Non-uniform finite-element meshes defined by ray dynamics for Helmholtz problems
Martin Averseng, Jeffrey Galkowski, Euan A. Spence

TL;DR
This paper shows that non-uniform finite-element meshes guided by ray dynamics can achieve quasioptimality and bounded relative error for high-frequency Helmholtz problems, even with coarser meshes away from trapping regions and in PML.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mesh design based on ray trajectories that relaxes traditional mesh refinement conditions for Helmholtz problems.
Findings
Non-uniform meshes can achieve QO and BRE with relaxed conditions.
In PML, only small hk is needed, eliminating pollution.
Mesh variation impacts local and global errors through ray dynamics.
Abstract
The -version of the finite-element method (-FEM) applied to the high-frequency Helmholtz equation has been a classic topic in numerical analysis since the 1990s. It is now rigorously understood that (using piecewise polynomials of degree on a mesh of a maximal width ) the conditions " sufficiently small" and " sufficiently small" guarantee, respectively, -uniform quasioptimality (QO) and bounded relative error (BRE), where is the norm of the solution operator with for non-trapping problems. Empirically, these conditions are observed to be optimal in the context of -FEM with a uniform mesh. This paper demonstrates that QO and BRE can be achieved using certain non-uniform meshes that violate the conditions above on and involve coarser meshes away from trapping and in the perfectly matched layer (PML). The main theorem…
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Taxonomy
TopicsContact Mechanics and Variational Inequalities · Vibration and Dynamic Analysis · Structural Analysis of Composite Materials
