Exponential Fourier Collocation Methods for Solving First-Order Differential Equations

Authors

  • Bin Wang School of Mathematical Sciences, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, China
  • Xinyuan Wu Department of Mathematics, Nanjing University, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, P.R.China, School of Mathematical Sciences, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, PR China
  • Fanwei Meng School of Mathematical Sciences, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, China
  • Yonglei Fang School of Mathematics and Statistics, Zaozhuang University, Zaozhuang 277160, China

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4208/jcm.1611-m2016-0596

Keywords:

First-order differential equations, Exponential Fourier collocation methods, Variation-of-constants formula, Structure-preserving exponential integrators, Collocation methods.

Abstract

In this paper, a novel class of exponential Fourier collocation methods (EFCMs) is presented for solving systems of first-order ordinary differential equations. These so-called exponential Fourier collocation methods are based on the variation-of-constants formula, incorporating a local Fourier expansion of the underlying problem with collocation methods. We discuss in detail the connections of EFCMs with trigonometric Fourier collocation methods (TFCMs), the well-known Hamiltonian Boundary Value Methods (HBVMs), Gauss methods and Radau IIA methods. It turns out that the novel EFCMs are an essential extension of these existing methods. We also analyse the accuracy in preserving the quadratic invariants and the Hamiltonian energy when the underlying system is a Hamiltonian system. Other properties of EFCMs including the order of approximations and the convergence of fixed-point iterations are investigated as well. The analysis given in this paper proves further that EFCMs can achieve arbitrarily high order in a routine manner which allows us to construct higher-order methods for solving systems of first-order ordinary differential equations conveniently. We also derive a practical fourth-order EFCM denoted by EFCM(2,2) as an illustrative example. The numerical experiments using EFCM(2,2) are implemented in comparison with an existing fourth-order HBVM, an energy-preserving collocation method and a fourth-order exponential integrator in the literature. The numerical results demonstrate the remarkable efficiency and robustness of the novel EFCM(2,2).

Published

2021-07-01

Issue

Section

Articles