One-Step Piecewise Polynomial Multiple Collocation Methods for Initial Value Problems
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4118752
DOI10.2307/2005777zbMath0348.65068OpenAlexW4250505388MaRDI QIDQ4118752
Publication date: 1977
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2005777
Numerical methods for initial value problems involving ordinary differential equations (65L05) Numerical analysis in abstract spaces (65J99)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Finite element analysis of transient heat conduction application of the weighted residual process
- Piecewise polynomial Taylor methods for initial value problems
- On finite element approximations to time-dependent problems
- Integration Formulas and Schemes Based on g-Splines
- On Higher Order Stable Implicit Methods for Solving Parabolic Partial Differential Equations
- Linear Multistep Formulas Based on g-Splines
- Discrete Galerkin and Related One-Step Methods for Ordinary Differential Equations
- Discretization Errors for Well‐Set Cauchy Problems. I.
- Spline Function Approximations for Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations
- A note on unconditionally stable linear multistep methods
- Generalized Finite-Difference Schemes
- Some relationships between implicit Runge-Kutta, collocation and Lanczosτ methods, and their stability properties
- Single Step Methods and Low Order Splines for Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations
- Galerkin Methods for Parabolic Equations
- A-Stable Methods and Padé Approximations to the Exponential
- Transient field problems: Two‐dimensional and three‐dimensional analysis by isoparametric finite elements
- A general theory of finite elements. II. Applications
- One-Step Piecewise Polynomial Galerkin Methods for Initial Value Problems
- Natural spline block implicit methods
- A special stability problem for linear multistep methods
- A Generalization of Taylor's Expansion
This page was built for publication: One-Step Piecewise Polynomial Multiple Collocation Methods for Initial Value Problems