M. Engin Danis, Duc Truong, Ismael Boureima, Oleg Korobkin, Kim Ø. Rasmussen, Boian S. Alexandrov
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this study, we introduce a tensor-train (TT) finite difference WENO method for solving compressible Euler equations. In a step-by-step manner, the tensorization of the governing equations is demonstrated. We also introduce LF-cross and WENO-cross methods to compute numerical fluxes and the WENO reconstruction using the cross interpolation technique. A tensor-train approach is developed for boundary condition types commonly encountered in Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). The performance of the proposed WENO-TT solver is investigated in a rich set of numerical experiments. We demonstrate that the WENO-TT method achieves the theoretical -order accuracy of the classical WENO scheme in smooth problems while successfully capturing complicated shock structures. In an effort to avoid the growth of TT ranks, we propose a dynamic method to estimate the TT approximation error that governs the ranks and overall truncation error of the WENO-TT scheme. Finally, we show that the traditional WENO scheme can be accelerated up to 1000 times in the TT format, and the memory requirements can be significantly decreased for low-rank problems, demonstrating the potential of tensor-train approach for future CFD application. This paper is the first study that develops a finite difference WENO scheme using the tensor-train approach for compressible flows. It is also the first comprehensive work that provides a detailed perspective into the relationship between rank, truncation error, and the TT approximation error for compressible WENO solvers.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Computational Physics thoroughly treats the computational aspects of physical problems, presenting techniques for the numerical solution of mathematical equations arising in all areas of physics. The journal seeks to emphasize methods that cross disciplinary boundaries.
The Journal of Computational Physics also publishes short notes of 4 pages or less (including figures, tables, and references but excluding title pages). Letters to the Editor commenting on articles already published in this Journal will also be considered. Neither notes nor letters should have an abstract.