Refined convergence structures of the rectangular Raviart-Thomas element
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 04:36 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas element for the Laplace eigenvalue problem exhibits supercloseness to interpolated eigenfunctions, enabling one-order accuracy gains via post-processing and error expansions for both simple and多个t
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas element possesses a supercloseness property between the discrete eigenfunctions and the interpolated ones, derived from integral expansions of interpolation terms. This property yields error expansions for both simple and multiple eigenvalues that support Richardson extrapolation and prove convergence from above. On uniform rectangular meshes of the square domain the same property gives a rigorous proof of the convergence behavior for multiple eigenvalues. The element is also shown to be equivalent to the enriched rotated bilinear element.
What carries the argument
The integral expansion of interpolation terms on rectangular meshes, which produces the supercloseness between discrete eigenfunctions and their interpolants.
If this is right
- Post-processing of the discrete eigenfunctions yields up to one additional order of accuracy.
- Richardson extrapolation becomes available once the error expansions for simple and multiple eigenvalues are known.
- All eigenvalues of the discrete problem converge to the exact eigenvalues from above.
- Multiple eigenvalues on uniform meshes of the square domain obey a specific, rigorously proved convergence pattern.
- The rectangular Raviart-Thomas element can be replaced by the enriched rotated bilinear element without altering the convergence properties.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same integral-expansion technique may produce analogous supercloseness results for other mixed finite-element schemes on rectangular grids.
- Implementation cost can be reduced by freely switching between the Raviart-Thomas and enriched rotated bilinear elements on rectangles.
- Extension of the integral-expansion argument to three-dimensional rectangular hexahedral meshes could yield comparable refinements.
- On general quadrilateral meshes the proofs would require replacement techniques because they exploit rectangular geometry.
Load-bearing premise
The supercloseness and error expansions hold only when the mesh is rectangular, allowing exact integral expansions of the interpolation error.
What would settle it
A numerical experiment on a rectangular mesh in which the computed eigenvalues approach the true values from below would contradict the claimed convergence from above.
read the original abstract
In this work, we fully explore three refined convergence structures of the lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas element in solving the Laplace eigenvalue problem. Firstly, the scheme possesses a property of supercloseness between the discrete eigenfunctions and the interpolated ones, so that post-processing can be easily constructed to improve the accuracy at most by one order. The essentially skillful method is the integral expansion for interpolation terms. Secondly, based on the supercloseness property, we derive the error expansions for not only simple eigenvalues but also multiple eigenvalues, and provide a rigorous proof for them, based on which Richardson extrapolation can be performed. As a byproduct, we prove that all eigenvalues converge from above. Moreover, by utilizing the supercloseness property and Rayleigh quotient analysis, we give a rigorous proof for the convergence behavior for multiple eigenvalues on uniform meshes for the problem on the square domain. Thirdly, the equivalence between the lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas element and the enriched rotated bilinear element is also indicated. At the last of this work, several numerical experiments are designed to demonstrate our theory.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript examines refined convergence properties of the lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas finite element for the Laplace eigenvalue problem. It establishes supercloseness between discrete and interpolated eigenfunctions via integral expansions, derives error expansions for simple and multiple eigenvalues, proves convergence of eigenvalues from above, provides rigorous analysis for multiple eigenvalues on uniform square meshes, shows equivalence to the enriched rotated bilinear element, and includes numerical experiments.
Significance. This work offers important contributions to superconvergence and error analysis in finite element eigenvalue approximations. The supercloseness property enables post-processing for improved accuracy, and the error expansions support Richardson extrapolation. The proof that eigenvalues converge from above and the equivalence result are valuable theoretical insights. Numerical verification adds credibility to the findings.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The abstract claims derivation of error expansions for multiple eigenvalues with rigorous proofs, but specifies that the rigorous proof for convergence behavior of multiple eigenvalues is only for uniform meshes on the square domain. This creates ambiguity regarding the generality of the results for rectangular meshes, which is central to the paper's title and claims. Please specify the precise scope of each result.
- [Section on error expansions for multiple eigenvalues] Section on error expansions for multiple eigenvalues: The use of Rayleigh quotient analysis for multiple eigenvalues appears limited to uniform meshes. If the integral expansion identities used for supercloseness do not hold or require additional assumptions for non-uniform rectangular meshes, the error expansion and post-processing claims may not apply broadly. A concrete example or counterexample on a non-uniform rectangular mesh would strengthen the claim.
minor comments (2)
- [Notation] Ensure consistent use of notation for the Raviart-Thomas space and interpolation operators throughout the manuscript.
