Information via e-mail about NA-NET: Mail to na.help@na-net.ornl.gov.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Petter Kolm <Petter.Kolm@gs.com>
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 11:23:12 -0400
Subject: Change of Address for Petter Kolm
Dear friends and colleagues,
My new contact address is:
Petter Kolm
Goldman, Sachs & Co.
Quantitative Strategies
32 Old Slip, 24th floor
New York, NY 10036
phone: (212) 357-3554
email: petter.kolm@gs.com
Thanks,
Petter Kolm
------------------------------
From: Susanne Brenner <brenner@math.sc.edu>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2002 17:16:13 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: New Book, The Mathematical Theory of Finite Element Methods
We are pleased to announce the Second Edition of our book
"The Mathematical Theory of Finite Element Methods,"
Springer-Verlag, Texts in Applied Mathematics 15, 2002,
ISBN 0-387-95451-1.
This expanded edition contains two new chapters. The first
is on the additive Schwarz theory with applications to
multilevel and domain decomposition preconditioners. The
second one is an introduction to a posteriori error estimators
and adaptivity. There are also substantial additions to
several other chapters. New exercises have been added throughout,
and the list of references has been expanded and updated.
The table of contents and additional information can be found at
http://www.math.sc.edu/~fem/book.html
Susanne C. Brenner and L. Ridgway Scott
------------------------------
From: Kurt Georg <georg@math.colostate.edu>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2002 16:02:22 -0600 (MDT)
Subject: Allgower/Georg Book Freely Available
Dear Colleagues:
We would like to inform you that our book
"Numerical Continuation Methods", Springer, 1990,
is out of print. The copyrights have been returned to us, and we are
posting the book as a pdf file on the net:
http://www.math.colostate.edu/~georg/Preprints/book.pdf
Sincerely yours,
Gene Allgower and Kurt Georg
------------------------------
From: Will Zimmerman <w.zimmerman@sheffield.ac.uk>
Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 11:12:28 +0100
Subject: Intensive FEMLAB Module at the University of Sheffield
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMICAL AND PROCESS ENGINEERING
UNIVERSITY OF SHEFFIELD
is hosting a five day intensive module entitled
Chemical Engineering Modelling with FEMLAB
24-28 June 2002, Room LT20, Newcastle Street Building.
The module is aimed at graduate Chemical Engineers who use
modelling tools and as a general introduction to FEMLAB for
scientists and engineers. So a bachelor's degree in any cognate
discipline -- engineering, chemistry, physics, applied maths will be
sufficient. FEMLAB is built on top of MATLAB as an integrated
application environment for finite element analysis of pde systems.
Check out the web site for more details:
http://eyrie.shef.ac.uk/femlab
------------------------------
From: Iain Duff <I.Duff@rl.ac.uk>
Date: Sat, 4 May 2002 13:39:10 +0100 (BST)
Subject: Sparse Days at CERFACS
Sparse Days at CERFACS 2002
Workshop on Preconditioning Large, Sparse Systems of Linear Equations
June 24-25, 2002
The workshop will start around lunchtime on June 24. A full
programme will be broadcast in a later NA Digest.
Direct methods for large, sparse linear systems are robust
across application domains, but their memory requirements
often make pure direct methods unsuitable for the largest
problems in practice. Iterative methods, on the other
hand, can often be scaled to large problem sizes, but they
typically require preconditioning to converge well. Since
the best preconditioners are often domain-specific, it is
more difficult to make iterative methods robust across many
application domains.
The development of robust preconditioning techniques is
therefore of the highest importance in advancing our
ability to solve large, sparse linear systems. This is an
exciting and fertile field, in which researchers attempt to
combine the discrete, combinatorial data structures and
algorithms used in direct methods with the continuous,
algebraic analysis used in iterative methods. Among the
directions that have been fruitfully investigated are
incomplete factorizations, sparse representations of
approximate inverses, and support-graph preconditioning.
We propose a workshop that will bring some of the key
researchers in these various preconditioning techniques
together with some of the graduate students whose future
work will extend this field. The workshop will consist
of talks and problem sessions on Monday, June 24 and
Tuesday, June 25 at CERFACS. Delegates to the workshop
are encouraged to visit CERFACS during the entire week
of June 24-28 in order to have as much opportunity as
possible for interaction.
