d03prc integrates a system of linear or nonlinear, first-order, time-dependent partial differential equations (PDEs) in one space variable, with scope for coupled ordinary differential equations (ODEs), and automatic adaptive spatial remeshing. The spatial discretization is performed using the Keller box scheme (see Keller (1970)) and the method of lines is employed to reduce the PDEs to a system of ODEs. The resulting system is solved using a Backward Differentiation Formula (BDF) method or a Theta method (switching between Newton's method and functional iteration).
The function may be called by the names: d03prc, nag_pde_dim1_parab_remesh_keller or nag_pde_parab_1d_keller_ode_remesh.
3Description
d03prc integrates the system of first-order PDEs and coupled ODEs given by the master equations:
(1)
(2)
In the PDE part of the problem given by (1), the functions must have the general form
(3)
where , and depend on , , , and .
The vector is the set of PDE solution values
and the vector is the partial derivative with respect to . The vector is the set of ODE solution values
and denotes its derivative with respect to time.
In the ODE part given by (2), represents a vector of spatial coupling points at which the ODEs are coupled to the PDEs. These points may or may not be equal to some of the PDE spatial mesh points. , and are the functions , and evaluated at these coupling points. Each may only depend linearly on time derivatives. Hence equation (2) may be written more precisely as
(4)
where , is a vector of length nv, is an nv by nv matrix, is an nv by matrix and the entries in , and may depend on , , , and . In practice you only need to supply a vector of information to define the ODEs and not the matrices and . (See Section 5 for the specification of odedef.)
The integration in time is from to , over the space interval , where and are the leftmost and rightmost points of a mesh defined initially by you and (possibly) adapted automatically during the integration according to user-specified criteria.
The PDE system which is defined by the functions must be specified in pdedef.
The initial values of the functions and must be specified in uvinit. Note that uvinit will be called again following any remeshing, and so should be specified for all values of in the interval , and not just the initial mesh points.
For a first-order system of PDEs, only one boundary condition is required for each PDE component . The npde boundary conditions are separated into at the left-hand boundary , and at the right-hand boundary , such that . The position of the boundary condition for each component should be chosen with care; the general rule is that if the characteristic direction of at the left-hand boundary (say) points into the interior of the solution domain, then the boundary condition for should be specified at the left-hand boundary. Incorrect positioning of boundary conditions generally results in initialization or integration difficulties in the underlying time integration functions.
The boundary conditions have the master equation form:
(5)
at the left-hand boundary, and
(6)
at the right-hand boundary.
Note that the functions and must not depend on , since spatial derivatives are not determined explicitly in the Keller box scheme functions. If the problem involves derivative (Neumann) boundary conditions then it is generally possible to restate such boundary conditions in terms of permissible variables. Also note that and must be linear with respect to time derivatives, so that the boundary conditions have the general form:
(7)
at the left-hand boundary, and
(8)
at the right-hand boundary, where , , , , and depend on and only.
The boundary conditions must be specified in bndary.
The problem is subject to the following restrictions:
(i), and must not depend on any time derivatives;
(ii), so that integration is in the forward direction;
(iii)The evaluation of the function is done approximately at the mid-points of the mesh , for , by calling pdedef for each mid-point in turn. Any discontinuities in the function must, therefore, be at one or more of the fixed mesh points specified by xfix;
(iv)At least one of the functions must be nonzero so that there is a time derivative present in the PDE problem.
The algebraic-differential equation system which is defined by the functions must be specified in odedef. You must also specify the coupling points in the array xi.
The first-order equations are approximated by a system of ODEs in time for the values of at mesh points. In this method of lines approach the Keller box scheme is applied to each PDE in the space variable only, resulting in a system of ODEs in time for the values of at each mesh point. In total there are ODEs in time direction. This system is then integrated forwards in time using a Backward Differentiation Formula (BDF) or a Theta method.
