*DECK HWSPLR SUBROUTINE HWSPLR (A, B, M, MBDCND, BDA, BDB, C, D, N, NBDCND, + BDC, BDD, ELMBDA, F, IDIMF, PERTRB, IERROR, W) C***BEGIN PROLOGUE HWSPLR C***PURPOSE Solve a finite difference approximation to the Helmholtz C equation in polar coordinates. C***LIBRARY SLATEC (FISHPACK) C***CATEGORY I2B1A1A C***TYPE SINGLE PRECISION (HWSPLR-S) C***KEYWORDS ELLIPTIC, FISHPACK, HELMHOLTZ, PDE, POLAR C***AUTHOR Adams, J., (NCAR) C Swarztrauber, P. N., (NCAR) C Sweet, R., (NCAR) C***DESCRIPTION C C Subroutine HWSPLR solves a finite difference approximation to the C Helmholtz equation in polar coordinates: C C (1/R)(d/dR)(R(dU/dR)) + (1/R**2)(d/dTHETA)(dU/dTHETA) C C + LAMBDA*U = F(R,THETA). C C C C C * * * * * * * * Parameter Description * * * * * * * * * * C C * * * * * * On Input * * * * * * C C A,B C The range of R, i.e., A .LE. R .LE. B. A must be less than B C and A must be non-negative. C C M C The number of panels into which the interval (A,B) is C subdivided. Hence, there will be M+1 grid points in the C R-direction given by R(I) = A+(I-1)DR, for I = 1,2,...,M+1, C where DR = (B-A)/M is the panel width. M must be greater than 3. C C MBDCND C Indicates the type of boundary condition at R = A and R = B. C C = 1 If the solution is specified at R = A and R = B. C = 2 If the solution is specified at R = A and the derivative of C the solution with respect to R is specified at R = B. C = 3 If the derivative of the solution with respect to R is C specified at R = A (see note below) and R = B. C = 4 If the derivative of the solution with respect to R is C specified at R = A (see note below) and the solution is C specified at R = B. C = 5 If the solution is unspecified at R = A = 0 and the C solution is specified at R = B. C = 6 If the solution is unspecified at R = A = 0 and the C derivative of the solution with respect to R is specified C at R = B. C C NOTE: If A = 0, do not use MBDCND = 3 or 4, but instead use C MBDCND = 1,2,5, or 6 . C C BDA C A one-dimensional array of length N+1 that specifies the values C of the derivative of the solution with respect to R at R = A. C When MBDCND = 3 or 4, C C BDA(J) = (d/dR)U(A,THETA(J)), J = 1,2,...,N+1 . C C When MBDCND has any other value, BDA is a dummy variable. C C BDB C A one-dimensional array of length N+1 that specifies the values C of the derivative of the solution with respect to R at R = B. C When MBDCND = 2,3, or 6, C C BDB(J) = (d/dR)U(B,THETA(J)), J = 1,2,...,N+1 . C C When MBDCND has any other value, BDB is a dummy variable. C C C,D C The range of THETA, i.e., C .LE. THETA .LE. D. C must be less C than D. C C N C The number of panels into which the interval (C,D) is C subdivided. Hence, there will be N+1 grid points in the C THETA-direction given by THETA(J) = C+(J-1)DTHETA for C J = 1,2,...,N+1, where DTHETA = (D-C)/N is the panel width. N C must be greater than 3. C C NBDCND C Indicates the type of boundary conditions at THETA = C and C at THETA = D. C C = 0 If the solution is periodic in THETA, i.e., C U(I,J) = U(I,N+J). C = 1 If the solution is specified at THETA = C and THETA = D C (see note below). C = 2 If the solution is specified at THETA = C and the C derivative of the solution with respect to THETA is C specified at THETA = D (see note below). C = 4 If the derivative of the solution with respect to THETA is C specified at THETA = C and the solution is specified at C THETA = D (see note below). C C NOTE: When NBDCND = 1,2, or 4, do not use MBDCND = 5 or 6 C (the former indicates that the solution is specified at C R = 0, the latter indicates the solution is unspecified C at R = 0). Use instead MBDCND = 1 or 2 . C C BDC C A one-dimensional array of length M+1 that specifies the values C of the derivative of the solution with respect to THETA at C THETA = C. When NBDCND = 3 or 4, C C BDC(I) = (d/dTHETA)U(R(I),C), I = 1,2,...,M+1 . C C When NBDCND has any other value, BDC is a dummy variable. C C BDD C A one-dimensional array of length M+1 that specifies the values C of the derivative of the solution with respect to THETA at C THETA = D. When NBDCND = 2 or 3, C C BDD(I) = (d/dTHETA)U(R(I),D), I = 1,2,...,M+1 . C C When NBDCND has any other value, BDD is a dummy variable. C C ELMBDA C The constant LAMBDA in the Helmholtz equation. If C LAMBDA .LT. 0, a solution may not exist. However, HWSPLR will C attempt to find a solution. C C F C A two-dimensional array that specifies the values of the right C side of the Helmholtz equation and boundary values (if any). C For I = 2,3,...,M and J = 2,3,...,N C C F(I,J) = F(R(I),THETA(J)). C C On the boundaries F is defined by C C MBDCND F(1,J) F(M+1,J) C ------ ------------- ------------- C C 1 U(A,THETA(J)) U(B,THETA(J)) C 2 U(A,THETA(J)) F(B,THETA(J)) C 3 F(A,THETA(J)) F(B,THETA(J)) C 4 