- [Figures] The numerical results figures would benefit from error tables with computed orders to make the convergence rates more evident.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive review of our manuscript on the refined convergence structures of the lowest-order rectangular Raviart-Thomas element. We address each major comment below with clarifications on the scope of our results and indicate the revisions planned for the next version of the paper.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The abstract claims derivation of error expansions for multiple eigenvalues with rigorous proofs, but specifies that the rigorous proof for convergence behavior of multiple eigenvalues is only for uniform meshes on the square domain. This creates ambiguity regarding the generality of the results for rectangular meshes, which is central to the paper's title and claims. Please specify the precise scope of each result.
Authors: We agree that the abstract should more precisely delineate the scope to avoid ambiguity. The supercloseness property and the associated integral expansion identities are established for general rectangular meshes. Error expansions for both simple and multiple eigenvalues are derived from this supercloseness and hold under the same assumptions. The rigorous proof for the convergence behavior of multiple eigenvalues via Rayleigh quotient analysis is, however, specialized to uniform meshes on the square domain. We will revise the abstract to explicitly state: error expansions and post-processing apply to rectangular meshes, while the detailed Rayleigh-quotient convergence analysis for multiple eigenvalues is proven for uniform square meshes. This revision will align the abstract with the title and the body of the paper. revision: yes
-
Referee: [Section on error expansions for multiple eigenvalues] Section on error expansions for multiple eigenvalues: The use of Rayleigh quotient analysis for multiple eigenvalues appears limited to uniform meshes. If the integral expansion identities used for supercloseness do not hold or require additional assumptions for non-uniform rectangular meshes, the error expansion and post-processing claims may not apply broadly. A concrete example or counterexample on a non-uniform rectangular mesh would strengthen the claim.
Authors: The integral expansion identities underlying supercloseness are derived for general rectangular meshes and do not require mesh uniformity. The Rayleigh quotient analysis is applied specifically when proving the convergence behavior of multiple eigenvalues on uniform square meshes. To strengthen the presentation, we will add a numerical example on a non-uniform rectangular mesh demonstrating that the supercloseness property and resulting error expansions continue to hold, thereby supporting the post-processing claims for rectangular meshes. This addition will clarify the applicability of the core results while acknowledging the specialized nature of the Rayleigh-based proof. revision: partial
Circularity Check
Derivations rely on independent integral expansions and Rayleigh analysis with no self-referential reduction
full rationale
The paper constructs its central results—supercloseness via integral expansions of interpolation terms, error expansions for simple and multiple eigenvalues, convergence from above, and equivalence to the enriched rotated bilinear element—through direct mathematical proofs on rectangular meshes. These steps use standard finite-element identities and Rayleigh-quotient arguments that are derived within the present work rather than fitted to data or reduced to prior self-citations by construction. The restriction of the multiple-eigenvalue proof to uniform square meshes is an explicit limitation of the analysis, not a hidden circularity. No load-bearing premise collapses to a self-definition or renamed input.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Rectangular mesh regularity and sufficient Sobolev regularity of eigenfunctions for interpolation error estimates.
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
the scheme possesses a property of supercloseness between the discrete eigenfunctions and the interpolated ones, so that post-processing can be easily constructed to improve the accuracy at most by one order. [...] we derive the error expansions for not only simple eigenvalues but also multiple eigenvalues
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/DimensionForcing.leanalexander_duality_circle_linking unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
by utilizing the supercloseness property and Rayleigh quotient analysis, we give a rigorous proof for the convergence behavior for multiple eigenvalues on uniform meshes for the problem on the square domain