There is no registration fee but prospective attendees should register
with Brigitte Yzel at CERFACS (Brigitte.Yzel@cerfacs.fr) with a
copy to Luc Giraud (giraud@cerfacs.fr). Please let us know if you want to
speak (sending title and abstract). We have a limited amount of
cheap accommodation on site and you should let us know soon if you want
us to try to book a room for you.
Confirmed attendees (some of whom will be speaking) include:
Michele Benzi, Erik Boman, Doron Chen, John Gilbert, Hussein Hoteit, John Lewis,
Jose Mas Mari, Esmond Ng, Suely Oliveira, Bernard Philippe, Yousef Saad,
Olaf Schenk, Masha Sosonkina, Sivan Toledo and, of course, nearly all members
of the Parallel Algorithms Team at CERFACS.
------------------------------
From: Juha Haataja <Juha.Haataja@csc.fi>
Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2002 13:24:43 +0300
Subject: Conference in Finland on Applied Parallel Computing
PARA'02 Conference provisional program published
The provisional PARA'02 conference program is now published at
http://www.csc.fi/para2002/program.phtml
The speakers of the conference are renowned specialists in advanced
scientific computing and include for example Professor Jack Dongarra
from the Department of Computer Science at the University of Tennessee,
USA, Professor Rainald Lohner from the George Mason University, USA, and
Academy Professor Risto Nieminen from the Helsinki University of
Technology. The emphasis in the program is to demonstrate how advanced
scientific computing helps solve "real-world" problems. The application
areas are for example micro-electro mechanical components,
semiconductors, the behavior of human body or oceanic and atmospheric
phenomena.
The invited speakers are:
- Xing Cai University of Oslo, Norway
- Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, USA
- Christian Hege, Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum in Berlin, Germany
- Gregor von Laszewski, Argonne National Laboratory, USA
- Rainald Lohner, George Mason University, USA
- Heikki Mannila, Helsinki University of Technology,
- Jamshed Mirza, IBM, USA
- Risto Nieminen, Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
- John Reid, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK
- Paolo Sibani, University of Southern Denmark,
- Anders Waananen, Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark
Xing Cai, representing Simula Research Laboratory and the Department of
Informatics in the University of Oslo, Norway, will give a presentation
about numerical and software technologies for studying the electrical
activity in the human heart. Computational medicine and the concepts
virtual patient and virtual surgery are new growing phenomena in=20
research.
Another actual topic is the Grid. Gregor von Laszewski from Argonne
National Laboratory in Illinois, USA, will talk about how to provide a
motivation for Grid computing, based on a vision to enable a
collaborative research environment. The presentation gives an overview
showing why Grid research is difficult, and presents management-related
issues that must be addressed to make Grids a reality. Also a list of
projects that provide solutions to subsets of these issues is given.
The PARA2002 conference starts with a one-day Grid tutorial on Saturday,
June 15, 2002. The tutorial will introduce the concept of the Grid, and
Grid middleware called Globus. Register before 15 May to get the early
registration fee! The on-line registration is at
http://www.csc.fi/para2002/registration.phtml
------------------------------
From: Tim Davis <davis@cise.ufl.edu>
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 17:15:45 -0400
Subject: Conference in Bangalore on High Performance Computing
The submission deadline of HiPC 2002, the 9th International Conference on High
Performance Computing, has been extended to May 15, 2002.
HiPC 2002 will be held in Bangalore, the Silicon Valley of India, during
December 18-21, 2002. It will serve as a forum to present current work by
researchers from around the world as well as highlight activities in Asia
in the high performance computing area. The conference has a history of
attracting participation from reputed researchers from all over the world.
Complete information can be obtained at http://www.hipc.org .
HiPC 2002 will emphasize the design and analysis of high
performance computing and networking systems and their scientific,
engineering, and commercial applications. In addition to technical sessions
of contributed paper presentations, the conference will offer invited
presentations, a poster/presentation session, tutorials, and vendor
presentations. HPC Asia 2002 will also be held in Bangalore during December
16-19, 2002, and will be co-located with HiPC 2002 (see
http://www.cdacindia.com/hpcasia2002 for more information).
