219 RWTH Publication No: 47160        2002        IGPM219.pdf
TITLE Adaptive Finite Element Methods with Convergence Rates
AUTHORS Peter Binev, Wolfgang Dahmen, Ronald DeVore
ABSTRACT Adaptive Finite Element Methods for numerically solving elliptic equations are used often in practice. Only recently [10], [14] have these methods been shown to converge. However, this convergence analysis says nothing about the rates of convergence of these methods and therefore does not yet, in principle, describe yet any numerical advantages of adaptive strategies versus non-adaptive strategies. The present paper modifies the adaptive method of Morin, Nochetto, and Siebert [14] for solving the Laplace equation with piecewise linear elements on domains in IR ² by adding a coarsening step and proves that this new method has certain optimal convergence rates in the energy norm (which is equivalent to the H¹ norm). Namely, it is shown that whenever s > 0 and the solution u is such that for each n ≥ 1, it can be approximated to accuracy O(n-s) in the energy norm by a continuous, piecewise linear function on a triangulation with n cells (using complete knowledge of u), then the adaptive algorithm constructs an approximation of the same type with the same asymptotic accuracy while using only information gained during the computational process. Moreover, the number of arithmetic computations in the proposed method is also of order O(n) for each n ≥ 1. The construction and analysis of this adaptive method relies on the theory of nonlinear approximation.
KEYWORDS elliptic equations, finite element methods, adaptive refinements, rates of convergence, nonlinear approximation
DOI 10.1007/s00211-003-0492-7
PUBLICATION Numerische Mathematik
97(2), 219-268 (2004)