Volume 1, 2006

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J. Thomas Beale & Anita T. Layton

Vol. 1 (2006), 91-119
Abstract

In problems with interfaces, the unknown or its derivatives may have jump discontinuities. Finite difference methods, including the method of A. Mayo and the immersed interface method of R. LeVeque and Z. Li, maintain accuracy by adding corrections, found from the jumps, to the difference operator at grid points near the interface and by modifying the operator if necessary. It has long been observed that the solution can be computed with uniform O(h2) accuracy even if the truncation error is O(h) at the interface, while O(h2) in the interior. We prove this fact for a class of static interface problems of elliptic type using discrete analogues of estimates for elliptic equations. Moreover, we show that the gradient is uniformly accurate to O(h2 log (1 ∕ h)). Various implications are discussed, including the accuracy of these methods for steady fluid flow governed by the Stokes equations. Two-fluid problems can be handled by first solving an integral equation for an unknown jump. Numerical examples are presented which confirm the analytical conclusions, although the observed error in the gradient is O(h2).

Keywords

elliptic equations, interfaces, discontinuous coefficients, finite differences, immersed interface method

Mathematical Subject Classification

Primary: 35R05, 65N06, 65N15

Authors
J. Thomas Beale
Department of Mathematics
Duke University, Box 90320
Durham NC 27708
United States
Anita T. Layton
Department of Mathematics
Duke University, Box 90320
Durham NC 27708
United States