The nonlinear fractional point reactor kinetics equation in the presence of Newtonian temperature reactivity feedback with a multi-group of delayed neutrons,which describes the spectrum behavior of neutron density int...The nonlinear fractional point reactor kinetics equation in the presence of Newtonian temperature reactivity feedback with a multi-group of delayed neutrons,which describes the spectrum behavior of neutron density into the homogenous nuclear reactors, is developed. This system is one of the most important stiff coupled nonlinear fractional differentials for nuclear reactor dynamics. The generalization of Taylor's formula that involves Caputo fractional derivatives is developed in an attempt to overcome the difficulty of the stiffness of the nonlinear fractional differential model. Moreover, the general fractional derivatives are calculated analytically throughout this work. Furthermore, the local and global estimated errors were analyzed, which suggest that the error quantification should take into account the possible grow in time of the error. This observation provides a motivation for going beyond more classical local-in-time concepts of error(local truncation error). The neutron density response with time is analyzed for the anomalous diffusion, sub-diffusion, and super-diffusion processes.展开更多
文摘The nonlinear fractional point reactor kinetics equation in the presence of Newtonian temperature reactivity feedback with a multi-group of delayed neutrons,which describes the spectrum behavior of neutron density into the homogenous nuclear reactors, is developed. This system is one of the most important stiff coupled nonlinear fractional differentials for nuclear reactor dynamics. The generalization of Taylor's formula that involves Caputo fractional derivatives is developed in an attempt to overcome the difficulty of the stiffness of the nonlinear fractional differential model. Moreover, the general fractional derivatives are calculated analytically throughout this work. Furthermore, the local and global estimated errors were analyzed, which suggest that the error quantification should take into account the possible grow in time of the error. This observation provides a motivation for going beyond more classical local-in-time concepts of error(local truncation error). The neutron density response with time is analyzed for the anomalous diffusion, sub-diffusion, and super-diffusion processes.