Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Springer Computational Mathematics : Springer in Computational Mathematics - Michael Plum

Springer Computational Mathematics

By: Michael Plum, Yoshitaka Watanabe, Mitsuhiro T. Nakao

Hardcover | 20 November 2020

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $219.00

$184.75

16%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $46.19 with

 or 

Ships in 10 to 15 business days

In the last decades, various mathematical problems have been solved by computer-assisted proofs, among them the Kepler conjecture, the existence of chaos, the existence of the Lorenz attractor, the famous four-color problem, and more. In many cases, computer-assisted proofs have the remarkable advantage (compared with a "theoretical" proof) of additionally providing accurate quantitative information.

The authors have been working more than a quarter century to establish methods for the verified computation of solutions for partial differential equations, mainly for nonlinear elliptic problems of the form - u=f(x,u, u) with Dirichlet boundary conditions. Here, by "verified computation" is meant a computer-assisted numerical approach for proving the existence of a solution in a close and explicit neighborhood of an approximate solution. The quantitative information provided by these techniques is also significant from the viewpoint of a posteriori error estimates for approximate solutions of the concerned partial differential equations in a mathematically rigorous sense.

In this monograph, the authors give a detailed description of the verified computations and computer-assisted proofs for partial differential equations that they developed. In Part I, the methods mainly studied by the authors Nakao and Watanabe are presented. These methods are based on a finite dimensional projection and constructive a priori error estimates for finite element approximations of the Poisson equation. In Part II, the computer-assisted approaches via eigenvalue bounds developed by the author Plum are explained in detail. The main task of this method consists of establishing eigenvalue bounds for the linearization of the corresponding nonlinear problem at the computed approximate solution. Some brief remarks on other approaches are also given in Part III. Each method in Parts I and II is accompanied by appropriate numerical examples that confirm the actual usefulness of the authors' methods. Also in some examples practical computer algorithms are supplied so that readers can easily implement the verification programs by themselves.
Industry Reviews

"Each chapter of the book is written in an excellent, easy-to-understand way, both in terms of items, proofs, and codes. The reader himself can easily check the simplicity and correctness of the codes." (Rozsa Horvath-Bokor, zbMATH 1462.65004, 2021)

More in Differential Calculus & Equations

Mathematical Modelling Techniques - Harald E. Krogstad

RRP $389.00

$333.75

14%
OFF
Mathematical Modelling Techniques - Harald E. Krogstad

RRP $156.00

$139.75

10%
OFF
LEC NOTE MATH OLYM : SNR SEC (V1) - XU JIAGU

RRP $77.99

$70.75

Scattering of Waves : Theory and Applications - D. N. Ghosh Roy

RRP $431.00

$368.75

14%
OFF
Elementary Differential Equations : Textbooks in Mathematics - Charles E.  Roberts Jr.
Abstract Cauchy Problems : Three Approaches - Alexei Filinkov

RRP $315.00

$271.99

14%
OFF
The Calderon Problem : An Introduction - Joel Feldman

RRP $312.00

$290.99

The Calderon Problem : An Introduction - Gunther Uhlmann

RRP $206.00

$195.75