EPSRC Symposium Workshop on New directions in computational partial differential equations
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Workshop on New directions in computational PDEsMonday 12 - Friday 16 January 2009Organisers: John Barrett (Imperial College), Charlie Elliott (Warwick), Chris Schwab (E.T.H.), Endre Süli (Oxford)
E. Cances (INRIA) PDEs and electronic structure calculations Klaus Deckelnick (Magdeburg) Approximation of axisymmetric solutions of Willmore flow under Dirichlet boundary conditions We consider the Willmore flow of axially symmetric surfaces subject to Dirichlet boundary conditions. The corresponding evolution is described by a nonlinear parabolic PDE of fourth order for the radial variable. A suitable weak form of the equation, which is based on the first variation of the Willmore energy, leads to a semidiscrete scheme, in which we employ C1 finite elements for the approximation in space. Our main results are optimal error bounds in Sobolev norms for the solution and its time derivative. This is joint work with Friedhelm Schieweck (Magdeburg). Ivan Graham (Bath) Multiscale finite elements for high-contrast elliptic interface problems
We introduce a new multiscale finite element method which is able to accurately capture solutions of elliptic interface problems with high contrast coefficients by using only coarse quasiuniform meshes, and without resolving the interfaces. A typical application would be the modelling of flow in a porous medium containing a number of inclusions of relatively low permeability, embedded in a matrix of relatively high permeability. Our method is H1- conforming, with degrees of freedom at the nodes of a triangular mesh and requires the solution of subgrid problems for the basis functions on elements which straddle the coefficient interface, but uses standard linear approximation otherwise. A key point is the introduction of novel coefficient-dependent boundary conditions for the subgrid problems. Under moderate assumptions, we prove that our methods have (optimal) convergence rate of O(h) in the energy norm and O(h2) in the L2 norm where h is the (coarse) mesh diameter and the hidden constants in these estimates are independent of the coefficient “contrast”. The proof does not depend on perodicity or any homogenisation argument. This is joint work with Jay Chu and Tom Hou of Caltech. Jonas Haehnle (Tübingen) Approximations of the Mumford-Shah functional for unit vector fields
From an optimization theoretic point of view optimal control problems for variational inequalities belong to the class of mathematical programs with equilibrium constraints (MPECs, for short) in function space. These problems typically lack constraint qualifications for proving existence of Lagrange multipliers in first order characterizations. In this talk, new first order concepts based one relaxation techniques for the original problem are presented. These approaches are constructive and allow to pattern solution algorithms after the proof steps. In addition, these techniques my be intertwined with multigrid concepts. Corresponding algorithms including their convergence analysis are discussed and numerical results are presented. M. Hinze (Hamburg) Optimization with PDEs in the presence of constraints – tailored discrete concepts and error analysis Karl Kunish (Graz) Semi-smooth Newton methods for optimal control of variational inequalities Semi-smooth Newton methods are superlinearly convergent iterative methods for non-differentiable optimization methods in function space. In the context of optimal control of variational inequalities proper regularization is required to profit from this property. Asymptotic as well as qualitative properties of this regularization are analysed. Omar Lakkis (Sussex) Error control via elliptic reconstruction in some evolution equations I will review the elliptic reconstruction technique (ERT) in a posteriori error analysis and its impact on error contro and adaptivity for fully discrete schemes for parabolic equations. The flexibility of the ERT, in contrast with more standard approaches, allows a almost indiscriminate combination of various parabolic PDE techniques such as energy methods, duality methods and heat-kernel estimates. The ERT simplifies and allows interesting extensions of previous methods (Lakkis & Makridakis, 2006; Makridakis & Nochetto 2003). In particular, it provides previously unavailable error bounds for Fully Discrete Schemes, such as pointwise norm error bounds for the heat equation (Demlow, Lakkis & Makridakis, 2009) and optimal-order and to derive estimates for fully-discrete parabolic schemes using elliptic gradient-recovery estimators (Lakkis & Pryer, 2009) and for certain non-conforming methods such as spatial DGFEM (Georgoulis & Lakkis, 