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arXiv:2212.05474 [math.NA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

A new approach to handle curved meshes in the Hybrid High-Order method

Liam Yemm

Published 2022-12-11Version 1

The hybrid high-order method is a modern numerical framework for the approximation of elliptic PDEs. We present here an extension of the hybrid high-order method to meshes possessing curved edges/faces. Such an extension allows us to enforce boundary conditions exactly on curved domains, and capture curved geometries that appear internally in the domain e.g. discontinuities in a diffusion coefficient. The method makes use of non-polynomial functions on the curved faces and does not require any mappings between reference elements/faces. Such an approach does not require the faces to be polynomial, and has a strict upper bound on the number of degrees of freedom on a curved face for a given polynomial degree. Moreover, this approach of enriching the space of unknowns on the curved faces with non-polynomial functions should extend naturally to other polytopal methods. We show the method to be stable and consistent on curved meshes and derive optimal error estimates in L2 and energy norms. We present numerical examples of the method on a domain with curved boundary, and for a diffusion problem such that the diffusion tensor is discontinuous along a curved arc.

Comments: 23 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables
Categories: math.NA, cs.NA
Subjects: 65N12, 65N15, 65N30
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