[HTML][HTML] Time-integration methods for finite element discretisations of the second-order Maxwell equation

D Sármány, MA Botchev, JJW van der Vegt - Computers & Mathematics …, 2013 - Elsevier
Computers & Mathematics with Applications, 2013Elsevier
This article deals with time integration for the second-order Maxwell equations with possibly
non-zero conductivity in the context of the discontinuous Galerkin finite element method (DG-
FEM) and the H (curl)-conforming FEM. For the spatial discretisation, hierarchic H (curl)-
conforming basis functions are used up to polynomial order p= 3 over tetrahedral meshes,
meaning fourth-order convergence rate. A high-order polynomial basis often warrants the
use of high-order time-integration schemes, but many well-known high-order schemes may …
This article deals with time integration for the second-order Maxwell equations with possibly non-zero conductivity in the context of the discontinuous Galerkin finite element method (DG-FEM) and the H(curl)-conforming FEM. For the spatial discretisation, hierarchic H(curl)-conforming basis functions are used up to polynomial order p=3 over tetrahedral meshes, meaning fourth-order convergence rate. A high-order polynomial basis often warrants the use of high-order time-integration schemes, but many well-known high-order schemes may suffer from a severe time-step stability restriction owing to the conductivity term. We investigate several possible time-integration methods from the point of view of accuracy, stability and computational work. We also carry out a numerical Fourier analysis to study the dispersion and dissipation properties of the semi-discrete DG-FEM scheme as well as the fully-discrete schemes with several of the time-integration methods. The dispersion and dissipation properties of the spatial discretisation and those of the time-integration methods are investigated separately, providing additional insight into the two discretisation steps.
Elsevier
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