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Three-Dimensional High-Order Spectral Volume Method for Solving Maxwell's Equations on Unstructured GridsA three-dimensional, high-order, conservative, and efficient discontinuous spectral volume (SV) method for the solutions of Maxwell's equations on unstructured grids is presented. The concept of discontinuous 2nd high-order loca1 representations to achieve conservation and high accuracy is utilized in a manner similar to the Discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method, but instead of using a Galerkin finite-element formulation, the SV method is based on a finite-volume approach to attain a simpler formulation. Conventional unstructured finite-volume methods require data reconstruction based on the least-squares formulation using neighboring cell data. Since each unknown employs a different stencil, one must repeat the least-squares inversion for every cell at each time step, or to store the inversion coefficients. In a high-order, three-dimensional computation, the former would involve impractically large CPU time, while for the latter the memory requirement becomes prohibitive. In the SV method, one starts with a relatively coarse grid of triangles or tetrahedra, called spectral volumes (SVs), and partition each SV into a number of structured subcells, called control volumes (CVs), that support a polynomial expansion of a desired degree of precision. The unknowns are cell averages over CVs. If all the SVs are partitioned in a geometrically similar manner, the reconstruction becomes universal as a weighted sum of unknowns, and only a few universal coefficients need to be stored for the surface integrals over CV faces. Since the solution is discontinuous across the SV boundaries, a Riemann solver is thus necessary to maintain conservation. In the paper, multi-parameter and symmetric SV partitions, up to quartic for triangle and cubic for tetrahedron, are first presented. The corresponding weight coefficients for CV face integrals in terms of CV cell averages for each partition are analytically determined. These discretization formulas are then applied to the integral form of the Maxwell equations. All numerical procedures for outer boundary, material interface, zonal interface, and interior SV face are unified with a single characteristic formulation. The load balancing in a massive parallel computing environment is therefore easier to achieve. A parameter is introduced in the Riemann solver to control the strength of the smoothing term. Important aspects of the data structure and its effects to communication and the optimum use of cache memory are discussed. Results will be presented for plane TE and TM waves incident on a perfectly conducting cylinder for up to fifth order of accuracy, and a plane wave incident on a perfectly conducting sphere for up to fourth order of accuracy. Comparisons are made with exact solutions for these cases.
Document ID
20040068169
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Liu, Yen
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Vinokur, Marcel
(Eloret Corp. Sunnyvale, CA, United States)
Wang, Z. J.
(Michigan State Univ. East Lansing, MI, United States)
Date Acquired
August 21, 2013
Publication Date
January 15, 2004
Subject Category
Mathematical And Computer Sciences (General)
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2004 International Conference on Spectral and High Order Methods (ICOSAHOM)
Location: Providence, RI
Country: United States
Start Date: June 21, 2004
End Date: June 25, 2004
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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