Discrete ABP Estimate and Convergence Rates for Linear Elliptic Equations in Non-divergence Form
Abstract: We design a two-scale finite element method (FEM) for linear elliptic PDEs in non-divergence form $A(x) : D2 u(x) = f(x)$ in a bounded but not necessarily convex domain $\Omega$ and study it in the max norm. The fine scale is given by the meshsize $h$ whereas the coarse scale $\epsilon$ is dictated by an integro-differential approximation of the PDE. We show that the FEM satisfies the discrete maximum principle (DMP) for any uniformly positive definite matrix $A$ provided that the mesh is face weakly acute. We establish a discrete Alexandroff-Bakelman-Pucci (ABP) estimate which is suitable for finite element analysis. Its proof relies on a discrete Alexandroff estimate which expresses the min of a convex piecewise linear function in terms of the measure of its sub-differential, and thus of jumps of its gradient. The discrete ABP estimate leads, under suitable regularity assumptions on $A$ and $u$, to pointwise error estimates of the form \begin{equation*} | u - u{\epsilon}_h |{L\infty(\Omega)} \leq \, C(A,u) \, h{2\alpha /(2 + \alpha)} \big| \ln h \big| \qquad 0< \alpha \leq 2, \end{equation*} provided $\epsilon \approx h{2/(2+\alpha)}$. Such a convergence rate is at best of order $ h \big| \ln h \big|$, which turns out to be quasi-optimal.
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