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      Optimal Local Approximation Spaces for Generalized Finite Element Methods with Application to Multiscale Problems

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          Abstract

          The paper addresses a numerical method for solving second order elliptic partial differential equations that describe fields inside heterogeneous media. The scope is general and treats the case of rough coefficients, i.e. coefficients with values in \(L^\infty(\Omega)\). This class of coefficients includes as examples media with micro-structure as well as media with multiple non-separated length scales. The approach taken here is based on the the generalized finite element method (GFEM) introduced in \cite{107}, and elaborated in \cite{102}, \cite{103} and \cite{104}. The GFEM is constructed by partitioning the computational domain \(\Omega\) into to a collection of preselected subsets \(\omega_{i},i=1,2,..m\) and constructing finite dimensional approximation spaces \(\Psi_{i}\) over each subset using local information. The notion of the Kolmogorov \(n\)-width is used to identify the optimal local approximation spaces. These spaces deliver local approximations with errors that decay almost exponentially with the degrees of freedom \(N_{i}\) in the energy norm over \(\omega_i\). The local spaces \(% \Psi_{i}\) are used within the GFEM scheme to produce a finite dimensional subspace \(S^N\) of \(H^{1}(\Omega)\) which is then employed in the Galerkin method. It is shown that the error in the Galerkin approximation decays in the energy norm almost exponentially (i.e., super-algebraicly) with respect to the degrees of freedom \(N\). When length scales "`separate" and the microstructure is sufficiently fine with respect to the length scale of the domain \(\omega_i\) it is shown that homogenization theory can be used to construct local approximation spaces with exponentially decreasing error in the pre-asymtotic regime.

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          Asymptotic and numerical homogenization

          Homogenization is an important mathematical framework for developing effective models of differential equations with oscillations. We include in the presentation techniques for deriving effective equations, a brief discussion on analysis of related limit processes and numerical methods that are based on homogenization principles. We concentrate on first- and second-order partial differential equations and present results concerning both periodic and random media for linear as well as nonlinear problems. In the numerical sections, we comment on computations of multi-scale problems in general and then focus on projection-based numerical homogenization and the heterogeneous multi-scale method.
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            A Framework for Adaptive Multiscale Methods for Elliptic Problems

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              Homogenization of Parabolic Equations with a Continuum of Space and Time Scales

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                18 April 2010
                2010-11-28
                Article
                1004.3041
                455bba58-301a-45ff-bd45-df10c4096ab0

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                65Nxx
                ICES Report 10-12 2010
                30 pages, 6 figures, updated references, sections 3 and 4 typos corrected, minor text revision, results unchanged
                math.NA

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