Adaptive Moving Mesh Methods
Weizhang Huang Robert D. Russell
Venduto da Books Puddle, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Venditore AbeBooks dal 22 novembre 2018
Nuovi - Brossura
Condizione: Nuovo
Quantità: 4 disponibili
Aggiungere al carrelloVenduto da Books Puddle, New York, NY, U.S.A.
Venditore AbeBooks dal 22 novembre 2018
Condizione: Nuovo
Quantità: 4 disponibili
Aggiungere al carrellopp. 452.
Codice articolo 2651413777
Moving mesh methods are an effective, mesh-adaptation-based approach for the numerical solution of mathematical models of physical phenomena. Currently there exist three main strategies for mesh adaptation, namely, to use mesh subdivision, local high order approximation (sometimes combined with mesh subdivision), and mesh movement. The latter type of adaptive mesh method has been less well studied, both computationally and theoretically.
This book is about adaptive mesh generation and moving mesh methods for the numerical solution of time-dependent partial differential equations. It presents a general framework and theory for adaptive mesh generation and gives a comprehensive treatment of moving mesh methods and their basic components, along with their application for a number of nontrivial physical problems. Many explicit examples with computed figures illustrate the various methods and the effects of parameter choices for those methods. The partial differential equations considered are mainly parabolic (diffusion-dominated, rather than convection-dominated).
The extensive bibliography provides an invaluable guide to the literature in this field. Each chapter contains useful exercises. Graduate students, researchers and practitioners working in this area will benefit from this book.
Weizhang Huang is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Kansas.
Robert D. Russell is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Simon Fraser University.
Moving mesh methods are an effective, mesh-adaptation-based approach for the numerical solution of mathematical models of physical phenomena. Currently there exist three main strategies for mesh adaptation, namely, to use mesh subdivision, local high order approximation (sometimes combined with mesh subdivision), and mesh movement. The latter type of adaptive mesh method has been less well studied, both computationally and theoretically.
This book is about adaptive mesh generation and moving mesh methods for the numerical solution of time-dependent partial differential equations. It presents a general framework and theory for adaptive mesh generation and gives a comprehensive treatment of moving mesh methods and their basic components, along with their application for a number of nontrivial physical problems. Many explicit examples with computed figures illustrate the various methods and the effects of parameter choices for those methods. The partial differential equations considered are mainly parabolic (diffusion-dominated, rather than convection-dominated).
The extensive bibliography provides an invaluable guide to the literature in this field. Each chapter contains useful exercises. Graduate students, researchers and practitioners working in this area will benefit from this book.
Weizhang Huang is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Kansas.
Robert D. Russell is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Simon Fraser University.
Le informazioni nella sezione "Su questo libro" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.
Visita la pagina della libreria
We accept return for those books which are received damamged. Though we take appropriate care in packaing to avoid such situation.
Quantità dell?ordine | Da 12 a 19 giorni lavorativi | Da 12 a 14 giorni lavorativi |
---|---|---|
Primo articolo | EUR 3.40 | EUR 5.96 |
I tempi di consegna sono stabiliti dai venditori e variano in base al corriere e al paese. Gli ordini che devono attraversare una dogana possono subire ritardi e spetta agli acquirenti pagare eventuali tariffe o dazi associati. I venditori possono contattarti in merito ad addebiti aggiuntivi dovuti a eventuali maggiorazioni dei costi di spedizione dei tuoi articoli.