Hi Kramer,
Thank you for the reply.
The only problem I see with the solution you suggest, is that both I and
lambda will be trial functions, so both terms should be on the bilinear
part of the variational form.
Not quite. I and lambda together form a Function in a mixed finite element space. You solve for both of them together, just like pressure and velocity in a fluid simulation.
 
I could, of course, define a residual and solve everything using
nonlinear solvers, but I don't know how efficient that would be.
I think you are confused. None of the relevant issues change in the nonlinear case. After all, the nonlinear solver will differentiate the residual to create a bilinear form anyway.
Incidentally, there is no particular reason to believe that writing the problem in nonlinear form would be inefficient.
Regards,
David
 
Best,
Anna.
  Dr Anna Kalogirou
  Research Fellow
  School of Mathematics
  University of Leeds
  http://www1.maths.leeds.ac.uk/~matak/
On 04/08/16 17:29, Stephan Kramer wrote:
> On 27/07/16 11:01, Anna Kalogirou wrote:
>> Dear all,
>>
>> I am trying to solve the system found in the attached pdf as a mixed
>> system. I want to solve the same
>> problem as the one found here
>> <https://bitbucket.org/annakalog/buoy2d/src/14334d3c20b9f10ed7c1246cde9e3cb60b1c75e4/Inequality%20constraint/?at=master>,
>>
>> but with the use of Schur complements and not linear algebra.
>>
>> In a previous discussion about this problem, Lawrence mentioned that the
>> test function for integral(lambda*Theta(x-Lp)dx) needs to be considered
>> as coming from the real space of constant functions. Could you please
>> elaborate on this?
>
> My guess at what Lawrence means is (it's how I would probably approach
> it), is that you add an additional equation that says
>
>  (1)  I = integral(lambda*Theta(x-Lp)dx)
>
> and then substitute I in your third equation. Equation (1) can
> be turned into a finite element weak formulation by considering the
> function space of functions that are constant over the entire domain
> This function space is just 1-dimensional and therefore equivalent to
> the space of reals R and hence we denote this function space of
> constants simply as R. Then we can consider I to be a trial function
> in R, and with a test function v4 in R, we can write:
>
>   v4*lambda*Theta(x-Lp)*dx == v4*I*dx/area(domain)
>
> This is a proper finite element equation that you could solve in
> conjuction with the other equations. I believe however that this
> function space R is not currently implemented in Firedrake. It is
> available in fenics, and is on the wishlist.
>
> Cheers
> Stephan
>
> _______________________________________________
> firedrake mailing list
> firedrake@imperial.ac.uk
> https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/firedrake
_______________________________________________
firedrake mailing list
firedrake@imperial.ac.uk
https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/firedrake