Abstract

We present an adaptive algorithm for the computation of quantities of interest involving the solution of a stochastic elliptic partial differential equation, where the diffusion coefficient is parametrized by means of a Karhunen-Loève expansion. The approximation of the equivalent parametric problem requires a restriction of the countably infinite-dimensional parameter space to a finite-dimensional parameter set, a spatial discretization, and an approximation in the parametric variables. We consider a sparse grid approach between these approximation directions in order to reduce the computational effort and propose a dimension-adaptive combination technique. In addition, a sparse grid quadrature for the high-dimensional parametric approximation is employed and simultaneously balanced with the spatial and stochastic approximation. Our adaptive algorithm constructs a sparse grid approximation based on the benefit-cost ratio such that the regularity and thus the decay of the Karhunen-Loève coefficients is not required beforehand. The decay is detected and exploited as the algorithm adjusts to the anisotropy in the parametric variables. We include numerical examples for the Darcy problem with a lognormal permeability field, which illustrate a good performance of the algorithm. For sufficiently smooth random fields, we essentially recover the spatial order of convergence as asymptotic convergence rate with respect to the computational cost.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call