Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2010
Introduction
The question, “Is the long term qualitative behaviour of numerical solutions accurate?” is increasingly being asked. One way of gauging this is to examine the success or otherwise of the numerical code to maintain certain conserved quantities such as energy or potential vorticity. For example, numerical solutions of a conservative system are usually presented together with plots of energy dissipation. But what if the conserved quantity is a less well studied quantity than energy or is not easily measured in the approximate function space? What if there is more than one conserved quantity? Is it possible to construct an integrator that maintains, a priori, several laws at once?
Arguably, the most physically important conserved quantities arise via Noether's theorem; the system has an underlying variational principle and a Lie group symmetry leaves the Lagrangian invariant. A Lie group is a group whose elements depend in a smooth way on real or complex parameters. Energy, momentum and potential vorticity, used to track the development of certain weather fronts, are conserved quantities arising from translation in time and space, and fluid particle relabelling respectively. The Lie groups for all three examples act on the base space which is discretised. It is not obvious how to build their automatic conservation into a discretisation, and expressions for the conserved quantities must be known exactly in order to track them.
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