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arxiv: 1812.00676 · v2 · pith:3TURKFTXnew · submitted 2018-12-03 · 🧮 math.NA · cs.NA

Efficient multistep methods for tempered fractional calculus: Algorithms and Simulations

classification 🧮 math.NA cs.NA
keywords fastmethodfractionalmethodsintegraltemperedapproximationnumerical
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In this work, we extend the fractional linear multistep methods in [C. Lubich, SIAM J. Math. Anal., 17 (1986), pp.704--719] to the tempered fractional integral and derivative operators in the sense that the tempered fractional derivative operator is interpreted in terms of the Hadamard finite-part integral. We develop two fast methods, Fast Method I and Fast Method II, with linear complexity to calculate the discrete convolution for the approximation of the (tempered) fractional operator. Fast Method I is based on a local approximation for the contour integral that represents the convolution weight. Fast Method II is based on a globally uniform approximation of the trapezoidal rule for the integral on the real line. Both methods are efficient, but numerical experimentation reveals that Fast Method II outperforms Fast Method I in terms of accuracy, efficiency, and coding simplicity. The memory requirement and computational cost of Fast Method II are $O(Q)$ and $O(Qn_T)$, respectively, where $n_T$ is the number of the final time steps and $Q$ is the number of quadrature points used in the trapezoidal rule. The effectiveness of the fast methods is verified through a series of numerical examples for long-time integration, including a numerical study of a fractional reaction-diffusion model.

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