#### Conference abstracts

Plenary talk

July 14, 9:30 ~ 10:30

## Adaptive High-Order Methods for Elliptic Problems: Convergence and Optimality

### Politecnico di Torino, Italy   -   claudio.canuto@polito.it

Adaptive algorithms for $h$-type finite element discretizations of elliptic problems are by now well understood, as far as their convergence and optimality properties are concerned.

The design and analysis of adaptive algorithms for $hp$-type discretizations poses new challenges. Indeed, the choice between applying a mesh refinement or a polynomial enrichment is a delicate stage in the adaptive process, since early decisions in one of the two directions should be lately amenable to a correction in order to guarantee the final near-optimality of the adaptive discretization for a prescribed accuracy. Furthermore, the optimality of the approximation should be assessed with respect to specific functional classes in which the best $N$-term approximation error is allowed to decay exponentially, as opposed to the more familiar classes of algebraic decay which are natural for $h$-type, finite-order methods.

Building on the experience gained on adaptive spectral (Fourier, Legende) discretizations, we will highlight the results obtained in the last few years on the analysis of adaptive discretizations of $hp$-type. In particular, we will describe an abstract framework ($hp$-AFEM) in which such methods can be casted. It is based on alternating a solution stage, which provides a new approximate solution with guaranteed error reduction, and an adaptation stage, which yields a new $hp$-near best partition at the expense of a mild increase of the error. Under reasonable assumptions, this general algorithm is proven to be convergent with geometric rate and instance optimal. Several practical realizations of $hp$-AFEM will be discussed. Particular attention will be devoted to the issue of $p$-robustness, i.e., the independence from the polynomial degree of the constants involved in the analysis.

Joint work with Ricardo H. Nochetto (University of Maryland, USA), Rob Stevenson (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and Marco Verani (Politecnico di Milano, Italy).

FoCM 2017, based on a nodethirtythree design.