464 Homogeneous Difference Schemes for Time-Dependent Equations
The following implicit schemes are frequently encountered in the the-
ory and practice:
a) the symmetric scheme (o- = 0.5)
Yt = 0.5 A (y + y) + <p;
b) the forward scheme or purely implicit schen1e ( o- = 1)
Yi= Ay + <p ·
- Stability and convergence. The general stability theory for two-layer
schemes applies equally well to the stability analysis of the weighted scheme
(7). With this aim, the appropriate difference scheme with the homoge-
neous boundary conditions comes first:
(9) Yt = A ( o-y + ( 1 - o-) y) + <p , x E w h , t > 0 ,
y(x,O)=u 0 (x), y=O for x=O,x=l.
All the tricks and turns remain unchanged: we, first, introduce the
0
space SL of all grid functions given on the grid wh and vanishing on the
0
boundary for x = 0 and .i: = l and then define in that space H = SL an
inner product
N-l
(y,v) = L: Y;V;h
i= 1
and associated norm II y II = v1.Y:Y). By means of a linear operator A
acting in accordance with the rule
Ay=-Ay=-(ay 5 ;)," for yEH
the preceding scheme (9) can be rewritten as
( 10) Yt + A ( o-y + ( 1 - o-) y) = <p , t = j T > 0 , y( 0) = 'll 0.
Observe the operator A so defined is self-adjoint and positive definite:
where
fJ = min AdA),
I<k<N-l