Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4638641 Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Many physics problems can only be studied by coupling various numerical codes, each modeling a subaspect of the physics problem that is addressed. In most cases, the “brute force” technique of running the codes one after the other in a loop until convergence is reached requires excessive CPU time. The present paper illustrates that re-writing the coupling as a root-finding problem, to which a quasi-Newton method–here the (Inverse) Column Updating Method–can be applied, is useful to push down the computation time, at the expense of a very modest amount of supplementary programming. A simplified version of the set of codes commonly used to describe plasma heating by radio frequency waves in a tokamak plasma is adopted for illustrating the potential of the speed-up method. It consists of a wave equation as well as a Fokker–Planck velocity space diffusion and a radial energy diffusion model. It is shown that with this approach a substantial reduction in CPU time needed for convergence can be obtained.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Applied Mathematics
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