Applied/ACMS/absS14: Difference between revisions
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Natural images tend to be compressible, i.e., the amount of information needed to encode an image is small. This conciseness of information -- in other words, low dimensionality of the signal -- is found throughout a plethora of applications ranging from MRI to quantum state tomography. It is natural to ask: can the number of measurements needed to determine a signal be comparable with the information content? We explore this question under modern models of low-dimensionality and measurement acquisition. | Natural images tend to be compressible, i.e., the amount of information needed to encode an image is small. This conciseness of information -- in other words, low dimensionality of the signal -- is found throughout a plethora of applications ranging from MRI to quantum state tomography. It is natural to ask: can the number of measurements needed to determine a signal be comparable with the information content? We explore this question under modern models of low-dimensionality and measurement acquisition. | ||
=== Lorenzo Pareschi === | === Lorenzo Pareschi (University of Ferrara) === | ||
''Kinetic description and simulation of optimal control problems in self-organized systems'' | ''Kinetic description and simulation of optimal control problems in self-organized systems'' |
Revision as of 22:52, 3 February 2014
ACMS Abstracts: Spring 2014
Adrianna Gillman (Dartmouth)
Fast direct solvers for linear partial differential equations
The cost of solving a large linear system often determines what can and cannot be modeled computationally in many areas of science and engineering. Unlike Gaussian elimination which scales cubically with the respect to the number of unknowns, fast direct solvers construct an inverse of a linear in system with a cost that scales linearly or nearly linearly. The fast direct solvers presented in this talk are designed for the linear systems arising from the discretization of linear partial differential equations. These methods are more robust, versatile and stable than iterative schemes. Since an inverse is computed, additional right-hand sides can be processed rapidly. The talk will give the audience a brief introduction to the core ideas, an overview of recent advancements, and it will conclude with a sampling of challenging application examples including the scattering of waves.
Yaniv Plan (Michigan)
Low-dimensionality in mathematical signal processing
Natural images tend to be compressible, i.e., the amount of information needed to encode an image is small. This conciseness of information -- in other words, low dimensionality of the signal -- is found throughout a plethora of applications ranging from MRI to quantum state tomography. It is natural to ask: can the number of measurements needed to determine a signal be comparable with the information content? We explore this question under modern models of low-dimensionality and measurement acquisition.
Lorenzo Pareschi (University of Ferrara)
Kinetic description and simulation of optimal control problems in self-organized systems
Emerging phenomena driven by interactions of a large number of self-organized agents are present in various real life applications. Different to the classical approach where individuals are assumed to freely interact with each other, here we are particularly interested in such problems in a constrained setting. This can be used to understand the influence of external factors to the system dynamics, for example to enforce emergence of non spontaneous desired asymptotic states. Classical examples are given by persuading voters to vote for a specific candidate, by influencing buyers towards a given good or asset or by confining/driving a group of animals in a specific area. In this talk we review different kind of controls for the resulting process and present several kinetic models and stochastic simulation methods including those controls.
Harvey Segur (Colorado)
The nonlinear Schrödinger equation, dissipation and ocean swell
The focus of this talk is less about how to solve a particular mathematical model, and more about how to find the right model of a physical problem.
The nonlinear Schrödinger (NLS) equation was discovered as an approximate model of wave propagation in several branches of physics in the 1960s. It has become one of the most studied models in mathematical physics, because of its interesting mathematical structure and because of its wide applicability – it arises naturally as an approximate model of surface water waves, nonlinear optics, Bose-Einstein condensates and plasma physics.
In every physical application, the derivation of NLS requires that one neglect the (small) dissipation that exists in the physical problem. But our studies of water waves (including freely propagating ocean waves, called “ocean swell”) have shown that even though dissipation is small, neglecting it can give qualitatively incorrect results. This talk describes an ongoing quest to find an appropriate generalization of NLS that correctly predicts experimental data for ocean swell. As will be shown, adding a dissipative term to the usual NLS model gives correct predictions in some situations. In other situations, both NLS and dissipative NLS give incorrect predictions, and the “right model” is still to be found.
This is joint work with Diane Henderson, at Penn State.