论文标题
分段平滑2D函数的全局和明确近似来自细胞平均数据
Global and explicit approximation of piecewise smooth 2D functions from cell-average data
论文作者
论文摘要
给定分段平滑双变量函数$ f $的细胞平均数据值$ω$,我们寻找分段自适应近似为$ f $。我们对明确和全球(平稳)的方法感兴趣。双变量近似技术作为三角法或花键近似,在域的边界附近和函数或其衍生物的跳跃奇异点的近曲线附近实现了降低的近似顺序。尽管假定$ω$的边界已知,但$ f $平滑的子域的$ω$的细分是未知的。提出的近似算法的第一个挑战是找到与分隔$ f $的平滑子域的曲线的良好近似值。在第二阶段,我们同时寻找$ f $的不同平滑段的近似值,在每个段中,我们通过基础函数的线性组合$ \ {p_i \} _ {i = 1}^m $近似函数,请考虑相应的细胞含量。应用于给定的细胞平均数据的离散拉普拉斯运算符加强了分隔$ f $的平滑子域的数据的奇异性的结构。我们将这些派生值称为数据的签名,并且我们将其用于近似于分隔$ f $的不同平滑区域的奇异曲线。这里的主要贡献是提高了对奇点曲线的近似值和$ f $的近似值,明确和全局公式的近似值,尤其是对函数的分段平滑高阶近似值的推导。
Given cell-average data values of a piecewise smooth bivariate function $f$ within a domain $Ω$, we look for a piecewise adaptive approximation to $f$. We are interested in an explicit and global (smooth) approach. Bivariate approximation techniques, as trigonometric or splines approximations, achieve reduced approximation orders near the boundary of the domain and near curves of jump singularities of the function or its derivatives. Whereas the boundary of $Ω$ is assumed to be known, the subdivision of $Ω$ to subdomains on which $f$ is smooth is unknown. The first challenge of the proposed approximation algorithm would be to find a good approximation to the curves separating the smooth subdomains of $f$. In the second stage, we simultaneously look for approximations to the different smooth segments of $f$, where on each segment we approximate the function by a linear combination of basis functions $\{p_i\}_{i=1}^M$, considering the corresponding cell-averages. A discrete Laplacian operator applied to the given cell-average data intensifies the structure of the singularity of the data across the curves separating the smooth subdomains of $f$. We refer to these derived values as the signature of the data, and we use it for both approximating the singularity curves separating the different smooth regions of $f$. The main contributions here are improved convergence rates to both the approximation of the singularity curves and the approximation of $f$, an explicit and global formula, and, in particular, the derivation of a piecewise smooth high order approximation to the function.