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On energy conservation of the simplified Takahashi-Imada method

In long-time numerical integration of Hamiltonian systems, and especially in molecular dynamics simulation, it is important that the energy is well conserved. For symplectic integrators applied with sufficiently small step size, this is guaranteed by the existence of a modified Hamiltonian that is exactly conserved up to exponentially small terms. This article is concerned with the simplified Takahashi-Imada method, which is a modification of the Störmer-Verlet method that is as easy to implement but has improved accuracy. This integrator is symmetric and volume-preserving, but no longer symplectic. We study its long-time energy conservation and give theoretical arguments, supported by numerical experiments, which show the possibility of a drift in the energy (linear or like a random walk). With respect to energy conservation, this article provides empirical and theoretical data concerning the importance of using a symplectic integrator.
- Massey University New Zealand
- Purdue University West Lafayette United States
- Purdue University West Lafayette United States
- University of Geneva Switzerland
- Massey University New Zealand
Symmetric and symplectic integrators, Modified differential equation, Energy conservation, Geometric numerical integration, Henon-Heiles problem, N-body problem in molecular dynamics, info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/510, ddc: ddc:510
Symmetric and symplectic integrators, Modified differential equation, Energy conservation, Geometric numerical integration, Henon-Heiles problem, N-body problem in molecular dynamics, info:eu-repo/classification/ddc/510, ddc: ddc:510
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