Authors are invited to submit original unpublished manuscripts that
demonstrate current research in all areas of high performance computing
including design and analysis of parallel and distributed systems, embedded
systems, and their applications in scientific, engineering, and commercial
areas. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
* Parallel Algorithms * Supercomputing Applications
* Scientific Computation * Memory Systems
* Parallel Architectures * Internet and WWW-based Computing
* Visualization * Multimedia and High Speed Networks
* Parallel Languages & Compilers * Scalable Servers
* Network and Cluster-Based Computing * Wireless Mobile Computing
* Distributed Systems * Embedded Systems
* Signal & Image Processing Systems * Computational Biology
* Programming Environments * P2P Computing
To submit an original research paper, send your complete manuscript (not to
exceed 15 double-spaced pages of text using 12 point size type on 8.5 x 11
inch pages) to the Program Chair. Workshop proposals are also solicited.
For more submission details, please see http://www.hipc.org .
PROGRAM CHAIR:
Sartaj Sahni, University of Florida
CISE Department,
CSE 301
University of Florida Gainesville,
FL 32611, USA
Internet: sahni@cise.ufl.edu
Co-sponsored by IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Parallel
Processing, ACM SIGARCH, and the European Association for Theoretical
Computer Science.
------------------------------
From: Peter Matus <matus@im.bas-net.by>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2002 15:17:56 +0300
Subject: Conference in Belarus on Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics
FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT - CALL FOR PAPERS
International Conference
Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics: CMAM-1
July 21 - 25, 2003, Minsk, BELARUS
*Conference Organizers
- Institute of Mathematics of the National Academy of Sciences of
Belarus, Minsk
- Dalhea Trading Co., Ltd., Cyprus
*General Information
The Conference will be held under the aegis of the journal Computational
Methods in Applied Mathematics (CMAM: www.cmam.net). The Conference focuses
on various aspects of numerical methods in applied mathematics and its scope
coincides with the scope of the journal: subject areas include initial and
boundary value problems for ordinary and partial differential equations and
integral equations, appearing in applied mathematics and mathematical
physics.
Working language of the conference is English.
Selected papers presented on the Conference will be published in a special
issue of the journal CMAM.
*International Program Committee
P. Matus (Belarus - the chairman), P. Hemker (The Netherlands - the vice
chairman), R. Lazarov (USA - the vice chairman), P. Vabishchevich (Russia -
the vice chairman), V. Agoshkov (Russia), G. Akrivis (Greece), A. Buikis
(Latvia), R. Ciegis (Lithuania), M. Crouzeix (France), M. Dryja (Poland), I.
Gaishun (Belarus), I. Gavrilyuk (Germany), M. Griebel (Germany), B.
Gustafsson (Sweden), A. Hasanoglu (Hasanov) (Turkey), A. Iakoubenia
(Belarus), B. Jovanovich (Yugoslavia), A. Knyazev (USA), L. Krukier
(Russia), A. Lapin (Russia), V. Makarov (Ukraine), G. Meladze (Georgia), J.
Miller (Ireland), R. Nochetto (USA), P. Oswald (USA), C. Palencia (Spain),
J. Pasciak (USA), V. Shaidurov (Russia), Zh.-C. Shi (China), G. Shishkin
(Russia), I. Sloan (Australia), G. Vainikko (Finland), O. Widlund (USA), R.
Winther (Norway)
*Contact Details
CMAM-1
Institute of Mathematics NASB
11 Surganov Str.
220072 Minsk, BELARUS
Phone +375 17 2841958
Fax +375 17 2840915
E-mail cmam@im.bas-net.by
For further information or to download the complete announcement, please visit
www.cmam.net/cmam-1.shtml
Sincerely,
Prof. Peter Matus
Chairman of the conference CMAM-1
www.cmam.net/matus/
------------------------------
From: Erricos John Kontoghiorghes <erricos.kontoghiorghes@unine.ch>
Date: Fri, 03 May 2002 16:01:46 +0200
Subject: Worshop in Switzerland on Parallel Matrix Algorithms
2nd International Workshop on
Parallel Matrix Algorithms and Applications (PMAA'02)
9-10 November, Neuchatel, Switzerland, 2002.
http://www.unine.ch/iiun/matrix/seminars/PMAA2002/index.html
This international workshop aims to be a forum for the exchange of
ideas and competence for specialists in those areas of parallel
computing that are based on matrix algorithms. Emphasis will be on:
1.Implementation and performance issues on various types of parallel
systems.
2.Parallel algorithms for dense, structured and sparse matrices.
3.Algorithmic engineering & complexity (matrix algorithms based on
parallel models of computation such as PRAM, systolic arrays, etc.)
