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arxiv: 2604.26111 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-28 · 🧮 math.NA · cs.NA

A New Asymptotic-Preserving Dual Formulation Finite-Volume Method for the Compressible Euler Equations

Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 12:21 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.NA cs.NA
keywords schememachconservativenonconservativenumbernumericalsolutionsystem
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The pith

A dual nonconservative-conservative finite-volume scheme for compressible Euler equations delivers second-order accuracy and Mach-independent time steps via nonconservative hyperbolic splitting, Poisson pressure solve, and post-processing selection.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The compressible Euler equations describe gas motion and become numerically stiff when flow speeds are much slower than sound speed (low Mach number). Standard explicit methods then require tiny time steps, making simulations expensive. The authors split the equations into a stiff part handled semi-implicitly with central differences and a non-stiff part treated explicitly with a central-upwind scheme. Pressure is obtained by solving an elliptic Poisson equation at each step to enforce the asymptotic-preserving property. They also evolve the original conservative form in parallel. At the end of each time step a post-processing step picks the nonconservative solution for low Mach numbers and the conservative solution for higher Mach numbers. This hybrid approach keeps the time step independent of Mach number while preserving second-order accuracy and physical behavior across regimes.

Core claim

Numerical experiments confirm that the proposed AP scheme achieves the expected second order of accuracy and that the time-step constraint is independent of the Mach number, making it a robust and efficient alternative to conventional explicit methods.

Load-bearing premise

The post-processing step that selects between the nonconservative AP solution and the conservative CU solution depending on Mach number preserves accuracy, stability, and conservation properties without introducing new errors or inconsistencies.

read the original abstract

The paper focuses on the development of numerical methods for the compressible Euler equations. It is well-known that if the Mach number is small, the system becomes stiff and hence explicit schemes suffer from severe time-step restrictions, making them inefficient or even impractical. Our objective is to develop an asymptotic preserving (AP) scheme that remains uniformly accurate and stable across all Mach numbers. Instead of the conservative hyperbolic flux splitting approach, which is widely used to design AP schemes, we consider a primitive (nonconservative) formulation and introduce a nonconservative hyperbolic splitting. The resulting system is discretized using a semi-implicit approach: the stiff part is handled semi-implicitly using second-order central differences, while the nonstiff part is treated explicitly using a second-order path-conservative central-upwind (CU) discretization. A key feature of our method is that the pressure at each time level is computed by solving a well-posed Poisson-type elliptic equation, thereby enforcing the AP property. Simultaneously, we evolve the conservative form of the system using a semi-discrete CU scheme. At the end of each stage of the time discretization, we perform a special post-processing that selects the appropriate numerical solution depending on the Mach number. This guarantees that in low-Mach-number regimes, the solution is obtained by the AP nonconservative scheme, while in higher-Mach-number regimes, a sharp and physically relevant solution is computed by the conservative CU scheme. Numerical experiments confirm that the proposed AP scheme achieves the expected second order of accuracy and that the time-step constraint is independent of the Mach number, making it a robust and efficient alternative to conventional explicit methods.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The approach rests on standard assumptions of finite-volume methods for hyperbolic conservation laws and the well-posedness of the derived Poisson equation; no new free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The compressible Euler equations admit a nonconservative primitive-variable formulation whose stiff and non-stiff parts can be split for semi-implicit treatment.
    Invoked to justify the dual formulation and splitting strategy.
  • domain assumption A well-posed Poisson-type elliptic equation can be derived from the nonconservative system to compute pressure and enforce the asymptotic-preserving property.
    Central to the AP property claimed in the abstract.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5614 in / 1385 out tokens · 71214 ms · 2026-05-07T12:21:13.571558+00:00 · methodology

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