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Armentano, M., Dur´ an, R.: Asymptotic lower bounds for eigenvalues by non- conforming finite element methods.Electron. Trans. Numer. Anal,17, 93–101, (2004)
work page 2004
-
[2]
Arnold, D.N., Brezzi, F.: Mixed and nonconforming finite element methods imple- mentation, postprocessing and error estimates.Mod´ el. Math. Anal. Num´ er.,19, 7–32, (1985)
work page 1985
-
[3]
In: Finite Element Methods (Part I).Handbook of Numerical Analysis,2, 641–787 (1984)
Babuˇ ska, I., Osborn, J.E.: Eigenvalue problems. In: Finite Element Methods (Part I).Handbook of Numerical Analysis,2, 641–787 (1984)
work page 1984
-
[4]
Babuˇ ska, I., Osborn, J.E.: Estimates for the errors in eigenvalue and eigenvec- tor approximation by Galerkin methods with particular attention to the case of multiple eigenvalue.SIAM J. Numer. Anal.,24, 1249–1276, (1987)
work page 1987
-
[5]
Babuˇ ska, I., Osborn, J.E.: Finite element-Galerkin approximation of the eigen- values and eigenvectors of selfadjoint problems.Math. Comp.,52, 275–297, (1989)
work page 1989
-
[6]
Brandts, J.H.: Superconvergence and a posteriori error estimation for triangular mixed finite elements.Numer. Math.,68, 311–324, (1994)
work page 1994
-
[7]
Brezzi, F., Fortin, M.: Mixed and Hybrid Finite Element Methods.Springer Series in Computational Mathematics, 15, (1991)
work page 1991
-
[8]
Boffi, D.: Finite element approximation of eigenvalue problems.Acta Numerica, 19:1–120, (2010) 26
work page 2010
-
[9]
Chen, H., Jia, S., Xie, H.: Postprocessing and higher order convergence for the mixed finite element approximations of the eigenvalue problem,Applied Numerical Mathematics,61, 615–629, (2011)
work page 2011
-
[10]
Douglas, J., Wang, J.: Superconvergence of mixed finite element methods on rectangular domains.Calcolo,26, 121–133, (1989)
work page 1989
-
[11]
Dur´ an, R.: Superconvergence for rectangular mixed finite elements.Numer. Math.,58, 287–298, (1990)
work page 1990
-
[12]
Dur´ an, R., Gastaldi L., Padra C.: A posteriori error estimators for mixed approx- imations of eigenvalue problems.Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci.,9, 1165–1178, (1999)
work page 1999
-
[13]
Fairweather, G., Lin, Q., Lin, Y., Wang, J., Zhang, S.: Asymptotic expansions and Richardson extrapolation of approximate solutions for second order elliptic problems by mixed finite element methods,SIAM J. Numer. Anal.,44, 1122– 1149, (2006)
work page 2006
-
[14]
Hu, J., Huang, Y., Lin, Q.: Lower bounds for eigenvalues of elliptic operators: by nonconforming finite element methods.Journal of Scientific Computing,61, 196–221, (2014)
work page 2014
-
[15]
Hu, J., Ma, R.: The Enriched Crouzeix-Raviart Elements are Equivalent to the Raviart-Thomas Elements.J. Sci. Comput.,63, 410–425, (2015)
work page 2015
-
[16]
Kato, T.: Perturbation theory for nullity, deficiency and other quantities of linear operators,J. Anal. Math.,6, 261–322, (1958)
work page 1958
-
[17]
Li, Y.: Lower approximation of eigenvalues by the nonconforming finite element method.Math. Numer. Sin.,30, 195–200, (2008)
work page 2008
-
[18]
Lin, Q., Huang, H., Li, Z.: New expansions of numerical eigenvlaues for−∆u= λρuby nonconforming elements.Math. Comput.,77, 2061–2084, (2008)
work page 2061
-
[19]
Lin, Q., Lin, J.: Finite element methods: accuracy and improvement.Science Press, (2006)
work page 2006
-
[20]
Lin, Q., Xie, H.: Asymptotic error expansion and Richardson extrapolation of eigenvalue approximations for second order elliptic problems by the mixed finite element method.Applied Numerical Mathematics,59, 1884–1893, (2009)
work page 2009
-
[21]
Lin, Q., Xie, H.: A Superconvergence result for mixed finite element approxima- tions of the eigenvalue problem.Mathematical Modelling and Numerical Analysis, 46, 797–812, (2012) 27
work page 2012
-
[22]
Marini, L.D.: An inexpensive method for the evaluation of the solution of the lowest order Raviart-Thomas mixed method.SIAM J. Numer. Anal.,22, 493– 496, (1985)
work page 1985
-
[23]
In Mathematical Aspects of Finite Element Methods.Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 292–315, (1977)
Raviart, P.A., Thomas, J.M.: A mixed finite element method for 2-nd order elliptic problems. In Mathematical Aspects of Finite Element Methods.Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 292–315, (1977)
work page 1977
-
[24]
Sheng, Y., Zhang, T., Pan, Z.: Superconvergence of the finite element method for the Stokes eigenvalue problem.Chaos, Solitons and Fractals,144, 110706, (2021)
work page 2021
-
[25]
Yang, Y., Bi, H., Li, S.: The extrapolation of numerical eigenvalues by finite elements for differential operators.Applied Numerical Mathematics,69, 59–72, (2013)
work page 2013
-
[26]
Zhang, S.: A nonconforming framework for finite element exterior calculus.IMA J. Numer. Anal., published online, (2026) 28
work page 2026
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.