6533b871fe1ef96bd12d18ca
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Jacobian-free approximate solvers for hyperbolic systems: Application to relativistic magnetohydrodynamics
Manuel J. CastroAntonio MarquinaJosé M. Gallardosubject
PolynomialWork (thermodynamics)MathematicsofComputing_NUMERICALANALYSISGeneral Physics and Astronomy01 natural sciencesMatrix decomposition010101 applied mathematicssymbols.namesakeMatrix (mathematics)Hardware and ArchitectureSimple (abstract algebra)Viscosity (programming)0103 physical sciencesJacobian matrix and determinantsymbolsCalculusApplied mathematics0101 mathematicsMagnetohydrodynamics010303 astronomy & astrophysicsMathematicsdescription
Abstract We present recent advances in PVM (Polynomial Viscosity Matrix) methods based on internal approximations to the absolute value function, and compare them with Chebyshev-based PVM solvers. These solvers only require a bound on the maximum wave speed, so no spectral decomposition is needed. Another important feature of the proposed methods is that they are suitable to be written in Jacobian-free form, in which only evaluations of the physical flux are used. This is particularly interesting when considering systems for which the Jacobians involve complex expressions, e.g., the relativistic magnetohydrodynamics (RMHD) equations. On the other hand, the proposed Jacobian-free solvers have also been extended to the case of approximate DOT (Dumbser–Osher–Toro) methods, which can be regarded as simple and efficient approximations to the classical Osher–Solomon method, sharing most of it interesting features and being applicable to general hyperbolic systems. To test the properties of our schemes a number of numerical experiments involving the RMHD equations are presented, both in one and two dimensions. The obtained results are in good agreement with those found in the literature and show that our schemes are robust and accurate, running stable under a satisfactory time step restriction. It is worth emphasizing that, although this work focuses on RMHD, the proposed schemes are suitable to be applied to general hyperbolic systems.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-10-01 | Computer Physics Communications |