Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 From local to global approximation
- 2 Trigonometric polynomial approximation
- 3 Fourier spectral methods
- 4 Orthogonal polynomials
- 5 Polynomial expansions
- 6 Polynomial approximation theory for smooth functions
- 7 Polynomial spectral methods
- 8 Stability of polynomial spectral methods
- 9 Spectral methods for nonsmooth problems
- 10 Discrete stability and time integration
- 11 Computational aspects
- 12 Spectral methods on general grids
- Appendix A Elements of convergence theory
- Appendix B A zoo of polynomials
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1 From local to global approximation
- 2 Trigonometric polynomial approximation
- 3 Fourier spectral methods
- 4 Orthogonal polynomials
- 5 Polynomial expansions
- 6 Polynomial approximation theory for smooth functions
- 7 Polynomial spectral methods
- 8 Stability of polynomial spectral methods
- 9 Spectral methods for nonsmooth problems
- 10 Discrete stability and time integration
- 11 Computational aspects
- 12 Spectral methods on general grids
- Appendix A Elements of convergence theory
- Appendix B A zoo of polynomials
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The purpose of this book is to collect, in one volume, all the ingredients necessary for the understanding of spectral methods for time-dependent problems, and, in particular, hyperbolic partial differential equations. It is intended as a graduate-level text, covering not only the basic concepts in spectral methods, but some of the modern developments as well. There are already several excellent books on spectral methods by authors who are well-known and active researchers in this field. This book is distinguished by the exclusive treatment of time-dependent problems, and so the derivation of spectral methods is influenced primarily by the research on finite-difference schemes, and less so by the finite-element methodology. Furthermore, this book is unique in its focus on the stability analysis of spectral methods, both for the semi-discrete and fully discrete cases. In the book we address advanced topics such as spectral methods for discontinuous problems and spectral methods on arbitrary grids, which are necessary for the implementation of pseudo-spectral methods on complex multi-dimensional domains.
In Chapter 1, we demonstrate the benefits of high order methods using phase error analysis. Typical finite difference methods use a local stencil to compute the derivative at a given point; higher order methods are then obtained by using a wider stencil, i.e., more points. The Fourier spectral method is obtained by using all the points in the domain. In Chapter 2, we discuss the trigonometric polynomial approximations to smooth functions, and the associated approximation theory for both the continuous and the discrete case. In Chapter 3, we present Fourier spectral methods, using both the Galerkin and collocation approaches, and discuss their stability for both hyperbolic and parabolic equations.
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- Spectral Methods for Time-Dependent Problems , pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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