Solving Continuous Models with Dependent Uncertainty: A Computational Approach
Author(s) -
J.C. Cortés,
J.V. Romero,
M.D. Roselló,
Francisco-J. Santonja,
R.-J. Villanueva
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
abstract and applied analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.228
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1687-0409
pISSN - 1085-3375
DOI - 10.1155/2013/983839
Subject(s) - mathematics , orthonormal basis , galerkin method , orthogonality , basis (linear algebra) , polynomial chaos , projection (relational algebra) , range (aeronautics) , basis function , polynomial , class (philosophy) , mathematical optimization , algorithm , mathematical analysis , monte carlo method , finite element method , computer science , statistics , physics , geometry , materials science , quantum mechanics , composite material , thermodynamics , artificial intelligence
This paper presents a computational study on a quasi-Galerkin projection-based method to deal with a class of systems of random ordinary differential equations (r.o.d.e.’s) which is assumed to depend on a finite number of random variables (r.v.’s). This class of systems of r.o.d.e.’s appears in different areas, particularly in epidemiology modelling. In contrast with the other available Galerkin-based techniques, such as the generalized Polynomial Chaos, the proposed method expands the solution directly in terms of the random inputs rather than auxiliary r.v.’s. Theoretically, Galerkin projection-based methods take advantage of orthogonality with the aim of simplifying the involved computations when solving r.o.d.e.’s, which means to compute both the solution and its main statistical functions such as the expectation and the standard deviation. This approach requires the previous determination of an orthonormal basis which, in practice, could become computationally burden and, as a consequence, could ruin the method. Motivated by this fact, we present a technique to deal with r.o.d.e.’s that avoids constructing an orthogonal basis and keeps computationally competitive even assuming statistical dependence among the random input parameters. Through a wide range of examples, including a classical epidemiologic model, we show the ability of the method to solve r.o.d.e.’s
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