Mohanty, R. K.; Jain, M. K.; Arora, Urvashi An unconditionally stable ADI method for the linear hyperbolic equation in three space dimensions. (English) Zbl 0995.65093 Int. J. Comput. Math. 79, No. 1, 133-142 (2002). Summary: An unconditionally stable alternating direction implicit (ADI) method of \(O(k^2+ h^2)\) of M. Lees type [J. Soc. Ind. Appl. Math. 10, 610-616 (1962; Zbl 0111.29204)] for solving the three space dimensional linear hyperbolic equation \(u_{tt}+ 2\alpha u_t+ \beta^2u= u_{xx}+ u_{yy}+ u_{zz}+ f(x,y,z,t)\), \(0< x, y\), \(z< 1\), \(t> 0\) subject to appropriate initial and Dirichlet boundary conditions is proposed, where \(\alpha> 0\) and \(\beta\geq 0\) are real numbers. For this method, we use a single computational cell. The resulting system of algebraic equations is solved by a three step split method. The new method is demonstrated by a suitable numerical example. Cited in 61 Documents MSC: 65M06 Finite difference methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs 65M12 Stability and convergence of numerical methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs 35L05 Wave equation 65F10 Iterative numerical methods for linear systems Keywords:unconditional stability; damped wave equation; ADI method; linear hyperbolic equation; Padé approximation; alternating direction implicit method; step split method; numerical example Citations:Zbl 0111.29204 PDF BibTeX XML Cite \textit{R. K. Mohanty} et al., Int. J. Comput. Math. 79, No. 1, 133--142 (2002; Zbl 0995.65093) Full Text: DOI References: [1] DOI: 10.1080/00207169508804400 · Zbl 0845.65046 [2] DOI: 10.1137/0110046 · Zbl 0111.29204 [3] DOI: 10.1093/imamat/11.1.105 · Zbl 0259.65085 [4] DOI: 10.1137/0706006 · Zbl 0175.16203 [5] Jain M. K., ”Numerical solution of differential equations”, 2. ed. (1984) · Zbl 0536.65004 This reference list is based on information provided by the publisher or from digital mathematics libraries. Its items are heuristically matched to zbMATH identifiers and may contain data conversion errors. It attempts to reflect the references listed in the original paper as accurately as possible without claiming the completeness or perfect precision of the matching.