The adaptive space remeshing can be used to generate meshes that automatically follow the changing time-dependent nature of the solution, generally resulting in a more efficient and accurate solution using fewer mesh points than may be necessary with a fixed uniform or non-uniform mesh. Problems with travelling wavefronts or variable-width boundary layers for example will benefit from using a moving adaptive mesh. The discrete time-step method used here (developed by Furzeland (1984)) automatically creates a new mesh based on the current solution profile at certain time-steps, and the solution is then interpolated onto the new mesh and the integration continues.
The method requires you to supply monitf which specifies in an analytic or numeric form the particular aspect of the solution behaviour you wish to track. This so-called monitor function is used to choose a mesh which equally distributes the integral of the monitor function over the domain. A typical choice of monitor function is the second space derivative of the solution value at each point (or some combination of the second space derivatives if more than one solution component), which results in refinement in regions where the solution gradient is changing most rapidly.
You must specify the frequency of mesh updates along with certain other criteria such as adjacent mesh ratios. Remeshing can be expensive and you are encouraged to experiment with the different options in order to achieve an efficient solution which adequately tracks the desired features of the solution.
Note that unless the monitor function for the initial solution values is zero at all user-specified initial mesh points, a new initial mesh is calculated and adopted according to the user-specified remeshing criteria. uvinit will then be called again to determine the initial solution values at the new mesh points (there is no interpolation at this stage) and the integration proceeds.
4References
Berzins M (1990) Developments in the NAG Library software for parabolic equations Scientific Software Systems (eds J C Mason and M G Cox) 59–72 Chapman and Hall
Berzins M, Dew P M and Furzeland R M (1989) Developing software for time-dependent problems using the method of lines and differential-algebraic integrators Appl. Numer. Math.5 375–397
Berzins M and Furzeland R M (1992) An adaptive theta method for the solution of stiff and nonstiff differential equations Appl. Numer. Math.9 1–19
Furzeland R M (1984) The construction of adaptive space meshes TNER.85.022 Thornton Research Centre, Chester
Keller H B (1970) A new difference scheme for parabolic problems Numerical Solutions of Partial Differential Equations (ed J Bramble) 2 327–350 Academic Press
Pennington S V and Berzins M (1994) New NAG Library software for first-order partial differential equations ACM Trans. Math. Softw.20 63–99
5Arguments
1: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of PDEs to be solved.
Constraint:
.
2: – double *Input/Output
On entry: the initial value of the independent variable .
Constraint:
.
On exit: the value of corresponding to the solution values in u. Normally .
3: – doubleInput
On entry: the final value of to which the integration is to be carried out.
4: – function, supplied by the userExternal Function
pdedef must evaluate the functions which define the system of PDEs. pdedef is called approximately midway between each pair of mesh points in turn by d03prc.
On exit: should usually remain unchanged. However, you may set ires to force the integration function to take certain actions, as described below:
Indicates to the integrator that control should be passed back immediately to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_USER_STOP.
Indicates to the integrator that the current time step should be abandoned and a smaller time step used instead. You may wish to set when a physically meaningless input or output value has been generated. If you consecutively set , d03prc returns to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_FAILED_DERIV.
12: – Nag_Comm *
Pointer to structure of type Nag_Comm; the following members are relevant to pdedef.
user – double *
iuser – Integer *
p – Pointer
The type Pointer will be void *. Before calling d03prc you may allocate memory and initialize these pointers with various quantities for use by pdedef when called from d03prc (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
Note:pdedef should not return floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by d03prc. If your code inadvertently does return any NaNs or infinities, d03prc is likely to produce unexpected results.
5: – function, supplied by the userExternal Function
bndary must evaluate the functions and which describe the boundary conditions, as given in (5) and (6).
On exit: should usually remain unchanged. However, you may set ires to force the integration function to take certain actions as described below:
Indicates to the integrator that control should be passed back immediately to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_USER_STOP.
Indicates to the integrator that the current time step should be abandoned and a smaller time step used instead. You may wish to set when a physically meaningless input or output value has been generated. If you consecutively set , d03prc returns to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_FAILED_DERIV.
