Céa's lemma
Céa's lemma is a lemma in mathematics. It is an important tool for proving error estimates for the finite element method applied to elliptic partial differential equations.
Lemma statement
Let be a real Hilbert space with the norm
Let
be a bilinear form with the properties
-
for some constant
and all
in
(continuity)
-
for some constant
and all
in
(coercivity or
-ellipticity).
Let be a bounded linear operator. Consider the problem of finding an element
in
such that
-
for all
in
Consider the same problem on a finite-dimensional subspace of
so,
in
satisfies
-
for all
in
By the Lax–Milgram theorem, each of these problems has exactly one solution. Céa's lemma states that
-
for all
in
That is to say, the subspace solution is "the best" approximation of
in
up to the constant
The proof is straightforward
-
for all
in
We used the -orthogonality of
and
-
in
which follows directly from
-
for all
in
.
Note: Céa's lemma holds on complex Hilbert spaces also, one then uses a sesquilinear form instead of a bilinear one. The coercivity assumption then becomes
for all
in
(notice the absolute value sign around
).
Error estimate in the energy norm
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In many applications, the bilinear form is symmetric, so
-
for all
in
This, together with the above properties of this form, implies that is an inner product on
The resulting norm
is called the energy norm, since it corresponds to a physical energy in many problems. This norm is equivalent to the original norm
Using the -orthogonality of
and
and the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality
-
for all
in
.
Hence, in the energy norm, the inequality in Céa's lemma becomes
-
for all
in
(notice that the constant on the right-hand side is no longer present).
This states that the subspace solution is the best approximation to the full-space solution
in respect to the energy norm. Geometrically, this means that
is the projection of the solution
onto the subspace
in respect to the inner product
(see the picture on the right).
Using this result, one can also derive a sharper estimate in the norm . Since
-
for all
in
,
it follows that
-
for all
in
.
An application of Céa's lemma
We will apply Céa's lemma to estimate the error of calculating the solution to an elliptic differential equation by the finite element method.
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Consider the problem of finding a function satisfying the conditions
where is a given continuous function.
Physically, the solution to this two-point boundary value problem represents the shape taken by a string under the influence of a force such that at every point
between
and
the force density is
(where
is a unit vector pointing vertically, while the endpoints of the string are on a horizontal line, see the picture on the right). For example, that force may be the gravity, when
is a constant function (since the gravitational force is the same at all points).
Let the Hilbert space be the Sobolev space
which is the space of all square integrable functions
defined on
that have a weak derivative on
with
also being square integrable, and
satisfies the conditions
The inner product on this space is
-
for all
and
in
After multiplying the original boundary value problem by in this space and performing an integration by parts, one obtains the equivalent problem
-
for all
in
with
(here the bilinear form is given by the same expression as the inner product, this is not always the case), and
It can be shown that the bilinear form and the operator
satisfy the assumptions of Céa's lemma.
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In order to determine a finite-dimensional subspace of
consider a partition
of the interval and let
be the space of all continuous functions that are affine on each subinterval in the partition (such functions are called piecewise-linear). In addition, assume that any function in
takes the value 0 at the endpoints of
It follows that
is a vector subspace of
whose dimension is
(the number of points in the partition that are not endpoints).
Let be the solution to the subspace problem
-
for all
in
so one can think of as of a piecewise-linear approximation to the exact solution
By Céa's lemma, there exists a constant
dependent only on the bilinear form
such that
-
for all
in
To explicitly calculate the error between and
consider the function
in
that has the same values as
at the nodes of the partition (so
is obtained by linear interpolation on each interval
from the values of
at interval's endpoints). It can be shown using Taylor's theorem that there exists a constant
that depends only on the endpoints
and
such that
for all in
where
is the largest length of the subintervals
in the partition, and the norm on the right-hand side is the L2 norm.
This inequality then yields an estimate for the error
Then, by substituting in Céa's lemma it follows that
where is a different constant from the above (it depends only on the bilinear form, which implicitly depends on the interval
).
This result is of a fundamental importance, as it states that the finite element method can be used to approximately calculate the solution of our problem, and that the error in the computed solution decreases proportionately to the partition size Céa's lemma can be applied along the same lines to derive error estimates for finite element problems in higher dimensions (here the domain of
was in one dimension), and while using higher order polynomials for the subspace
References
- Céa, Jean (1964). Approximation variationnelle des problèmes aux limites (PDF) (PhD thesis). Annales de l'institut Fourier 14 2. pp. 345–444. Retrieved 2010-11-27. (Original work from J. Céa)
- Johnson, Claes (1987). Numerical solution of partial differential equations by the finite element method. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34514-6.
- Monk, Peter (2003). Finite element methods for Maxwell's equations. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-850888-3.
- Roos, H.-G.; Stynes, M.; Tobiska, L. (1996). Numerical methods for singularly perturbed differential equations: convection-diffusion and flow problems. Berlin; New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 3-540-60718-8.
- Eriksson, K.; Estep, D.; Hansbo, P.; Johnson, C. (1996). Computational differential equations. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56738-6.
- Zeidler, Eberhard (1995). Applied functional analysis: applications to mathematical physics. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-94442-7.
- Brenner, Susanne C.; L. Ridgeway Scott (2002). The mathematical theory of finite element methods (2nd ed.). ISBN 0-387-95451-1. OCLC 48892839.
- Ciarlet, Philippe G. (2002). The finite element method for elliptic problems ((SIAM Classics reprint) ed.). ISBN 0-89871-514-8. OCLC 48892573.