Methods and Applications of Analysis

Volume 17 (2010)

Number 3

The Pressure Gradient System

Pages: 263 – 278

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4310/MAA.2010.v17.n3.a2

Authors

Zachary Robinson

Yuxi Zheng

Abstract

The pressure gradient system is a sub-system of the compressible Euler system. It can be obtained either through a flux splitting or an asymptotic expansion. In both derivations, the velocity field is treated as a small remnant of the original velocity of the Euler system. As such, the boundary conditions for the velocity do not necessarily follow the original ones and careful consideration is needed for the validity, integrity, and completeness of the model. We provide numerical simulations as well as basic characteristic analysis and physical considerations for the Riemann problems of the model to find out appropriate internal conditions at the origin. The study reveals subtle structures of the velocity: Both components exhibit discontinuities at the origin at traditional levels of numerical resolutions around 400×400 cells on the unit square, but they vanish at the origin with possible square root type singularity when we increase the resolutions. Comparing to the roll-up of shear waves or vortex-sheets of the Euler system, these singularities are mild and occur only along rays from the origin. The numerics is done at higher resolutions than traditionally possible via the automated clawpack that contains adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) and message passing interface (MPI), for which we provide the Riemann solvers in both the normal and transversal directions, where the Roe's approximation has the elegant 1/2 average in the model's original variables.

Keywords

Dimension splitting, Riemann problem, Roe approximation

2010 Mathematics Subject Classification

Primary 35J70, 35L65, 35R35. Secondary 35J65.

Published 1 January 2010