Solvability of Discrete Helmholtz Equations
We study the unique solvability of the discretized Helmholtz problem with Robin boundary conditions using a conforming Galerkin \(hp\)-finite element method. Well-posedness of the discrete equations is typically investigated by applying a compact perturbation to the continuous Helmholtz problem so t...
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description | We study the unique solvability of the discretized Helmholtz problem with Robin boundary conditions using a conforming Galerkin \(hp\)-finite element method. Well-posedness of the discrete equations is typically investigated by applying a compact perturbation to the continuous Helmholtz problem so that a "sufficiently rich" discretization results in a "sufficiently small" perturbation of the continuous problem and well-posedness is inherited via Fredholm's alternative. The qualitative notion "sufficiently rich", however, involves unknown constants and is only of asymptotic nature. Our paper is focussed on a fully discrete approach by mimicking the tools for proving well-posedness of the continuous problem directly on the discrete level. In this way, a computable criterion is derived which certifies discrete well-posedness without relying on an asymptotic perturbation argument. By using this novel approach we obtain a) new stability results for the \(hp\)-FEM for the Helmholtz problem b) examples for meshes such that the discretization becomes unstable (stiffness matrix is singular), and c) a simple checking Algorithm MOTZ "marching-of-the-zeros" which guarantees in an a posteriori way that a given mesh is certified for a stable Helmholtz discretization. |
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Well-posedness of the discrete equations is typically investigated by applying a compact perturbation to the continuous Helmholtz problem so that a "sufficiently rich" discretization results in a "sufficiently small" perturbation of the continuous problem and well-posedness is inherited via Fredholm's alternative. The qualitative notion "sufficiently rich", however, involves unknown constants and is only of asymptotic nature. Our paper is focussed on a fully discrete approach by mimicking the tools for proving well-posedness of the continuous problem directly on the discrete level. In this way, a computable criterion is derived which certifies discrete well-posedness without relying on an asymptotic perturbation argument. By using this novel approach we obtain a) new stability results for the \(hp\)-FEM for the Helmholtz problem b) examples for meshes such that the discretization becomes unstable (stiffness matrix is singular), and c) a simple checking Algorithm MOTZ "marching-of-the-zeros" which guarantees in an a posteriori way that a given mesh is certified for a stable Helmholtz discretization.</description><identifier>EISSN: 2331-8422</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Ithaca: Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</publisher><subject>Algorithms ; Asymptotic properties ; Boundary conditions ; Discretization ; Finite element method ; Helmholtz equations ; Mathematical analysis ; Perturbation ; Stiffness matrix ; Well posed problems</subject><ispartof>arXiv.org, 2022-02</ispartof><rights>2022. This work is published under http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/ (the “License”). 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By using this novel approach we obtain a) new stability results for the \(hp\)-FEM for the Helmholtz problem b) examples for meshes such that the discretization becomes unstable (stiffness matrix is singular), and c) a simple checking Algorithm MOTZ "marching-of-the-zeros" which guarantees in an a posteriori way that a given mesh is certified for a stable Helmholtz discretization.</abstract><cop>Ithaca</cop><pub>Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</pub><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Algorithms Asymptotic properties Boundary conditions Discretization Finite element method Helmholtz equations Mathematical analysis Perturbation Stiffness matrix Well posed problems |
title | Solvability of Discrete Helmholtz Equations |
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