12: – Nag_Comm *
Pointer to structure of type Nag_Comm; the following members are relevant to bndary.
user – double *
iuser – Integer *
p – Pointer
The type Pointer will be void *. Before calling d03prc you may allocate memory and initialize these pointers with various quantities for use by bndary when called from d03prc (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
Note:bndary should not return floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by d03prc. If your code inadvertently does return any NaNs or infinities, d03prc is likely to produce unexpected results.
6: – function, supplied by the userExternal Function
uvinit must supply the initial values of and for all values of in the interval .
On entry: the number of mesh points in the interval .
3: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of ODE/PDE coupling points.
4: – const doubleInput
On entry: the current mesh. contains the value of , for .
5: – const doubleInput
On entry: if , contains the ODE/PDE coupling point, , for .
6: – doubleOutput
Note: the th element of the matrix is stored in .
On exit: contains the value of the component , for and .
7: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of coupled ODEs in the system.
8: – doubleOutput
On exit: if , must contain the value of component , for .
9: – Nag_Comm *
Pointer to structure of type Nag_Comm; the following members are relevant to uvinit.
user – double *
iuser – Integer *
p – Pointer
The type Pointer will be void *. Before calling d03prc you may allocate memory and initialize these pointers with various quantities for use by uvinit when called from d03prc (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
Note:uvinit should not return floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by d03prc. If your code inadvertently does return any NaNs or infinities, d03prc is likely to produce unexpected results.
7: – doubleInput/Output
On entry: if the value of u must be unchanged from the previous call.
On exit: the computed solution
, for and , and
, for , evaluated at , as follows:
contain , for and , and
contain , for .
8: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of mesh points in the interval [].
Constraint:
.
9: – doubleInput/Output
On entry: the initial mesh points in the space direction. must specify the left-hand boundary, , and must specify the right-hand boundary, .
Constraint:
.
On exit: the final values of the mesh points.
10: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of boundary conditions at the left-hand mesh point .
Constraint:
.
11: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of coupled ODE components.
Constraint:
.
12: – function, supplied by the userExternal Function
odedef must evaluate the functions , which define the system of ODEs, as given in (4).
If , odedef will never be called and the NAG defined null void function pointer, NULLFN, can be supplied in the call to d03prc.
On exit: should usually remain unchanged. However, you may reset ires to force the integration function to take certain actions, as described below:
Indicates to the integrator that control should be passed back immediately to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_USER_STOP.
Indicates to the integrator that the current time step should be abandoned and a smaller time step used instead. You may wish to set when a physically meaningless input or output value has been generated. If you consecutively set , d03prc returns to the calling function with the error indicator set to NE_FAILED_DERIV.
13: – Nag_Comm *
Pointer to structure of type Nag_Comm; the following members are relevant to odedef.
user – double *
iuser – Integer *
p – Pointer
The type Pointer will be void *. Before calling d03prc you may allocate memory and initialize these pointers with various quantities for use by odedef when called from d03prc (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
Note:odedef should not return floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by d03prc. If your code inadvertently does return any NaNs or infinities, d03prc is likely to produce unexpected results.
13: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of ODE/PDE coupling points.
Constraints:
if , ;
if , .
14: – const doubleInput
On entry: , for , must be set to the ODE/PDE coupling points, .
Constraint:
.
15: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of ODEs in the time direction.
Constraint:
.
16: – const doubleInput
Note: the dimension, dim, of the array rtol
must be at least
when or ;
when or .
On entry: the relative local error tolerance.
Constraint:
for all relevant .
17: – const doubleInput
Note: the dimension, dim, of the array atol
must be at least
when or ;
when or .
On entry: the absolute local error tolerance.
Constraint:
for all relevant .
Note: corresponding elements of rtol and atol cannot both be .
