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We study the existence and uniqueness of Lp-bounded mild solutions for a class ofsemilinear stochastic evolutions equations driven by a real L\'evy processes withoutGaussian component not square integrable for instance the stable process through atruncation method by separating the big and small jumps together with the classicaland simple Banach fixed point theorem ; under local Lipschitz, Holder, linear growthconditions on the coefficients.

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 Processing 是一門開源編程語言和與之配套的集成開發環境(IDE)的名稱。Processing 在電子藝術和視覺設計社區被用來教授編程基礎,并運用于大量的新媒體和互動藝術作品中。

We survey recent developments in the field of complexity of pathwise approximation in $p$-th mean of the solution of a stochastic differential equation at the final time based on finitely many evaluations of the driving Brownian motion. First, we briefly review the case of equations with globally Lipschitz continuous coefficients, for which an error rate of at least $1/2$ in terms of the number of evaluations of the driving Brownian motion is always guaranteed by using the equidistant Euler-Maruyama scheme. Then we illustrate that giving up the global Lipschitz continuity of the coefficients may lead to a non-polynomial decay of the error for the Euler-Maruyama scheme or even to an arbitrary slow decay of the smallest possible error that can be achieved on the basis of finitely many evaluations of the driving Brownian motion. Finally, we turn to recent positive results for equations with a drift coefficient that is not globally Lipschitz continuous. Here we focus on scalar equations with a Lipschitz continuous diffusion coefficient and a drift coefficient that satisfies piecewise smoothness assumptions or has fractional Sobolev regularity and we present corresponding complexity results.

We establish a theoretical framework of the particle relaxation method for uniform particle generation of Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics. We achieve this by reformulating the particle relaxation as an optimization problem. The objective function is an integral difference between discrete particle-based and smoothed-analytical volume fractions. The analysis demonstrates that the particle relaxation method in the domain interior is essentially equivalent to employing a gradient descent approach to solve this optimization problem, and we can extend such an equivalence to the bounded domain by introducing a proper boundary term. Additionally, each periodic particle distribution has a spatially uniform particle volume, denoted as characteristic volume. The relaxed particle distribution has the largest characteristic volume, and the kernel cut-off radius determines this volume. This insight enables us to control the relaxed particle distribution by selecting the target kernel cut-off radius for a given kernel function.

A detailed numerical study of solutions to the Serre-Green-Naghdi (SGN) equations in 2D with vanishing curl of the velocity field is presented. The transverse stability of line solitary waves, 1D solitary waves being exact solutions of the 2D equations independent of the second variable, is established numerically. The study of localized initial data as well as crossing 1D solitary waves does not give an indication of existence of stable structures in SGN solutions localized in two spatial dimensions. For the numerical experiments, an approach based on a Fourier spectral method with a Krylov subspace technique is applied.

This paper presents a method for thematic agreement assessment of geospatial data products of different semantics and spatial granularities, which may be affected by spatial offsets between test and reference data. The proposed method uses a multi-scale framework allowing for a probabilistic evaluation whether thematic disagreement between datasets is induced by spatial offsets due to different nature of the datasets or not. We test our method using real-estate derived settlement locations and remote-sensing derived building footprint data.

The theory of mixed finite element methods for solving different types of elliptic partial differential equations in saddle point formulation is well established since many decades. This topic was mostly studied for variational formulations defined upon the same product spaces of both shape- and test-pairs of primal variable-multiplier. Whenever either these spaces or the two bilinear forms involving the multiplier are distinct, the saddle point problem is asymmetric. The three inf-sup conditions to be satisfied by the product spaces stipulated in work on the subject, in order to guarantee well-posedness, are well known. However, the material encountered in the literature addressing the approximation of this class of problems left room for improvement and clarifications. After making a brief review of the existing contributions to the topic that justifies such an assertion, in this paper we set up finer global error bounds for the pair primal variable-multiplier solving an asymmetric saddle point problem. Besides well-posedness, the three constants in the aforementioned inf-sup conditions are identified as all that is needed for determining the stability constant appearing therein, whose expression is exhibited. As a complement, refined error bounds depending only on these three constants are given for both unknowns separately.

We consider the statistical linear inverse problem of making inference on an unknown source function in an elliptic partial differential equation from noisy observations of its solution. We employ nonparametric Bayesian procedures based on Gaussian priors, leading to convenient conjugate formulae for posterior inference. We review recent results providing theoretical guarantees on the quality of the resulting posterior-based estimation and uncertainty quantification, and we discuss the application of the theory to the important classes of Gaussian series priors defined on the Dirichlet-Laplacian eigenbasis and Mat\'ern process priors. We provide an implementation of posterior inference for both classes of priors, and investigate its performance in a numerical simulation study.

We present an asymptotic-preserving (AP) numerical method for solving the three-temperature radiative transfer model, which holds significant importance in inertial confinement fusion. A carefully designedsplitting method is developed that can provide a general framework of extending AP schemes for the gray radiative transport equation to the more complex three-temperature radiative transfer model. The proposed scheme captures two important limiting models: the three-temperature radiation diffusion equation (3TRDE) when opacity approaches infinity and the two-temperature limit when the ion-electron coupling coefficient goes to infinity. We have rigorously demonstrated the AP property and energy conservation characteristics of the proposed scheme and its efficiency has been validated through a series of benchmark tests in the numerical part.

Exceptionally elegant formulae exist for the fractional Laplacian operator applied to weighted classical orthogonal polynomials. We utilize these results to construct a solver, based on frame properties, for equations involving the fractional Laplacian of any power, $s \in (0,1)$, on an unbounded domain in one or two dimensions. The numerical method represents solutions in an expansion of weighted classical orthogonal polynomials as well as their unweighted counterparts with a specific extension to $\mathbb{R}^d$, $d \in \{1,2\}$. We examine the frame properties of this family of functions for the solution expansion and, under standard frame conditions, derive an a priori estimate for the stationary equation. Moreover, we prove one achieves the expected order of convergence when considering an implicit Euler discretization in time for the fractional heat equation. We apply our solver to numerous examples including the fractional heat equation (utilizing up to a $6^\text{th}$-order Runge--Kutta time discretization), a fractional heat equation with a time-dependent exponent $s(t)$, and a two-dimensional problem, observing spectral convergence in the spatial dimension for sufficiently smooth data.

We consider a class of linear Vlasov partial differential equations driven by Wiener noise. Different types of stochastic perturbations are treated: additive noise, multiplicative It\^o and Stratonovich noise, and transport noise. We propose to employ splitting integrators for the temporal discretization of these stochastic partial differential equations. These integrators are designed in order to preserve qualitative properties of the exact solutions depending on the stochastic perturbation, such as preservation of norms or positivity of the solutions. We provide numerical experiments in order to illustrate the properties of the proposed integrators and investigate mean-square rates of convergence.

We present a new method to compute the solution to a nonlinear tensor differential equation with dynamical low-rank approximation. The idea of dynamical low-rank approximation is to project the differential equation onto the tangent space of a low-rank tensor manifold at each time. Traditionally, an orthogonal projection onto the tangent space is employed, which is challenging to compute for nonlinear differential equations. We introduce a novel interpolatory projection onto the tangent space that is easily computed for many nonlinear differential equations and satisfies the differential equation at a set of carefully selected indices. To select these indices, we devise a new algorithm based on the discrete empirical interpolation method (DEIM) that parameterizes any tensor train and its tangent space with tensor cross interpolants. We demonstrate the proposed method with applications to tensor differential equations arising from the discretization of partial differential equations.

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