The space of C1 cubic Clough-Tocher splines is a classical finite element approximation space over triangulations for solving partial differential equations. However, for such a space there is no B-spline basis available, which is a preferred choice in computer aided geometric design and isogeometric analysis. A B-spline basis is a locally supported basis that forms a convex partition of unity. In this paper, we explore several alternative C1 cubic spline spaces over triangulations equipped with a B-spline basis. They are defined over a Powell-Sabin refined triangulation and present different types of C2 super-smoothness. The super-smooth B-splines are obtained through an extraction process, i.e., they are expressed in terms of less smooth basis functions. These alternative spline spaces maintain the same optimal approximation power as Clough-Tocher splines. This is illustrated with a selection of numerical examples in the context of least squares approximation and finite element approximation for second and fourth order boundary value problems.
Groselj, J., Speleers, H. (2023). Extraction and application of super-smooth cubic B-splines over triangulations. COMPUTER AIDED GEOMETRIC DESIGN, 103 [10.1016/j.cagd.2023.102194].
Extraction and application of super-smooth cubic B-splines over triangulations
Speleers H.
2023-01-01
Abstract
The space of C1 cubic Clough-Tocher splines is a classical finite element approximation space over triangulations for solving partial differential equations. However, for such a space there is no B-spline basis available, which is a preferred choice in computer aided geometric design and isogeometric analysis. A B-spline basis is a locally supported basis that forms a convex partition of unity. In this paper, we explore several alternative C1 cubic spline spaces over triangulations equipped with a B-spline basis. They are defined over a Powell-Sabin refined triangulation and present different types of C2 super-smoothness. The super-smooth B-splines are obtained through an extraction process, i.e., they are expressed in terms of less smooth basis functions. These alternative spline spaces maintain the same optimal approximation power as Clough-Tocher splines. This is illustrated with a selection of numerical examples in the context of least squares approximation and finite element approximation for second and fourth order boundary value problems.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.