论文标题
混合FEM的稳定性对于非偏爱无限的二阶线性椭圆PDES的稳定性
Stability of mixed FEMs for non-selfadjoint indefinite second-order linear elliptic PDEs
论文作者
论文摘要
For a well-posed non-selfadjoint indefinite second-order linear elliptic PDE with general coefficients $\mathbf A, \mathbf b,γ$ in $L^\infty$ and symmetric and uniformly positive definite coefficient matrix $\mathbf A$, this paper proves that mixed finite element problems are uniquely solvable and the discrete solutions are uniformly bounded, whenever the潜在的形状定型三角剖分足够细。这适用于任何订单和任何空间维度的raviart-thomas(RT)和Brezzi-Douglas-Marini(BDM)有限元元素家族,并导致$ H(DIV)\ times l^2 $以及在$ l^2 \ times l^2 \ times l^2 \ times l^2 \ times l^2 $ l^2 $ l^2 $ in occillations中获得最佳的附属估计。这概括了分段Lipschitz连续系数的早期贡献,即$ l^\ infty $系数。 Schatz和Wang在面向位移问题的紧凑参数不适用于$ h(div)\ times l^2 $中的混合配方。但是,它允许一些$ l^2 $贡献的均匀近似,并且可以与Medius分析最佳$ l^2 $最佳评价相结合。该技术规避了任何规律性的假设和Fortin插值操作员的应用。
For a well-posed non-selfadjoint indefinite second-order linear elliptic PDE with general coefficients $\mathbf A, \mathbf b,γ$ in $L^\infty$ and symmetric and uniformly positive definite coefficient matrix $\mathbf A$, this paper proves that mixed finite element problems are uniquely solvable and the discrete solutions are uniformly bounded, whenever the underlying shape-regular triangulation is sufficiently fine. This applies to the Raviart-Thomas (RT) and Brezzi-Douglas-Marini (BDM) finite element families of any order and in any space dimension and leads to the best-approximation estimate in $H(div)\times L^2$ as well as in in $L^2\times L^2$ up to oscillations. This generalises earlier contributions for piecewise Lipschitz continuous coefficients to $L^\infty$ coefficients. The compactness argument of Schatz and Wang for the displacement-oriented problem does not apply immediately to the mixed formulation in $H(div)\times L^2$. But it allows the uniform approximation of some $L^2$ contributions and can be combined with a recent $L^2$ best-approximation result from the medius analysis. This technique circumvents any regularity assumption and the application of a Fortin interpolation operator.