1549301742-The_Theory_of_Difference_Schemes__Samarskii

(jair2018) #1
Conservative schemes

where

(15)

1/2

clx
k(x)

d; = d; = j q(xi +sh) ds,
-1/2
1/2
'Pi= &i = j f(x; +sh) ds.
-1/2

__ cl_s_ )-l
k(a:;+sh)

153

We have written the difference equation (14) at a fixed node x = X;. With
an arbitrarily chosen node x, it is plain to derive equation (14) at all inner
nodes of the grid. Since at all the nodes x;, i = 1, 2, ... , N - 1, the
coefficients a; and b; are specified by the same formulae (15), scheme (14)-
(15) is treated as a homogeneous conservative scheme. Because of this,
we may omit the subscript i in formulae (14)-(15) and write down an
alternative forn1 of scheme (14):

(a y, 0 )x - cly = -<p.


In the general case the coefficient ai built into the formula for the heat flow
is some functional of the values of k(x) on the segment [x;_u x;].
Observe that the conservation law in the entire grid domain wh known
as the "integral conservation law" is an algebraic corollary to equation (14)
for any conservative scheme of the form (14) with arbitrary ingredients a,
d and <p. Indeed, with the notation wi_ 112 = -a; (Y; - y;_ 1 )/h for the
difference expressi9n of the heat flow at the point x = X;_ 112 , we can
rearrange (14) as w;_ 112 - w;+ 1 ; 2 + h<p; = hdiyi, which becomes after
summation over i = 1, 2, ... , N - 1 the difference conservation heat law
within the entire grid domain:

N-l N-l
w1 12 -wN-1;2 + L h<p; = L hdi Yi,
i=l 1:=1

meaning the difference approxirnation of the integral conservation law for
equation ( 1) from Section 1.

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