18: – IntegerInput
A value to indicate the form of the local error test. itol indicates to d03prc whether to interpret either or both of rtol or atol as a vector or scalar. The error test to be satisfied is , where is defined as follows:
In the above, denotes the estimated local error for the th component of the coupled PDE/ODE system in time, , for .
The choice of norm used is defined by the argument norm.
Constraint:
, , or .
19: – Nag_NormTypeInput
On entry: the type of norm to be used.
Maximum norm.
Averaged norm.
If denotes the norm of the vector u of length neqn, then for the averaged norm
while for the maximum norm
See the description of itol for the formulation of the weight vector .
Constraint:
or .
20: – Nag_LinAlgOptionInput
On entry: the type of matrix algebra required.
Full matrix methods to be used.
Banded matrix methods to be used.
Sparse matrix methods to be used.
Constraint:
, or .
Note: you are recommended to use the banded option when no coupled ODEs are present (i.e., ).
21: – const doubleInput
On entry: may be set to control various options available in the integrator. If you wish to employ all the default options, should be set to . Default values will also be used for any other elements of algopt set to zero. The permissible values, default values, and meanings are as follows:
Selects the ODE integration method to be used. If , a BDF method is used and if , a Theta method is used. The default value is .
If , then
, for , are not used.
Specifies the maximum order of the BDF integration formula to be used. may be , , , or . The default value is .
Specifies what method is to be used to solve the system of nonlinear equations arising on each step of the BDF method. If a modified Newton iteration is used and if a functional iteration method is used. If functional iteration is selected and the integrator encounters difficulty, there is an automatic switch to the modified Newton iteration. The default value is .
Specifies whether or not the Petzold error test is to be employed. The Petzold error test results in extra overhead but is more suitable when algebraic equations are present, such as
, for , for some or when there is no dependence in the coupled ODE system. If , the Petzold test is used. If , the Petzold test is not used. The default value is .
If ,
, for , are not used.
Specifies the value of Theta to be used in the Theta integration method. . The default value is .
Specifies what method is to be used to solve the system of nonlinear equations arising on each step of the Theta method. If , a modified Newton iteration is used and if , a functional iteration method is used. The default value is .
Specifies whether or not the integrator is allowed to switch automatically between modified Newton and functional iteration methods in order to be more efficient. If , switching is allowed and if , switching is not allowed. The default value is .
Specifies a point in the time direction, , beyond which integration must not be attempted. The use of is described under the argument itask. If , a value of , for , say, should be specified even if itask subsequently specifies that will not be used.
Specifies the minimum absolute step size to be allowed in the time integration. If this option is not required, should be set to .
Specifies the maximum absolute step size to be allowed in the time integration. If this option is not required, should be set to .
Specifies the initial step size to be attempted by the integrator. If , the initial step size is calculated internally.
Specifies the maximum number of steps to be attempted by the integrator in any one call. If , no limit is imposed.
Specifies what method is to be used to solve the nonlinear equations at the initial point to initialize the values of , , and . If , a modified Newton iteration is used and if , functional iteration is used. The default value is .
and are used only for the sparse matrix algebra option, i.e., .
Governs the choice of pivots during the decomposition of the first Jacobian matrix. It should lie in the range , with smaller values biasing the algorithm towards maintaining sparsity at the expense of numerical stability. If lies outside this range then the default value is used. If the functions regard the Jacobian matrix as numerically singular then increasing towards may help, but at the cost of increased fill-in. The default value is .
Used as a relative pivot threshold during subsequent Jacobian decompositions (see ) below which an internal error is invoked. must be greater than zero, otherwise the default value is used. If is greater than no check is made on the pivot size, and this may be a necessary option if the Jacobian is found to be numerically singular (see ). The default value is .
22: – Nag_BooleanInput
On entry: indicates whether or not spatial remeshing should be performed.
Indicates that spatial remeshing should be performed as specified.
Indicates that spatial remeshing should be suppressed.
Note:remesh should not be changed between consecutive calls to d03prc. Remeshing can be switched off or on at specified times by using appropriate values for the arguments nrmesh and trmesh at each call.
