A Priori Error Analysis of a High-Order Selective Discontinuous Galerkin Method for Elliptic Interface Problems
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 07:36 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A selective discontinuous Galerkin method for elliptic interface problems achieves optimal error estimates while reducing computational cost.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that the hybrid immersed finite element space, built from high-order Frenet IFE basis functions, supports a selective DG-CG scheme that is well-posed and attains optimal a priori error bounds in energy and L2 norms for elliptic interface problems on unfitted meshes.
What carries the argument
The hybrid immersed finite element (HIFE) space on interface elements, which inherits conformity and approximation properties from the high-order Frenet IFE basis functions.
If this is right
- The computational cost of the method is significantly lower than a full discontinuous Galerkin approach and comparable to continuous Galerkin methods.
- Optimal convergence rates are guaranteed under h-refinement for the hybrid space.
- The scheme remains stable and well-posed for interface problems.
- Error estimates hold in both the energy norm and the L2 norm.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This selective approach could extend to other interface problems such as Stokes flow or elasticity by adapting the hybrid space.
- Large-scale simulations might benefit from the reduced degrees of freedom without sacrificing accuracy.
- Further analysis could address adaptive mesh refinement or higher-order time integration.
Load-bearing premise
The high-order Frenet IFE basis functions from prior work supply the local conformity and approximation properties required for the hybrid space on interface elements.
What would settle it
Numerical experiments that fail to show the predicted optimal convergence rates in the energy or L2 norm under successive h-refinement would disprove the error estimates.
read the original abstract
This paper develops a high-order selective discontinuous Galerkin (SDG) method for solving elliptic interface problems on interface-unfitted Cartesian meshes. This method applies the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) formulation on interface elements and the continuous Galerkin (CG) formulation elsewhere. Correspondingly, we construct a new, locally conforming, hybrid immersed finite element (HIFE) space based on the high-order Frenet IFE basis functions of [1]. Compared with the DG method, the computational cost of this SDG method is significantly reduced and remains comparable to that of the CG method. We prove that the new HIFE space achieves optimal approximation under $h$-refinement, and we establish the well-posedness of the SDG scheme. {\it A priori} error estimates are derived in the energy and $L^2$ norms. Numerical examples are provided to verify the theoretical analysis.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper develops a high-order selective discontinuous Galerkin (SDG) method for elliptic interface problems on unfitted Cartesian meshes. It applies the DG formulation only on interface elements and the CG formulation elsewhere, while constructing a new locally conforming hybrid immersed finite element (HIFE) space based on the high-order Frenet IFE basis functions from prior work [1]. The authors claim to prove that this HIFE space achieves optimal approximation under h-refinement, establish well-posedness of the SDG scheme, and derive a priori error estimates in the energy and L2 norms, supported by numerical examples.
Significance. If the proofs of well-posedness and optimal approximation hold without degradation from the hybrid assembly, the SDG method would offer a practical efficiency gain over full DG approaches while retaining optimal convergence rates for interface problems. This could be significant for high-order simulations on unfitted meshes, as the computational cost is stated to remain comparable to CG methods.
major comments (1)
- Abstract and the section on HIFE space construction: the central claim that the new HIFE space achieves optimal approximation under h-refinement rests on transferring local conformity and approximation properties from the high-order Frenet IFE basis functions of [1]. The hybrid selective formulation (CG away from the interface, DG on interface elements) may introduce additional consistency or jump terms at the boundaries between CG and DG regions that are not explicitly addressed; without a detailed check that these terms do not degrade the inherited estimates, the optimality proof does not follow directly.
minor comments (1)
- The abstract refers to 'the new HIFE space' and 'the SDG scheme' without a brief equation or diagram summarizing the hybrid formulation; adding a short display of the selective weak form would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the thorough review and valuable feedback on our manuscript. We address the major comment in detail below and outline the revisions we will make to strengthen the presentation of the approximation results.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Abstract and the section on HIFE space construction: the central claim that the new HIFE space achieves optimal approximation under h-refinement rests on transferring local conformity and approximation properties from the high-order Frenet IFE basis functions of [1]. The hybrid selective formulation (CG away from the interface, DG on interface elements) may introduce additional consistency or jump terms at the boundaries between CG and DG regions that are not explicitly addressed; without a detailed check that these terms do not degrade the inherited estimates, the optimality proof does not follow directly.
Authors: We appreciate this observation, which highlights an important point for clarity. The manuscript does establish local conformity of the hybrid HIFE space by construction from the Frenet IFE basis functions of [1], and the selective formulation ensures that DG is applied only on interface elements while CG elements remain continuous. However, we agree that the potential consistency and jump terms arising precisely at the interfaces between CG and DG regions warrant an explicit verification to confirm they do not degrade the inherited approximation properties. In the revised version, we will expand the HIFE space construction section with a dedicated paragraph (or short subsection) that analyzes these boundary terms. We will show that, because the HIFE space is designed to be continuous across CG-DG element faces (via the local conformity) and the DG penalty terms are localized to interface elements, the additional terms are bounded by the standard approximation error of the underlying IFE basis and do not affect the optimal rates under h-refinement. This addition will make the transfer of approximation properties fully rigorous without altering the main theorems. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Minor reliance on prior basis construction from [1] does not create circularity in the error analysis
full rationale
The paper constructs a hybrid HIFE space based on high-order Frenet IFE basis functions from referenced prior work [1] and claims to prove optimal approximation properties for this new space under h-refinement, followed by well-posedness and a priori error estimates for the SDG scheme. The derivation applies standard finite-element approximation and stability arguments to the selective CG/DG formulation on unfitted meshes. No equations or claims in the abstract or description reduce the target error bounds to quantities fitted or defined inside this paper itself. The cited basis properties from [1] supply local conformity and approximation order as an external input rather than a self-referential loop, and the hybrid assembly is presented as a new construction whose properties are established here. This qualifies as a normal self-citation that is not load-bearing for the central result.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The interface is sufficiently smooth and the elliptic coefficients satisfy standard regularity conditions so that optimal approximation rates hold for the IFE space.
invented entities (1)
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Hybrid immersed finite element (HIFE) space
no independent evidence
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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