews and extensive bibliographic references.
Substantial effort has been drawn for years onto the development of
(possibly high-order) numerical techniques for the scalar
homogeneous conservation law, an equation which is strongly
dissipative in L1 thanks to shock wave formation. Such a
dissipation property is generally lost when considering hyperbolic
systems of conservation laws, or simply inhomogeneous scalar
balance laws involving accretive or space-dependent source terms,
because of complex wave interactions. An overall weaker dissipation
can reveal intrinsic numerical weaknesses through specific
nonlinear mechanisms: Hugoniot curves being deformed by local
averaging steps in Godunov-type schemes, low-order errors
propagating along expanding characteristics after having hit a
discontinuity, exponential amplification of truncation errors in
the presence of accretive source terms... This book aims at
presenting rigorous derivations of different, sometimes called
well-balanced, numerical schemes which succeed in reconciling high
accuracy with a stronger robustness even in the aforementioned
accretive contexts. It is divided into two parts: one dealing with
hyperbolic systems of balance laws, such as arising from quasi-one
dimensional nozzle flow computations, multiphase WKB approximation
of linear Schroedinger equations, or gravitational Navier-Stokes
systems. Stability results for viscosity solutions of
onedimensional balance laws are sketched. The other being entirely
devoted to the treatment of weakly nonlinear kinetic equations in
the discrete ordinate approximation, such as the ones of radiative
transfer, chemotaxis dynamics, semiconductor conduction, spray
dynamics or linearized Boltzmann models. "Caseology" is one of the
main techniques used in these derivations. Lagrangian techniques
for filtration equations are evoked too. Two-dimensional methods
are studied in the context of non-degenerate semiconductor models.
This monograph presents, in an attractive and self-contained form,
techniques based on the L1 stability theory derived at the end of
the 1990s by A. Bressan, T.-P. Liu and T. Yang that yield original
error estimates for so-called well-balanced numerical schemes
solving 1D hyperbolic systems of balance laws. Rigorous error
estimates are presented for both scalar balance laws and a
position-dependent relaxation system, in inertial approximation.
Such estimates shed light on why those algorithms based on source
terms handled like "local scatterers" can outperform other, more
standard, numerical schemes. Two-dimensional Riemann problems for
the linear wave equation are also solved, with discussion of the
issues raised relating to the treatment of 2D balance laws. All of
the material provided in this book is highly relevant for the
understanding of well-balanced schemes and will contribute to
future improvements.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Biographie Toulousaine, Ou Dictionnaire Historique Des
Personnages Qui ... Se Sont Rendus Celebres Dans La Ville De
Toulouse, Ou Qui Ont Contribue a Son Illustration, Volume 2;
Biographie Toulousaine, Ou Dictionnaire Historique Des Personnages
Qui ... Se Sont Rendus Celebres Dans La Ville De Toulouse, Ou Qui
Ont Contribue a Son Illustration; Etienne-Leon De Lamothe-Langon
Etienne-Leon de Lamothe-Langon, Alexandre Du Mege, J. Theod
Laurent-Goss Michaud, 1823
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This
IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced
typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have
occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor
pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original
artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe
this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections,
have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We
appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the
preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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