23: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of fixed mesh points.
Constraint:
.
Note: the end points and are fixed automatically and hence should not be specified as fixed points.
24: – const doubleInput
On entry: , for , must contain the value of the coordinate at the th fixed mesh point.
Constraint:
, for , and each fixed mesh point must coincide with a user-supplied initial mesh point, that is for some , .
Note: the positions of the fixed mesh points in the array remain fixed during remeshing, and so the number of mesh points between adjacent fixed points (or between fixed points and end points) does not change. You should take this into account when choosing the initial mesh distribution.
25: – IntegerInput
On entry: indicates the form of meshing to be performed.
Indicates that a new mesh is adopted according to the argument dxmesh. The mesh is tested every timesteps.
Indicates that remeshing should take place just once at the end of the first time step reached when .
Indicates that remeshing will take place every nrmesh time steps, with no testing using dxmesh.
Note:nrmesh may be changed between consecutive calls to d03prc to give greater flexibility over the times of remeshing.
26: – doubleInput
On entry: determines whether a new mesh is adopted when nrmesh is set less than zero. A possible new mesh is calculated at the end of every time steps, but is adopted only if
or
dxmesh thus imposes a lower limit on the difference between one mesh and the next.
Constraint:
.
27: – doubleInput
On entry: specifies when remeshing will take place when nrmesh is set to zero. Remeshing will occur just once at the end of the first time step reached when is greater than trmesh.
Note:trmesh may be changed between consecutive calls to d03prc to force remeshing at several specified times.
28: – IntegerInput
On entry: the level of trace information regarding the adaptive remeshing.
No trace information.
Brief summary of mesh characteristics.
More detailed information, including old and new mesh points, mesh sizes and monitor function values.
Constraint:
, or .
29: – doubleInput
On entry: an input bound on the adjacent mesh ratio (greater than and typically in the range to ). The remeshing functions will attempt to ensure that
Suggested value:
.
Constraint:
.
30: – doubleInput
On entry: an input bound on the sub-integral of the monitor function over each space step. The remeshing functions will attempt to ensure that
(see Furzeland (1984)). con gives you more control over the mesh distribution e.g., decreasing con allows more clustering. A typical value is , but you are encouraged to experiment with different values. Its value is not critical and the mesh should be qualitatively correct for all values in the range given below.
Suggested value:
.
Constraint:
.
31: – function, supplied by the userExternal Function
monitf must supply and evaluate a remesh monitor function to indicate the solution behaviour of interest.
If , monitf will never be called and the NAG defined null void function pointer, NULLFN, can be supplied in the call to d03prc.
On entry: the current value of the independent variable .
2: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of mesh points in the interval .
3: – IntegerInput
On entry: the number of PDEs in the system.
4: – const doubleInput
On entry: the current mesh. contains the value of , for .
5: – const doubleInput
Note: the th element of the matrix is stored in .
On entry: contains the value of at and time , for and .
6: – doubleOutput
On exit: must contain the value of the monitor function at mesh point .
Constraint:
.
7: – Nag_Comm *
Pointer to structure of type Nag_Comm; the following members are relevant to monitf.
user – double *
iuser – Integer *
p – Pointer
The type Pointer will be void *. Before calling d03prc you may allocate memory and initialize these pointers with various quantities for use by monitf when called from d03prc (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
Note:monitf should not return floating-point NaN (Not a Number) or infinity values, since these are not handled by d03prc. If your code inadvertently does return any NaNs or infinities, d03prc is likely to produce unexpected results.
If , rsave must be unchanged from the previous call to the function because it contains required information about the iteration.
33: – IntegerInput
On entry: the dimension of the array rsave.
Its size depends on the type of matrix algebra selected.
If , .
If , .
If , .
