A Review of David Gottlieb's Work on the Resolution of the Gibbs Phenomenon

Authors

  • Sigal Gottlieb, Jae-Hun Jung & Saeja Kim

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4208/cicp.301109.170510s

Abstract

Given a piecewise smooth function, it is possible to construct a global expansion in some complete orthogonal basis, such as the Fourier basis. However, the local discontinuities of the function will destroy the convergence of global approximations, even in regions for which the underlying function is analytic. The global expansions are contaminated by the presence of a local discontinuity, and the result is that the partial sums are oscillatory and feature non-uniform convergence. This characteristic behavior is called the Gibbs phenomenon. However, David Gottlieb and Chi-Wang Shu showed that these slowly and non-uniformly convergent global approximations retain within them high order information which can be recovered with suitable postprocessing. In this paper we review the history of the Gibbs phenomenon and the story of its resolution.

Published

2011-03-05

Abstract View

  • 40214

Pdf View

  • 4203

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

A Review of David Gottlieb’s Work on the Resolution of the Gibbs Phenomenon. (2011). Communications in Computational Physics, 9(3), 497-519. https://doi.org/10.4208/cicp.301109.170510s