Abstract

In this paper, a nonlinear fractional order model of COVID-19 is approximated. For this aim, at first we apply the Caputo–Fabrizio fractional derivative to model the usual form of the phenomenon. In order to show the existence of a solution, the Banach fixed point theorem and the Picard–Lindelof approach are used. Additionally, the stability analysis is discussed using the fixed point theorem. The model is approximated based on Indian data and using the homotopy analysis transform method (HATM), which is among the most famous, flexible and applicable semi-analytical methods. After that, the CESTAC (Controle et Estimation Stochastique des Arrondis de Calculs) method and the CADNA (Control of Accuracy and Debugging for Numerical Applications) library, which are based on discrete stochastic arithmetic (DSA), are applied to validate the numerical results of the HATM. Additionally, the stopping condition in the numerical algorithm is based on two successive approximations and the main theorem of the CESTAC method can aid us analytically to apply the new terminations criterion instead of the usual absolute error that we use in the floating-point arithmetic (FPA). Finding the optimal approximations and the optimal iteration of the HATM to solve the nonlinear fractional order model of COVID-19 are the main novelties of this study.

Highlights

  • Corona virus infection (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by the newly discovered Corona virus

  • Because of some advantages of the discrete stochastic arithmetic (DSA) in comparison to the floatingpoint arithmetic (FPA), we apply the mathematical methods based on the DSA instead of the methods based on the FPA

  • Given the importance of modeling and controlling the COVID-19 pandemic, we focused on a nonlinear fractional order model of COVID-19

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Summary

Introduction

Corona virus infection (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by the newly discovered Corona virus. Most people with COVID-19 disease experience mild to moderate symptoms and recover without special treatment. The virus that causes COVID-19 is mainly transmitted through particles produced when a person coughs, sneezes, or exhales. These particles do not stay suspended in the air due to their weight and fall quickly on the ground or surfaces. According to WHO reports until 2 March 2021, more than 115 million infected, more than 2.5 million dead and more than 90 million recovered people from more than 200 countries have been identified [1]

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