AbstractWe introduce new projective versions of second-order accurate Runge–Kutta and Adams–Bashforth methods, and demonstrate their use as outer integrators in solving stiff differential systems. An important outcome is that the new outer integrators, when combined with an inner telescopic projective integrator, can result in fully explicit methods with adaptive outer step size selection and solution accuracy comparable to those obtained by implicit integrators. If the stiff differential equations are not directly available, our formulations and stability analysis are general enough to allow the combined outer–inner projective integrators to be applied to legacy codes or perform a coarse-grained time integration of microscopic systems to e...
In this paper new explicit integrators for numerical solution of stiff evolution equations are propo...
We derive a new class of parallelizable two-step peer methods for the numerical solution of stiff sy...
Time integration schemes with a fixed time step, much smaller than the dominant slow time scales of ...
AbstractWe introduce new projective versions of second-order accurate Runge–Kutta and Adams–Bashfort...
We present a convergence proof for higher order implementations of the projective integration method...
Abstract. We present a convergence proof of the projective integration method for a class of determi...
AbstractTime integration schemes with a fixed time step, much smaller than the dominant slow time sc...
AbstractApplication of the method of lines to partial differential equation leads to very large, spa...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
We study the design of a general, fully explicit numerical method for simulating kinetic equations w...
AbstractIn the context of multiscale computations, techniques have recently been developed that enab...
Despite the popularity of high-order explicit Runge-Kutta (ERK) methods for integrating semi-discret...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
We present a convergence proof of the projective integration method for a class of deterministic mul...
In this paper new explicit integrators for numerical solution of stiff evolution equations are propo...
We derive a new class of parallelizable two-step peer methods for the numerical solution of stiff sy...
Time integration schemes with a fixed time step, much smaller than the dominant slow time scales of ...
AbstractWe introduce new projective versions of second-order accurate Runge–Kutta and Adams–Bashfort...
We present a convergence proof for higher order implementations of the projective integration method...
Abstract. We present a convergence proof of the projective integration method for a class of determi...
AbstractTime integration schemes with a fixed time step, much smaller than the dominant slow time sc...
AbstractApplication of the method of lines to partial differential equation leads to very large, spa...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
We study the design of a general, fully explicit numerical method for simulating kinetic equations w...
AbstractIn the context of multiscale computations, techniques have recently been developed that enab...
Despite the popularity of high-order explicit Runge-Kutta (ERK) methods for integrating semi-discret...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
In this talk we derive a new class of linearly implicit numerical methods for stiff initial value pr...
We present a convergence proof of the projective integration method for a class of deterministic mul...
In this paper new explicit integrators for numerical solution of stiff evolution equations are propo...
We derive a new class of parallelizable two-step peer methods for the numerical solution of stiff sy...
Time integration schemes with a fixed time step, much smaller than the dominant slow time scales of ...