4.Applications with emphasis on parallel matrix computations
(applications from diverse fields such as fluid dynamics,
econometrics and financial optimization).
There will be two days of tutorials before the workshop.
Co-Chairs:
Peter Arbenz (Switzerland),
Erricos Kontoghiorghes (Switzerland),
Yousef Saad (USA), and
Denis Trystram (France).
International Program Committee:
O. Beaumont (France), M. Clint (UK), E. Daoudi (Marroco), F. Desprez
(France), J. Dongarra (USA), I. Duff (UK), E. Gallopoulos (Greece),
M. Grote (Switzerland), M. Gutknecht (Switzerland), E. Houstis (USA),
M. Hegland (Australia), G. Meurant (France), H. Park (USA),
P. Pardalos (USA), B. Philippe (France), A. Sameh (USA), V. Simoncini
(Italy), Z. Strakos (Czech Rep.), M. Vajtersic (Slovakia),
R. Wyrzykowski (Poland), Z. Zlatev (Denmark).
Local organizing committee:
E.J. Kontoghiorghes, O. Besson, P. Foschi, C. Gatu, Y. Petko
Important dates:
Submission of 1-page abstracts: 01 August 2002
Notification of acceptance: 01 September 2002
Workshop: 9-10 November 2002
Submission of full papers: 15 November 2002
Notification of acceptance: 01 February 2003
Final papers: 01 April 2003
The workshop will take place jointly with the ERCIM working Group
meeting on Matrix Computations & Statistics:
http://www.irisa.fr/aladin/wg-statlin/
------------------------------
From: Karl Sabelfeld <sabelfel@wias-berlin.de>
Date: Fri, 03 May 2002 16:24:20 +0200
Subject: IMACS Monte Carlo Seminar in Berlin
First Announcement
IVth IMACS Seminar on Monte Carlo Methods
MCM-2003
15-19 September 2003
The IVth IMACS Seminar on Monte Carlo Methods is organised by the
Weierstrass Institute of Applied Analysis and Stochastics
(WIAS, Berlin), and co-sponsored by the Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum for
Scientific Computing (ZIB, Berlin), the Humboldt University (HU, Berlin)
and the National Research Center "Quantification and Simulation of Economic
processes", Berlin.
Topics:
1. General theory of Monte Carlo and Quasi- Monte Carlo methdods
2. Stochastic models and algorithms for solving boundary value problems
3. Numerics for stochastic differential equations
4. Integration and path integration
5. Simulation of stochastic and turbulent flows
6. Interacting particle systems, Boltzmann and Smoluchowski equations
7. Stochastic simulation in finance
8. Applications in physics, mechanics, radiative transport
9. Applications in biology and medicine
Invited plenary lectures will be given by A. Chorin, J. Halton,
D. Talay, and N. Bouleau.
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Robert Beauwens (Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)
P. Deuflhard (Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum, Berlin, Germany)
I. Dimov (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria)
A. Dubus (Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)
S.M. Ermakov (St.Petersburg University, Russia)
S. Heinrich (Kaiserslautern University, Germany)
M. Kraft (University of Cambridge, UK)
O. Kurbanmuradov (Turkmenian University, Turkmenistan)
Ch. Lecot (Universite de Savoie, France)
M. Marseguerra (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
M. Mascagni (Florida State University, Tallahassee, USA)
P. Math\'{e} (WIAS, Berlin, Germany)
G.A. Mikhailov (ICMMG, Russian Academy of Sci., Novosibirsk, Russia)
H. Niederreiter (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
S. Ogawa (Kanazawa University, Japan)
K. Sabelfeld (WIAS, Berlin and ICMMG, Novosibirsk, Russia)
M. Saraniti (Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, USA)
B. Sawford (SCIRO, Aspendale, Australia)
W. Ch. Schmid (University of Salzburg, Austria)
J. G. M. Schoenmakers (WIAS, Berlin, Germany)
I. M. Sobol' (Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow )
V. Spokoiny (WIAS and Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany)
D. Talay (INRIA, Sophia-Antipolis, France)
W. Wagner (WIAS, Berlin, Germany)
P. A. Whitlock (Brooklyn College, USA)
Chair: K. Sabelfeld
Co-Chairs: P. Deuflhard, P. Mathe
An on-line registration form is now in preparation:
http://www.wias-berlin.de/research/events/workshops/mcm2003
LOCATION: The Seminar will be at the Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum, Berlin.
