Hybridizable discontinuous Galerkin methods for solving the two-fluid plasma model. Ho, A. & Shumlak, U. May, 2024. arXiv:2405.02182 [physics]
Hybridizable discontinuous Galerkin methods for solving the two-fluid plasma model [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The two-fluid plasma model has a wide range of timescales which must all be numerically resolved regardless of the timescale on which plasma dynamics occurs. The answer to solving numerically stiff systems is generally to utilize unconditionally stable implicit time advance methods. Hybridizable discontinuous Galerkin (HDG) methods have emerged as a powerful tool for solving stiff partial differential equations. The HDG framework combines the advantages of the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method, such as high-order accuracy and flexibility in handling mixed hyperbolic/parabolic PDEs with the advantage of classical continuous finite element methods for constructing small numerically stable global systems which can be solved implicitly. In this research we quantify the numerical stability conditions for the two-fluid equations and demonstrate how HDG can be used to avoid the strict stability requirements while maintaining high order accurate results.
@misc{ho_hybridizable_2024,
	title = {Hybridizable discontinuous {Galerkin} methods for solving the two-fluid plasma model},
	url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2405.02182},
	doi = {10.48550/arXiv.2405.02182},
	abstract = {The two-fluid plasma model has a wide range of timescales which must all be numerically resolved regardless of the timescale on which plasma dynamics occurs. The answer to solving numerically stiff systems is generally to utilize unconditionally stable implicit time advance methods. Hybridizable discontinuous Galerkin (HDG) methods have emerged as a powerful tool for solving stiff partial differential equations. The HDG framework combines the advantages of the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method, such as high-order accuracy and flexibility in handling mixed hyperbolic/parabolic PDEs with the advantage of classical continuous finite element methods for constructing small numerically stable global systems which can be solved implicitly. In this research we quantify the numerical stability conditions for the two-fluid equations and demonstrate how HDG can be used to avoid the strict stability requirements while maintaining high order accurate results.},
	urldate = {2024-08-06},
	publisher = {arXiv},
	author = {Ho, Andrew and Shumlak, Uri},
	month = may,
	year = {2024},
	note = {arXiv:2405.02182 [physics]},
	keywords = {Discontinuous Galerkin, finite element method, numerical analysis, plasma physics, uses sympy},
}

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