F(A,THETA(J)) U(B,THETA(J)) J = 1,2,...,N+1 C 5 F(0,0) U(B,THETA(J)) C 6 F(0,0) F(B,THETA(J)) C C NBDCND F(I,1) F(I,N+1) C ------ --------- --------- C C 0 F(R(I),C) F(R(I),C) C 1 U(R(I),C) U(R(I),D) C 2 U(R(I),C) F(R(I),D) I = 1,2,...,M+1 C 3 F(R(I),C) F(R(I),D) C 4 F(R(I),C) U(R(I),D) C C F must be dimensioned at least (M+1)*(N+1). C C NOTE C C If the table calls for both the solution U and the right side F C at a corner then the solution must be specified. C C C IDIMF C The row (or first) dimension of the array F as it appears in the C program calling HWSPLR. This parameter is used to specify the C variable dimension of F. IDIMF must be at least M+1 . C C W C A one-dimensional array that must be provided by the user for C work space. W may require up to 4*(N+1) + C (13 + INT(log2(N+1)))*(M+1) locations. The actual number of C locations used is computed by HWSPLR and is returned in location C W(1). C C C * * * * * * On Output * * * * * * C C F C Contains the solution U(I,J) of the finite difference C approximation for the grid point (R(I),THETA(J)), C I = 1,2,...,M+1, J = 1,2,...,N+1 . C C PERTRB C If a combination of periodic, derivative, or unspecified C boundary conditions is specified for a Poisson equation C (LAMBDA = 0), a solution may not exist. PERTRB is a constant, C calculated and subtracted from F, which ensures that a solution C exists. HWSPLR then computes this solution, which is a least C squares solution to the original approximation. This solution C plus any constant is also a solution. Hence, the solution is C not unique. PERTRB should be small compared to the right side. C Otherwise, a solution is obtained to an essentially different C problem. This comparison should always be made to insure that a C meaningful solution has been obtained. C C IERROR C An error flag that indicates invalid input parameters. Except C for numbers 0 and 11, a solution is not attempted. C C = 0 No error. C = 1 A .LT. 0 . C = 2 A .GE. B. C = 3 MBDCND .LT. 1 or MBDCND .GT. 6 . C = 4 C .GE. D. C = 5 N .LE. 3 C = 6 NBDCND .LT. 0 or .GT. 4 . C = 7 A = 0, MBDCND = 3 or 4 . C = 8 A .GT. 0, MBDCND .GE. 5 . C = 9 MBDCND .GE. 5, NBDCND .NE. 0 and NBDCND .NE. 3 . C = 10 IDIMF .LT. M+1 . C = 11 LAMBDA .GT. 0 . C = 12 M .LE. 3 C C Since this is the only means of indicating a possibly incorrect C call to HWSPLR, the user should test IERROR after the call. C C W C W(1) contains the required length of W. C C *Long Description: C C * * * * * * * Program Specifications * * * * * * * * * * * * C C Dimension of BDA(N+1),BDB(N+1),BDC(M+1),BDD(M+1),F(IDIMF,N+1), C Arguments W(see argument list) C C Latest June 1, 1976 C Revision C C Subprograms HWSPLR,GENBUN,POISD2,POISN2,POISP2,COSGEN,MERGE, C Required TRIX,TRI3,PIMACH C C Special None C Conditions C C Common NONE C Blocks C C I/O C C Precision Single C C Specialist Roland Sweet C C Language FORTRAN C C History Standardized April 1, 1973 C Revised January 1, 1976 C C Algorithm The routine defines the finite difference C equations, incorporates boundary data, and adjusts C the right side of singular systems and then calls C GENBUN to solve the system. C C Space 13430(octal) = 5912(decimal) locations on the NCAR C Required Control Data 7600 C C Timing and The execution time T on the NCAR Control Data C Accuracy 7600 for subroutine HWSPLR is roughly proportional C to M*N*log2(N), but also depends on the input C parameters NBDCND and MBDCND. Some typical values C are listed in the table below. C The solution process employed results in a loss C of no more than three significant digits for N and C M as large as 64. More detailed information about C accuracy can be found in the documentation for C subroutine GENBUN which is the routine that C solves the finite difference equations. C C C M(=N) MBDCND NBDCND T(MSECS) C ----- ------ ------ -------- C C 32 1 0 31 C 32 1 1 23 C 32 3 3 36 C 64 1 0 128 C 64 1 1 96 C 64 3 3 142 C C Portability American National Standards Institute FORTRAN. C The machine dependent constant PI is defined in C function PIMACH. C C Required COS C Resident C Routines C C Reference Swarztrauber, P. and R. Sweet, 'Efficient FORTRAN C Subprograms For The Solution Of Elliptic Equations' C NCAR TN/IA-109, July, 1975, 138 pp. C C * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * C C***REFERENCES P. N. Swarztrauber and R. Sweet, Efficient Fortran C subprograms for the solution of elliptic equations, C NCAR TN/IA-109, July 1975, 138 pp. C***ROUTINES CALLED GENBUN C***REVISION HISTORY (YYMMDD) C 801001 DATE WRITTEN C 890531 Changed all specific intrinsics to generic. (WRB) C 890531 REVISION DATE from Version 3.2 C 891214 Prologue converted to Version 4.0 format. (BAB) C 920501 Reformatted the REFERENCES section. (WRB) C***END PROLOGUE HWSPLR