CONTACT INFORMATION:
The E-mail of the Seminar: mcm2003@wias-berlin.de
------------------------------
From: Mayer Humi <mhumi@WPI.EDU>
Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 14:11:20 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Department Head Position at Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Department Head, Mathematical Sciences, WPI
Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) invites applications for the
position of Department Head, Mathematical Sciences. The department
currently comprises 24 full-time faculty, with strong programs in
computational math, applied analysis, composite materials, discrete
mathematics, optimization, stochastic analysis and statistics.
The department offers outstanding academic programs through the Ph.D.
in Mathematical Sciences, maintains vibrant research programs and is
the home of the Center for Industrial Mathematics and Statistics with
strong industry-university alliances. The department enrolls 94
undergraduate and 43 graduate students, supports other degree programs,
and occupies an historic building central to the campus.
WPI is a nationally ranked, innovative technical university of engineering,
science, management, humanities, arts and social sciences with an
enrollment of 2,700 undergraduate and 1,100 full and part-time graduate
students, located in scenic central Massachusetts. Well known for its
project oriented curriculum, its global perspectives program, and its
inclusion of societal/technological elements in the curriculum,
the university fosters a spirit of constructive experimentation in
educational development.
WPI seeks a dynamic individual with demonstrated leadership ability who
can promote continued curricular development, growth of funded research
programs, and excellence in scholarship. Applicants must have a strong
international reputation and a proven record of scholarly achievement
in application oriented mathematical sciences or a closely allied field
matching one of the department's strengths. The department head will be
expected to represent the department within both the constituent and
academic communities and to coordinate extramural funding activities.
The university is midway through a major capital campaign that will
significantly benefit the department.
Information about the department is available through
http://www.wpi.edu/Academics/Depts/Math/
Interested individuals should send a curriculum vita and list of
references to: Dr. William W. Durgin, Associate Provost for Academic
Affairs, Chair Mathematical Sciences Search Committee, Boynton Hall,
Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 100 Institute Rd., Worcester, MA 01609-2280.
This position will remain open until filled. WPI is an Equal Opportunity
Employer. Qualified women and minorities are strongly encouraged to apply.
------------------------------
From: Alison Ramage <alison@maths.strath.ac.uk>
Date: Wed, 1 May 2002 12:27:50 +0100 (BST)
Subject: Postdoctoral Position at University of Durham
EPSRC POST-DOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSISTANT
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS, UNIVERSITY OF STRATHCLYDE
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM
PRECONDITIONERS FOR FINITE ELEMENT MODELLING OF SOIL-STRUCTURE
INTERACTION PROBLEMS
Applications are invited for a three-year EPSRC funded post (under
the Computational Engineering Mathematics initiative) to work on preconditioners
for finite element modelling of soil-structure interaction problems. The post is
available from October 1st 2002 for a fixed three-year term: the successful
candidate will be based for the first 18 months at the University of Strathclyde
in Glasgow, and will be required to relocate to Durham for the second 18 month
period.
Applicants should have a Doctorate in Civil or Mechanical Engineering or Applied
Mathematics (or equivalent research experience) and possess expertise in one or
more of the following areas: the development and use of finite element methods for
the solution of PDEs; structural mechanics; numerical linear algebra; numerical
methods in geotechnical engineering.
Applications, with a full CV giving the names and addresses of two academic
referees (and copies of any relevant publications), should be sent to
Dr Alison Ramage,
Department of Mathematics,
University of Strathclyde,
26 Richmond Street,
Glasgow G1 1XH.
Informal enquiries can be made to Alison Ramage (ar@maths.strath.ac.uk) at
Strathclyde or Charles Augarde (charles.augarde@durham.ac.uk) at Durham.
Further particulars of the post are available at
http://www.dur.ac.uk/charles.augarde/cempost.htm.
The closing date for applications is 31st May 2002.
