Hypocoercivity-Preserving Discretisations
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Leicester
Department Name: Mathematics and Actuarial Sciences
Abstract
Numerous physical, chemical, biological and social dynamic processes are often characterised by convergence to long-time equilibria. In many important cases the diffusion/dissipation required to arrive to such equilibria is explicitly present in some of the spatial directions only. This, somewhat counter-intuitive at first, state of affairs suggests that decay to equilibrium is due to finer hidden structure, which allows for the transport terms to also `propagate dissipation' to the directions in which no dissipation appears explicitly in the model. In his celebrated AMS memoir, Villani introduced the eponymous concept of `Hypocoercivity' to describe a framework able to explain decay to equilibrium in the presence of dissipation in some directions only.
The broad objective of this project is the development of hypocoercivity-preserving Galerkin discretisations for very general classes of diffusion-degenerate kinetic problems. The construction of hypocoercivity-preserving variational methods unlock the potential of porting the already rich methodology of Galerkin finite element methods for standard, non-degenerate PDEs to large classes of hypocoercive problems.
To this end, we shall develop a general variational framework of non-conforming Galerkin methods that are able to counteract the inconsistency arising by differentiation of Galerkin spaces of reduced global regularity. This will be achieved by addressing the key challenge of lack of commutativity between differentiation and discretisation in the context of mesh-based Galerkin-type numerical methods via the use of carefully constructed non-conforming weak formulations of the underlying evolution problems. This will enable the development of discrete versions of hypocoercivity ensuring the accuracy and stability of the discretisations and provide convergence rates. Further, appropriate reconstructions of these, typically non-conforming, Galerkin approximations, will enable the proof of the first rigorous a posteriori error bounds. The latter will, in turn, allow for mathematically justifiable adaptive algorithms to be developed, aiming to reduce the significant computational complexity of the numerical methods, due to their inherent high-dimensionality.
Such numerical methods will be suitable for arbitrarily long-time simulations of complex phenomena modelled by kinetic-type formulations. As a result, we will be able to offer unprecedented numerical capabilities. This will, in turn, lead to a new class of simulators for important physical and industrial processes ranging from plasma physics, to rarefied gas dynamics and to nuclear reactor safety simulations.
The broad objective of this project is the development of hypocoercivity-preserving Galerkin discretisations for very general classes of diffusion-degenerate kinetic problems. The construction of hypocoercivity-preserving variational methods unlock the potential of porting the already rich methodology of Galerkin finite element methods for standard, non-degenerate PDEs to large classes of hypocoercive problems.
To this end, we shall develop a general variational framework of non-conforming Galerkin methods that are able to counteract the inconsistency arising by differentiation of Galerkin spaces of reduced global regularity. This will be achieved by addressing the key challenge of lack of commutativity between differentiation and discretisation in the context of mesh-based Galerkin-type numerical methods via the use of carefully constructed non-conforming weak formulations of the underlying evolution problems. This will enable the development of discrete versions of hypocoercivity ensuring the accuracy and stability of the discretisations and provide convergence rates. Further, appropriate reconstructions of these, typically non-conforming, Galerkin approximations, will enable the proof of the first rigorous a posteriori error bounds. The latter will, in turn, allow for mathematically justifiable adaptive algorithms to be developed, aiming to reduce the significant computational complexity of the numerical methods, due to their inherent high-dimensionality.
Such numerical methods will be suitable for arbitrarily long-time simulations of complex phenomena modelled by kinetic-type formulations. As a result, we will be able to offer unprecedented numerical capabilities. This will, in turn, lead to a new class of simulators for important physical and industrial processes ranging from plasma physics, to rarefied gas dynamics and to nuclear reactor safety simulations.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
| Emmanuil Georgoulis (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Barrenechea G
(2024)
A nodally bound-preserving finite element method
in IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis
Cangiani A
(2023)
A Posteriori Error Estimates for Discontinuous Galerkin Methods on Polygonal and Polyhedral Meshes
in SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis
Chrysafinos K
(2024)
Mesh-Dependent $$L^2$$-Like Norm a Posteriori Error Estimates for Elliptic Problems with Non-essential Boundary Conditions
in Journal of Scientific Computing
Deckelnick K
(2024)
PDE-constrained shape optimization with first-order and Newton-type methods in the W 1,8 topology
in Optimization Methods and Software
Djurdjevac A
(2023)
An evolving space framework for Oseen equations on a moving domain
in ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis
Djurdjevac A
(2023)
An evolving space framework for Oseen equations on a moving domain
Georgoulis E
(2023)
Discrete gradient flow approximations of high dimensional evolution partial differential equations via deep neural networks
in Communications in Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation
Georgoulis E
(2023)
Lower bounds, elliptic reconstruction and a posteriori error control of parabolic problems
in IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis
Related Projects
| Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Award Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP/W005840/1 | 31/05/2022 | 30/08/2022 | £421,893 | ||
| EP/W005840/2 | Transfer | EP/W005840/1 | 04/09/2022 | 29/09/2026 | £410,449 |
| Description | 1) We have managed to develop a numerical method for high dimensional Fokker-Planck type equations by devising a novel method based on the minimizing movement idea of De Giorgi/Abrosio/Jordan-Kinderleher-Otto. 2) We have recently completed a major milestone of the first part of the proposed research regarding the construction of hypocoercivity-preserving(exploiting) stabilised Petrov-Galerkin method for a basic kinetic equation. |
| Exploitation Route | The development of novel numerical methods for kinetic equations is central in the modelling of many particle systems arising in physics, biology, nuclear science and medical imaging. |
| Sectors | Aerospace Defence and Marine Energy Financial Services and Management Consultancy Healthcare |