Where and are the lower and upper half bandwidths given by such that
for problems involving PDEs only,
for coupled PDE/ODE problems,
Where is defined by
if ,
if ,
if ,
Where is defined by
if the BDF method is used,
if the Theta method is used,
Note: when using the sparse option, the value of lrsave may be too small when supplied to the integrator. An estimate of the minimum size of lrsave is printed on the current error message unit if and the function returns with NE_INT_2.
If , isave must be unchanged from the previous call to the function because it contains required information about the iteration. In particular the following components of the array isave concern the efficiency of the integration:
Contains the number of steps taken in time.
Contains the number of residual evaluations of the resulting ODE system used. One such evaluation involves evaluating the PDE functions at all the mesh points, as well as one evaluation of the functions in the boundary conditions.
Contains the number of Jacobian evaluations performed by the time integrator.
Contains the order of the ODE method last used in the time integration.
Contains the number of Newton iterations performed by the time integrator. Each iteration involves residual evaluation of the resulting ODE system followed by a back-substitution using the decomposition of the Jacobian matrix.
The rest of the array is used as workspace.
35: – IntegerInput
On entry: the dimension of the array isave. Its size depends on the type of matrix algebra selected:
if , ;
if , ;
if , .
Note: when using the sparse option, the value of lisave may be too small when supplied to the integrator. An estimate of the minimum size of lisave is printed if and the function returns with NE_INT_2.
36: – IntegerInput
On entry: the task to be performed by the ODE integrator.
Normal computation of output values u at (by overshooting and interpolating).
Take one step in the time direction and return.
Stop at first internal integration point at or beyond .
Normal computation of output values u at but without overshooting where is described under the argument algopt.
Take one step in the time direction and return, without passing , where is described under the argument algopt.
Constraint:
, , , or .
37: – IntegerInput
On entry: the level of trace information required from d03prc and the underlying ODE solver as follows:
No output is generated.
Only warning messages from the PDE solver are printed.
Output from the underlying ODE solver is printed. This output contains details of Jacobian entries, the nonlinear iteration and the time integration during the computation of the ODE system.
Output from the underlying ODE solver is similar to that produced when , except that the advisory messages are given in greater detail.
The output from the underlying ODE solver is similar to that produced when , except that the advisory messages are given in greater detail.
38: – const char *Input
On entry: the name of a file to which diagnostic output will be directed. If outfile is NULL the diagnostic output will be directed to standard output.
39: – Integer *Input/Output
On entry: indicates whether this is a continuation call or a new integration.
Starts or restarts the integration in time.
Continues the integration after an earlier exit from the function. In this case, only the argument tout and the remeshing arguments nrmesh, dxmesh, trmesh, xratio and con may be reset between calls to d03prc.
Constraint:
or .
On exit: .
40: – Nag_Comm *
The NAG communication argument (see Section 3.1.1 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
41: – Nag_D03_Save *Communication Structure
saved must remain unchanged following a previous call to a Chapter D03 function and prior to any subsequent call to a Chapter D03 function.
42: – NagError *Input/Output
The NAG error argument (see Section 7 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface).
6Error Indicators and Warnings
NE_ACC_IN_DOUBT
Integration completed, but small changes in atol or rtol are unlikely to result in a changed solution.
The required task has been completed, but it is estimated that a small change in atol and rtol is unlikely to produce any change in the computed solution. (Only applies when you are not operating in one step mode, that is when or .)
NE_ALLOC_FAIL
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
See Section 3.1.2 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
NE_BAD_PARAM
On entry, argument had an illegal value.
NE_FAILED_DERIV
In setting up the ODE system an internal auxiliary was unable to initialize the derivative. This could be due to your setting in pdedef or bndary.
NE_FAILED_START
atol and rtol were too small to start integration.
NE_FAILED_STEP
Error during Jacobian formulation for ODE system. Increase itrace for further details.
Repeated errors in an attempted step of underlying ODE solver. Integration was successful as far as ts:
.
In the underlying ODE solver, there were repeated error test failures on an attempted step, before completing the requested task, but the integration was successful as far as . The problem may have a singularity, or the error requirement may be inappropriate. Incorrect positioning of boundary conditions may also result in this error.
