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Published April 1997 | public
Journal Article

Probabilistic and deterministic convergence proofs for software for initial value problems

Abstract

The numerical solution of initial value problems for ordinary differential equations is frequently performed by means of adaptive algorithms with user-input tolerance τ. The time-step is then chosen according to an estimate, based on small time-step heuristics, designed to try and ensure that an approximation to the local error commited is bounded by τ. A question of natural interest is to determine how the global error behaves with respect to the tolerance τ. This has obvious practical interest and also leads to an interesting problem in mathematical analysis. The primary difficulties arising in the analysis are that: (i) the time-step selection mechanisms used in practice are discontinuous as functions of the specified data; (ii) the small time-step heuristics underlying the control of the local error can break down in some cases. In this paper an analysis is presented which incorporates these two difficulties. For a mathematical model of an error per unit step or error per step adaptive Runge–Kutta algorithm, it may be shown that in a certain probabilistic sense, with respect to a measure on the space of initial data, the small time-step heuristics are valid with probability one, leading to a probabilistic convergence result for the global error as τ → 0. The probabilistic approach is only valid in dimension m > 1; this observation is consistent with recent analysis concerning the existence of spurious steady solutions of software codes which highlights the difference between the cases m = 1 and m > 1. The breakdown of the small time-step heuristics can be circumvented by making minor modifications to the algorithm, leading to a deterministic convergence proof for the global error of such algorithms as τ → 0. An underlying theory is developed and the deterministic and probabilistic convergence results proved as particular applications of this theory.

Additional Information

© 1997 Kluwer Academic Publisher. Supported by the Office of Naval Research under grant N00014-92-J-1876 and by the National Science Foundation under grant DMS-9201727. The author is grateful to Des Higham, Harbir Lamba and to several participants in the Georgia Tech Conference on Dynamical Numerical Analysis, for a number of useful suggestions.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
March 5, 2024