Description
Speaker: Dr. Gaddam Sharat, Post-doctoral fellow, TIFR-CAM Bengaluru.
Title of the talk: Numerical Methods for Elliptic Variational Inequalities in Higher Dimensions.
Abstract: In this talk, I will first present a quadratic finite element method for three-dimensional elliptic obstacle problem which is optimally
convergent (with respect to the regularity). I will derive a priori error estimates to show the optimal convergence of the method with respect to the regularity, for this, we have enriched the finite element space with
element-wise bubble functions. Further, a posteriori error estimates are derived to design an adaptive mesh refinement algorithm. The result on a
priori estimate will be illustrated by a numerical experiment. Next, I will discuss two newly proposed discontinuous Galerkin (DG) finite element
methods for the elliptic obstacle problem. Using the localized behaviour of DG methods, I will present a priori and a posteriori error estimates for linear and quadratic DG methods in dimension 2 and 3 without the addition of bubble functions. I will consider two discrete sets, one with integral constraints (motivated as in the previous work) and another with
point constraints at quadrature points. The analysis is carried out in a unified setting which holds for several DG methods with a variable polynomial degree. Later, I will propose a new and simpler residual based a posteriori error estimator for finite element approximation of the elliptic obstacle problem. The results here are two-fold. Firstly, we
address the influence of the inhomogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition in a posteriori error control of the elliptic obstacle problem. Secondly, by
rewriting the obstacle problem in an equivalent form, a simpler a posteriori error bounds which are free from min/max functions will be constructed. To accomplish this, we construct a post-processed solution ˜uh of the discrete solution uh which satisfies the exact boundary conditions although the discrete solution uh may not satisfy. We propose
two post-processing methods and analyse them. We remark that the results known in the literature are either for the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary
condition or that the estimator is only weakly reliable in the case of inhomogeneous Dirichlet boundary condition. Finally, conclusions and possible extensions for the future works will also be discussed.
Venue, Date, and Time:
13th July 2018 (Friday) at 4PM in Ramanujan Hall,
Second floor, Mathematics building.