About: Additive Schwarz method is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 700 publications have been published within this topic receiving 14755 citations.
TL;DR: This paper analyzes these new methods for symmetric positive definite problems and shows their relation to other modern domain decomposition methods like the new Finite Element Tearing and Interconnect (FETI) variants.
Abstract: Optimized Schwarz methods are a new class of Schwarz methods with greatly enhanced convergence properties. They converge uniformly faster than classical Schwarz methods and their convergence rates dare asymptotically much better than the convergence rates of classical Schwarz methods if the overlap is of the order of the mesh parameter, which is often the case in practical applications. They achieve this performance by using new transmission conditions between subdomains which greatly enhance the information exchange between subdomains and are motivated by the physics of the underlying problem. We analyze in this paper these new methods for symmetric positive definite problems and show their relation to other modern domain decomposition methods like the new Finite Element Tearing and Interconnect (FETI) variants.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce some cheaper and faster variants of the classical additive Schwarz preconditioner (AS) for general sparse linear systems and show that the new methods are superior to AS in terms of both iteration counts and CPU time, as well as the communication cost when implemented on distributed memory computers.
Abstract: We introduce some cheaper and faster variants of the classical additive Schwarz preconditioner (AS) for general sparse linear systems and show, by numerical examples, that the new methods are superior to AS in terms of both iteration counts and CPU time, as well as the communication cost when implemented on distributed memory computers. This is especially true for harder problems such as indefinite complex linear systems and systems of convection-diffusion equations from three-dimensional compressible flows. Both sequential and parallel results are reported.
TL;DR: A variant of the Schwarz method which converges without overlap for the Helmholtz equation is studied, and it is shown that the key ingredients for such an algorithm are the transmission conditions, which lead to convergence of the algorithm in a finite number of steps.
Abstract: The classical Schwarz method is a domain decomposition method to solve elliptic partial differential equations in parallel. Convergence is achieved through overlap of the subdomains. We study in this paper a variant of the Schwarz method which converges without overlap for the Helmholtz equation. We show that the key ingredients for such an algorithm are the transmission conditions. We derive optimal transmission conditions which lead to convergence of the algorithm in a finite number of steps. These conditions are, however, nonlocal in nature, and we introduce local approximations which we optimize for performance of the Schwarz method. This leads to an algorithm in the class of optimized Schwarz methods. We present an asymptotic analysis of the optimized Schwarz method for two types of transmission conditions, Robin conditions and transmission conditions with second order tangential derivatives. Numerical results illustrate the effectiveness of the optimized Schwarz method on a model problem and on a problem from industry.
TL;DR: This paper presents an additive Schwarz method applied to linear, second order, symmetric or nonsymmetric, indefinite elliptic boundary value problems in two and three dimensions, and shows the rate of convergence to be independent of the number of degrees of freedom and thenumber of local problems.
Abstract: Iterative methods for linear systems of algebraic equations arising from the finite element discretization of nonsymmetric and indefinite elliptic problems are considered. Methods previously known to work well for positive definite, symmetric problems are extended to certain nonsymmetric problems, which can also have some eigenvalues in the left half plane.This paper presents an additive Schwarz method applied to linear, second order, symmetric or nonsymmetric, indefinite elliptic boundary value problems in two and three dimensions. An alternative linear system, which has the same solution as the original problem, is derived and this system is then solved by using GMRES, an iterative method of conjugate gradient type. In each iteration step, a coarse mesh finite element problem and a number of local problems are solved on small, overlapping subregions into which the original region is subdivided. The rate of convergence is shown to be independent of the number of degrees of freedom and the number of local...