------------------------------
From: Markus Kraft <markus_kraft@cheng.cam.ac.uk>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2002 20:17:45 +0100
Subject: Postdoctoral and Student Positions at University of Cambridge
University of Cambridge
Department of Chemical Engineering
1 Postdoctoral Research Associate and 2 PhD Studentship in Computational
Chemical Engineering
One Research Associateship (available for up to three years) and two 3-year
PhD positions are available in the Department of Chemical Engineering. The
proposed starting date is 1 October. The posts form part of an EPSRC funded
project on Mathematical and Numerical Analysis of Coagulation-Diffusion
Processes in Chemical Engineering. The project is carried out in close
cooperation with a research group in the Department of Pure Mathematics and
Mathematical Statistics. The candidates will develop the numerical and
application side of this project, which includes the dynamics of
nano-particles and population balances of bubbles. The applicants for the
postdoctoral post should have a PhD and those for the studentships should
possess a first class degree in (Chemical) Engineering, Mathematics, Physics
or another relevant subject and be experienced in computational work.
Salary range for the Postdoctoral position:
------------------------------
From: Ake Bjorck <akbjo@mai.liu.se>
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2002 10:47:06 +0200 (MEST)
Subject: Contents, BIT Numerical Mathematics
Volume 42, Issue 2 (June 2002)
For information to contributers and about subscriptions see
http://www.math.liu.se/BIT/
Multifilters with and without prefilters,
S. Bacchelli, M. Cotronei, and T. Sauer, pp. 231--261
High order optimized geometric integrators for linear
differential equations
S. Blanes, F. Casas, and J. Ros, pp. 262--284
The Cayley method and the inverse eigenvalue problem for
Toeplitz matrices
F. Diele and I. Sgura, pp. 285--299
Incremental norm estimation for dense and sparse matrices
I. S. Duff and Ch. V\"omel, pp. 300--322
Solving quadratically constrained least squares problems
using a differential-geometric approach
L. Eld\'en, pp. 323--335
A new approach of solving implicit equations arising from
Adams--Moulton methods
T. M. Han and Y. Han, pp. 336--350
Strong stability and non-smooth data error estimates for
discretizations of linear parabolic problems
A. Hansbo, pp. 351--379
Nonlinear stability of general linear methods for delay
differential equations
C. Huang, S. Li, H. Fu, and G. Chen, pp. 380--392
On generating discrete orthogonal bivariate polynomials
M. Huhtanen and R. M. Larsen, pp. 393--407
Numerical integration of differential algebraic systems
and invariant manifolds
K. Nipp, pp. 408--439
Positivity of the weights of interpolatory quadrature
formulae with Jacobi abscissae
S. E. Notaris, pp. 440--446
Adaptive model reduction for chemical kinetics
P. F. Tupper, pp. 447--465
------------------------------
From: Ed Saff <esaff@math.Vanderbilt.Edu>
Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 17:48:47 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: Contents, Constructive Approximation
Vol. 18, No. 3, 2002 of Constructive Approximation:
"On the q-Convolution on the Line" by G. Carnovale,
pp 309-341
"The Critical Values of a Polynomial" by A.F. Beardon,
T.K. Carne, and T.W. Ng, pp 343-354
"Exponential Asymptotics of the Mittag-Leffler Function"
by R. Wong and Y.-Q. Zhao, pp 355-385
"Orthonormality of Cardinal Chevyshev B-Spline Bases in
Weighted Sobolev Spaces" by M.-L. Mazure and K. Melkemi,
pp 387-415
"Balayage Properties Related to Rational Interpolation"
by S.J. Gardiner and C. Pommerenke, pp 417-426
"On Markoff's Inequality" by V. Totik, pp 427-441
"Differential Operators with Second-Order Degeneracy and
Positive Approximation Processes" by E.M. Mangino,
pp 443-466
------------------------------
From: Chi-Wang Shu <shu@cfm.brown.edu>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2002 23:23:51 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Contents, Journal of Scientific Computing
Journal of Scientific Computing
Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers
http://www.wkap.nl/journalhome.htm/0885-7474
Volume 17, Numbers 1-4, Combined March-June-September-December 2002 issue
Special issue of the ICOSAHOM-01 proceedings
Foreword,
Bertil Gustafsson, pp.1-2.
INVITED TALKS:
hp-Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Element Methods with Least-Squares
Stabilization,
Paul Houston, Max Jensen, Endre Suli, pp.3-25.
Local Discontinuous Galerkin Methods for Partial Differential Equations with
Higher Order Derivatives,
Jue Yan, Chi-Wang Shu, pp.27-47.
Divergence-Free Wavelet Analysis of Turbulent Flows,
Cem M. Albukrek, Karsten Urban, Dietmar Rempfer, John L. Lumley, pp.49-66.
Superconsistent Discretizations,
Daniele Funaro, pp.67-79.
