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Journal ArticleDOI

An Anisotropic Sparse Grid Stochastic Collocation Method for Partial Differential Equations with Random Input Data

TLDR
This work proposes and analyzes an anisotropic sparse grid stochastic collocation method for solving partial differential equations with random coefficients and forcing terms (input data of the model) and provides a rigorous convergence analysis of the fully discrete problem.
Abstract
This work proposes and analyzes an anisotropic sparse grid stochastic collocation method for solving partial differential equations with random coefficients and forcing terms (input data of the model). The method consists of a Galerkin approximation in the space variables and a collocation, in probability space, on sparse tensor product grids utilizing either Clenshaw-Curtis or Gaussian knots. Even in the presence of nonlinearities, the collocation approach leads to the solution of uncoupled deterministic problems, just as in the Monte Carlo method. This work includes a priori and a posteriori procedures to adapt the anisotropy of the sparse grids to each given problem. These procedures seem to be very effective for the problems under study. The proposed method combines the advantages of isotropic sparse collocation with those of anisotropic full tensor product collocation: the first approach is effective for problems depending on random variables which weigh approximately equally in the solution, while the benefits of the latter approach become apparent when solving highly anisotropic problems depending on a relatively small number of random variables, as in the case where input random variables are Karhunen-Loeve truncations of “smooth” random fields. This work also provides a rigorous convergence analysis of the fully discrete problem and demonstrates (sub)exponential convergence in the asymptotic regime and algebraic convergence in the preasymptotic regime, with respect to the total number of collocation points. It also shows that the anisotropic approximation breaks the curse of dimensionality for a wide set of problems. Numerical examples illustrate the theoretical results and are used to compare this approach with several others, including the standard Monte Carlo. In particular, for moderately large-dimensional problems, the sparse grid approach with a properly chosen anisotropy seems to be very efficient and superior to all examined methods.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic collocation algorithms using 𝓁 1 -minimization

TL;DR: The analysis suggests that using the Chebyshev measure to precondition the ‘1-minimization, which has been shown to be numerically advantageous in one dimension in the literature, may in fact become less efficient in high dimensions.
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Enabling High-Dimensional Hierarchical Uncertainty Quantification by ANOVA and Tensor-Train Decomposition

TL;DR: This paper develops an efficient analysis of variance-based stochastic circuit/microelectromechanical systems simulator to efficiently extract the surrogate models at the low level and employs tensor-train decomposition at the high level to construct the basis functions and Gauss quadrature points.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sparse adaptive Taylor approximation algorithms for parametric and stochastic elliptic PDEs

TL;DR: In this paper, an adaptive numerical algorithm for constructing a sequence of sparse polynomials that is proved to converge toward the solution with the optimal benchmark rate is presented, where the convergence rate in terms of N does not depend on the number of parameters in V, which may be arbitrarily large or countably infinite.
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Discrete least squares polynomial approximation with random evaluations − application to parametric and stochastic elliptic PDEs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the least squares method is quasi-optimal in expectation in the univariate case, under suitable conditions that relate the number of samples with respect to the dimension of the polynomial space.
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A Multilevel Stochastic Collocation Method for Partial Differential Equations with Random Input Data

TL;DR: Stochastic collocation methods for approximating the solution of partial differential equations with Random input data with random input data suffer from the curse of dimensionality.
References
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Book

The Finite Element Method for Elliptic Problems

TL;DR: The finite element method has been applied to a variety of nonlinear problems, e.g., Elliptic boundary value problems as discussed by the authors, plate problems, and second-order problems.
Book

Finite Element Method for Elliptic Problems

TL;DR: In this article, Ciarlet presents a self-contained book on finite element methods for analysis and functional analysis, particularly Hilbert spaces, Sobolev spaces, and differential calculus in normed vector spaces.
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The Mathematical Theory of Finite Element Methods

TL;DR: In this article, the construction of a finite element of space in Sobolev spaces has been studied in the context of operator-interpolation theory in n-dimensional variational problems.
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Probability theory

Michel Loève
TL;DR: These notes cover the basic definitions of discrete probability theory, and then present some results including Bayes' rule, inclusion-exclusion formula, Chebyshev's inequality, and the weak law of large numbers.
Book

Probability Theory I

Michel Loève
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