Barrier methods for critical exponent problems in geometric analysis and mathematical physics
Jennifer Erway, Michael Holst

TL;DR
This paper develops and analyzes a barrier method combined with Galerkin discretization to numerically approximate positive solutions of complex nonlinear geometric PDEs with critical exponents, such as the Yamabe problem.
Contribution
It introduces a primal barrier energy method tailored for critical exponent problems and demonstrates its effectiveness through numerical experiments on geometric PDEs.
Findings
The barrier method successfully approximates positive solutions.
Numerical experiments illustrate the method's robustness.
Application to Yamabe and Hamiltonian constraint problems.
Abstract
We consider the design and analysis of numerical methods for approximating positive solutions to nonlinear geometric elliptic partial differential equations containing critical exponents. This class of problems includes the Yamabe problem and the Einstein constraint equations, which simultaneously contain several challenging features: high spatial dimension n >= 3, varying (potentially non-smooth) coefficients, critical (even super-critical) nonlinearity, non-monotone nonlinearity (arising from a non-convex energy), and spatial domains that are typically Riemannian manifolds rather than simply open sets in Rn. These problems may exhibit multiple solutions, although only positive solutions typically have meaning. This creates additional complexities in both the theory and numerical treatment of such problems, as this feature introduces both non-uniqueness as well as the need to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Numerical Analysis Techniques · Advanced Numerical Methods in Computational Mathematics · Iterative Methods for Nonlinear Equations
