Volume 31, pp. 403-424, 2008.
On a multilevel Krylov method for the Helmholtz equation preconditioned by shifted Laplacian
Yogi A. Erlangga and Reinhard Nabben
Abstract
In Erlangga and Nabben [SIAM J. Sci. Comput., 30 (2008), pp. 1572–1595], a
multilevel Krylov method is proposed to solve linear systems with symmetric and
nonsymmetric matrices of coefficients. This multilevel method is based on an
operator which shifts some small eigenvalues to the largest eigenvalue, leading
to a spectrum which is favorable for convergence acceleration of a Krylov
subspace method. This shift technique involves a subspace or coarse-grid solve.
The multilevel Krylov method is obtained via a recursive application of the
shift operator on the coarse-grid system. This method has been applied
successfully to 2D convection-diffusion problems for which a standard multigrid
method fails to converge.
In this paper, we extend this multilevel Krylov method to indefinite linear
systems arising from a discretization of the Helmholtz equation, preconditioned
by shifted Laplacian as introduced by Erlangga, Oosterlee and Vuik [SIAM J.
Sci. Comput. 27 (2006), pp. 1471–1492]. Within the Krylov iteration and the
multilevel steps, for each coarse-grid solve a multigrid iteration is used to
approximately invert the shifted Laplacian preconditioner. Hence, a multilevel
Krylov-multigrid (MKMG) method results.
Numerical results are given for high wavenumbers and show the effectiveness of
the method for solving Helmholtz problems. Not only can the convergence be made
almost independent of grid size
Full Text (PDF) [299 KB], BibTeX
Key words
multilevel Krylov method, GMRES, multigrid, Helmholtz equation, shifted-Laplace preconditioner.
AMS subject classifications
65F10, 65F50, 65N22, 65N55.
ETNA articles which cite this article
Vol. 51 (2019), pp. 512-528 René Kehl, Reinhard Nabben, and Daniel B. Szyld: Adaptive Multilevel Krylov Methods |
Vol. 54 (2021), pp. 534-557 Luis García Ramos, Olivier Sète, and Reinhard Nabben: Preconditioning the Helmholtz equation with the shifted Laplacian and Faber polynomials |