Applied/ACMS/Spring2025: Difference between revisions

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!align="left" | host(s)
!align="left" | host(s)
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| Feb 2
| Mar 28
|[https://people.math.wisc.edu/~chr/ Chris Rycroft] (UW)
|Spring break
|''The reference map technique for simulating complex materials and multi-body interactions''
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| Feb 9
|Apr 11
|[https://users.flatironinstitute.org/~sweady/ Scott Weady] (Flatiron Institute)
|[https://meche.mit.edu/people/faculty/pierrel@mit.edu Pierre Lermusiaux] (MIT)
|''Entropy methods in active suspensions''
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|Saverio and Laurel
|Chen
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| Mar 28
|Apr 18
|Spring break
|[https://www.math.uci.edu/~jxin/ Jack Xin] (UC Irvine) '''[Colloquium]'''
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| Apr 25
|[https://www-users.cse.umn.edu/~bcockbur/ Bernardo Cockburn] (Minnesota)
|''Transforming stabilization into spaces''
|Stechmann, Fabien
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Latest revision as of 22:43, 7 September 2024

Spring 2025

date speaker title host(s)
Mar 28 Spring break
Apr 11 Pierre Lermusiaux (MIT) Chen
Apr 18 Jack Xin (UC Irvine) [Colloquium]
Apr 25 Bernardo Cockburn (Minnesota) Transforming stabilization into spaces Stechmann, Fabien

Abstracts

Bernardo Cockburn (Minnesota)

Title: Transforming stabilization into spaces

In the framework of finite element methods for ordinary differential equations, we consider the continuous Galerkin method (introduced in 72) and the discontinuous Galerkin method (introduced in 73/74). We uncover the fact that both methods discretize the time derivative in exactly the same form, and discuss a few of its consequences. We end by briefly describing our ongoing work on the extension of this result to some Galerkin methods for partial differential equations.