2009). John Lowengrub (Irvine) Multiscale models of solid tumor growth and angiogenesis Aurora Marica (BCAM) Wave propagation and discontinuous Galerkin approximations R.H. Nochetto (Maryland) AFEM for geometric biomembranes and fluid-membrane interaction R. Nurnberg (Imperial) Numerical approximation of gradient flows for curve networks and surface clusters Christoph Ortner (Oxford) Analysis of Quasicontinuum Methods We consider the density-dependent magneto-hydrodynamics equations, which couples the incompressible Navier-Stokes equation with variable density and viscosity with Maxwell's equation to describe a viscous, incompressible, and electrically conducting multi-fluid. In the main part of the talk, we discuss problems to overcome to construct a convergent implicit stabilized finite element discretization: The proposed scheme satisfies a discrete energy law, and a discrete maximum principle for the positive density. These properties, together with a discrete version of the compactness result by R. DiPerna and P.L. Lions then establishes solvability, and convergence of the finite element solutions to weak solutions of the limiting problem for vanishing discretization parameters. Computational studies are provided. This is joint work with L. Banas (HW Edinburgh, UK). The talk will focus on the natural time discretization of gradient flows based on a balance of dissipation and energy decay. Typically the dissipation is formulated in terms of a flow or transport field, whereas the energy primarily depends on a deduced quantity. This leads to a nested structure of the resulting variational problem and concepts from PDE constraint optimization come into play. Applications will include thin film flow in coating layers, the spreading of thin films on curved surfaces, and the evolution of curves and surfaces under Willmore flow. In this talk I will present the method of PDEs, i.e., functional minimization, used in a wide range of image processing tasks, such as image denoising, deblurring, and image interpolation. In particular I am interested in nonlinear PDEs of fourth differential order appearing in image inpainting, i.e., image restoration. Thereby inpainting is the process of filling in missing parts of damaged images based on the information obtained from the surrounding areas. Digital image restoration is an important challenge in our modern computerized society: From the reconstruction of crucial information in satellite images of our earth, restoration of CT- or PET images in molecular imaging to the renovation of digital photographs and ancient artwork, digital image restoration is ubiquitous. Motivated by these applications, I investigate certain PDEs used for these tasks. We shall discuss both some of their analytic properties, the efficient numerical solution of these equations as well as the concrete real world applications (like the restoration of ancient Viennese frescoes). Markus Schmuck (Tübingen) Modeling, analysis and numerics in electrohydrodynamics B. Stinner (Warwick) Elastic biomembranes involving lipid separation The lipids of biomembranes may separate into coexisting phases. In addition to its elastic bending energy the membrane energy then involves a line energy arising from the phase interfaces. In biophysics, equilibrium shapes are of interest, in particular with respect to budding phenomena and vesicle fission. The goal has been to numerically study energy minima by relaxing suitable initial shapes according to an appropriate gradient flow dynamics. The intermembrane domains are described using the phase field methodology leading to a pde on the membrane which is coupled to a geometric evolution law for the membrane. The discretisation is based on representing the membrane by a triangulated surface on which linear parametric FEs are defined. The convergence as the interface thickness tends to zero has been numerically analysed, and the influence of various physical parameters numerically investigated. Adaptive refinement will be briefly discussed. Smoluchowski, Langevin and Ehrenfest dynamics are shown to be accurate approximations of time-independent Schrödinger observables for a molecular system, in the limit of large ratio of nuclei and electron masses, without assuming that the nuclei are localized to vanishing domains. The derivation, based on characteristics for the Schrödinger equation, bypasses the usual separation of nuclei and electron wave functions and gives a different perspective on computation of observables and stochastic electron equilibrium states in molecular dynamics simulations A. Voigt (Dresden) PDE's on surfaces - a diffuse interface approach E. Zuazua (Madrid) Dispersive methods for linear and nonlinear Schrödinger equations |
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