Underlying ODE solver cannot make further progress from the point ts with the supplied values of atol and rtol.
.
NE_INCOMPAT_PARAM
On entry, ,
.
Constraint: .
On entry, ,
.
Constraint: .
On entry, the point does not coincide with any : and .
On entry, on initial entry .
Constraint: on initial entry .
NE_INT_2
On entry, and .
Constraint: corresponding elements and cannot both be .
On entry, .
Constraint: .
On entry, .
Constraint: .
On entry, ,
.
Constraint: .
On entry, and .
Constraint: when .
On entry, and .
Constraint: when .
On entry, ,
.
Constraint: .
When using the sparse option lisave or lrsave is too small:
,
.
NE_INT_4
On entry, , , and .
Constraint: .
NE_INTERNAL_ERROR
An internal error has occurred in this function. Check the function call and any array sizes. If the call is correct then please contact NAG for assistance.
See Section 7.5 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
Serious error in internal call to an auxiliary. Increase itrace for further details.
NE_ITER_FAIL
In solving ODE system, the maximum number of steps has been exceeded. .
NE_NO_LICENCE
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
See Section 8 in the Introduction to the NAG Library CL Interface for further information.
NE_NOT_CLOSE_FILE
Cannot close file .
NE_NOT_STRICTLY_INCREASING
On entry, , and .
Constraint: .
On entry, , , and .
Constraint: .
On entry, , and .
Constraint: .
NE_NOT_WRITE_FILE
Cannot open file for writing.
NE_REAL
On entry, .
Constraint: .
On entry, .
Constraint: .
NE_REAL_2
On entry, at least one point in xi lies outside : and .
Singular Jacobian of ODE system. Check problem formulation.
NE_USER_STOP
In evaluating residual of ODE system, has been set in pdedef, bndary, or odedef. Integration is successful as far as ts: .
NE_ZERO_WTS
Zero error weights encountered during time integration.
Some error weights became zero during the time integration (see the description of itol). Pure relative error control was requested on a variable (the th) which has become zero. The integration was successful as far as .
7Accuracy
d03prc controls the accuracy of the integration in the time direction but not the accuracy of the approximation in space. The spatial accuracy depends on both the number of mesh points and on their distribution in space. In the time integration only the local error over a single step is controlled and so the accuracy over a number of steps cannot be guaranteed. You should, therefore, test the effect of varying the accuracy arguments, atol and rtol.
8Parallelism and Performance
d03prc is threaded by NAG for parallel execution in multithreaded implementations of the NAG Library.
d03prc makes calls to BLAS and/or LAPACK routines, which may be threaded within the vendor library used by this implementation. Consult the documentation for the vendor library for further information.
Please consult the X06 Chapter Introduction for information on how to control and interrogate the OpenMP environment used within this function. Please also consult the Users' Note for your implementation for any additional implementation-specific information.
9Further Comments
The Keller box scheme can be used to solve higher-order problems which have been reduced to first-order by the introduction of new variables (see the example in Section 10). In general, a second-order problem can be solved with slightly greater accuracy using the Keller box scheme instead of a finite difference scheme (d03ppc for example), but at the expense of increased CPU time due to the larger number of function evaluations required.
It should be noted that the Keller box scheme, in common with other central-difference schemes, may be unsuitable for some hyperbolic first-order problems such as the apparently simple linear advection equation , where is a constant, resulting in spurious oscillations due to the lack of dissipation. This type of problem requires a discretization scheme with upwind weighting
(d03psc for example), or the addition of a second-order artificial dissipation term.
The time taken depends on the complexity of the system, the accuracy requested, and the frequency of the mesh updates. For a given system with fixed accuracy and mesh-update frequency it is approximately proportional to neqn.
10Example
This example is the first-order system
for and .
The initial conditions are
and the Dirichlet boundary conditions for at and at are given by the exact solution: