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Accurate numerical methods for two and three dimensional integral fractional Laplacian with applications

Authors :
Duo, Siwei
Zhang, Yanzhi
Source :
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 355 (2019), pp. 639-662
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

In this paper, we propose accurate and efficient finite difference methods to discretize the two- and three-dimensional fractional Laplacian $(-\Delta)^{\frac{\alpha}{2}}$ ($0 < \alpha < 2$) in hypersingular integral form. The proposed finite difference methods provide a fractional analogue of the central difference schemes to the fractional Laplacian, and as $\alpha \to 2^-$, they collapse to the central difference schemes of the classical Laplace operator $-\Delta$. We prove that our methods are consistent if $u \in C^{\lfloor\alpha\rfloor, \alpha-\lfloor\alpha\rfloor+\epsilon}({\mathbb R}^d)$, and the local truncation error is ${\mathcal O}(h^\epsilon)$, with $\epsilon > 0$ a small constant and $\lfloor \cdot \rfloor$ denoting the floor function. If $u \in C^{2+\lfloor\alpha\rfloor, \alpha-\lfloor\alpha\rfloor+\epsilon}({\mathbb R}^d)$, they can achieve the second order of accuracy for any $\alpha \in (0, 2)$. These results hold for any dimension $d \ge 1$ and thus improve the existing error estimates for the finite difference method of the one-dimensional fractional Laplacian. Extensive numerical experiments are provided and confirm our analytical results. We then apply our method to solve the fractional Poisson problems and the fractional Allen-Cahn equations. Numerical simulations suggest that to achieve the second order of accuracy, the solution of the fractional Poisson problem should {\it at most} satisfy $u \in C^{1,1}({\mathbb R}^d)$. One merit of our methods is that they yield a multilevel Toeplitz stiffness matrix, an appealing property for the development of fast algorithms via the fast Fourier transform (FFT). Our studies of the two- and three-dimensional fractional Allen-Cahn equations demonstrate the efficiency of our methods in solving the high-dimensional fractional problems.<br />Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, and 6 tables

Subjects

Subjects :
Mathematics - Numerical Analysis

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 355 (2019), pp. 639-662
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1804.02718
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cma.2019.06.016