On Finite Element Methods for Fully Nonlinear Elliptic Equations of Second Order

For the first time, we present for the general case of fully nonlinear elliptic differential equations of second order a nonstandard C¹ finite element method (FEM). We consider, throughout the paper, two cases in parallel: For convex, bounded, polyhedral domains in R$R^n $ , or for C² bounded domain...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inSIAM journal on numerical analysis Vol. 46; no. 3; pp. 1212 - 1249
Main Author Böhmer, Klaus
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics 01.01.2008
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0036-1429
1095-7170
DOI10.1137/040621740

Cover

More Information
Summary:For the first time, we present for the general case of fully nonlinear elliptic differential equations of second order a nonstandard C¹ finite element method (FEM). We consider, throughout the paper, two cases in parallel: For convex, bounded, polyhedral domains in R$R^n $ , or for C² bounded domains in R² , we prove stability and convergence for the corresponding conforming or nonconforming C¹ FEM, respectively. The results for equations and systems of orders 2 and 2m and quadrature approximations appear elsewhere. The classical theory of discretization methods is applied to the differential operator or the combined differential and the boundary operator. The consistency error for satisfied or violated boundary conditions on polyhedral or curved domains has to be estimated. The stability has to be proved in an unusual way. This is the hard core of the paper. Essential tools are linearization, a compactness argument, the interplay between the weak and strong form of the linearized operator, and a new regularity result for solutions of finite element equations. An essential basis for our proofs are Davydov's results for C¹ FEs on polyhedral domains in R n or of local degree 5 for C² domains in R² . Better convergence and extensions to $R^n $ for C² domains are to be expected from his forthcoming results on curved domains. Our proof for the second case in $R^n $, includes the first essentially as a special case. The method applies to quasi-linear elliptic problems not in divergence form as well. A discrete Newton method is shown to converge locally quadratically, essentially independently of the actual grid size by the mesh independence principle.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
content type line 14
ISSN:0036-1429
1095-7170
DOI:10.1137/040621740