Spectral Element Methods for Transitional Flows in Complex Geometries,
Paul F. Fischer, Gerald W. Kruse, Francis Loth, pp.81-98.
Toward Non Commutative Numerical Analysis: High Order Integration in Time,
Michelle Schatzman, pp.99-116.
A Fully Automatic hp-Adaptivity,
L. Demkowicz, W. Rachowicz, Ph. Devloo, pp.117-142.
A Discontinuous Spectral Element Model for Boussinesq-Type Equations,
C. Eskilsson, S. J. Sherwin, pp.143-152.
CONTRIBUTED AND MINISYMPOSIUM TALKS:
An Auto-Adaptive Multidomain Spectral Technique for Linear Stability Analysis:
Application to Viscous Compressible Flows,
Eric Serre, Serge Gauthier, pp.153-165.
Reducing the Effects of Noise in Image Reconstruction,
Rick Archibald, A. Gelb, pp.167-180.
Entropy Splitting for High Order Numerical Simulation of Vortex Sound at Low
Mach
Numbers,
Bernhard Muller, H. C. Yee, pp.181-190.
A Robust Spectral Element Method for Simulations of Time-Dependent Viscoelastic
Flows, Derived from the Brownian Configuration Field Method,
Cedric Chauviere, Robert G. Owens, pp.191-199.
Preconditioned Uzawa Algorithm for the Velocity-Pressure-Stress Formulation of
Viscoelastic Flow Problems,
X. Escriva, E. Leriche, T. N. Phillips, pp.201-210.
Two Barriers on Strong-Stability-Preserving Time Discretization Methods,
Steven J. Ruuth, Raymond J. Spiteri, pp.211-220.
Higher Order May Be Better or May Not Be Better: Investigations with the FDEM
(Finite Difference Element Method),
Willi Schonauer, Torsten Adolph, pp.221-229.
ADER: A High-Order Approach for Linear Hyperbolic Systems in 2D,
T. Schwartzkopff, C. D. Munz, E. F. Toro, pp.231-240.
Deferred Correction Methods for Initial Boundary Value Problems,
Wendy Kress, Bertil Gustafsson, pp.241-251.
Application of Second Order TVD and WENO Schemes in Internal Aerodynamics,
Jircaroni Furst, Karel Kozel, pp.253-262.
Numerical Entropy Production on Shocks and Smooth Transitions,
Gabriella Puppo, pp.263-271.
High-Order Algorithms for Large-Eddy Simulation of Incompressible Flows,
R. Pasquetti, C. J. Xu, pp.273-284.
A Least-Squares Spectral Element Formulation for the Stokes Problem,
M. M. J. Proot, M. I. Gerritsma, pp.285-296.
Analysis of a Discontinuous Least Squares Spectral Element Method,
Marc I. Gerritsma, Michael M. J. Proot, pp.297-306.
Towards a Realization of a Wavelet Galerkin Method on Non-Trivial Domains,
Stefano Berrone, Laurent Emmel, pp.307-317.
Spectral Polynomial Chaos Solutions of the Stochastic Advection Equation,
M. Jardak, C.-H. Su, G. E. Karniadakis, pp.319-338.
Semi-Implicit Spectral Element Atmospheric Model,
S. J. Thomas, R. D. Loft, pp.339-350.
Computation of Nonlinear Backscattering Using a High-Order Numerical Method,
G. Fibich, B. Ilan, S. Tsynkov, pp.351-364.
A Pseudospectral Multi-Domain Method for the Incompressible Navier-Stokes
Equations,
P. Droll, M. Schafer, pp.365-374.
On the Simulation of Unsteady Flow of an Oldroyd-B Fluid by Spectral Methods,
Alexei Lozinski, Robert G. Owens, Alfio Quarteroni, pp.375-383.
Adaptive Spectral Element Simulations of Thin Premixed Flame Sheet Deformations,
Huiyu Feng, Catherine Mavriplis, pp.385-395.
A Numerical Investigation of High-Order Finite Elements for Problems of
Elastoplasticity,
A. Duster, A. Niggl, V. Nubel, E. Rank, pp.397-404.
Long Time Behavior of the Perfectly Matched Layer Equations in Computational
Electromagnetics,
S. Abarbanel, D. Gottlieb, J. S. Hesthaven, pp.405-422.
Stability Criteria for Finite Difference Approximations to Parabolic Systems
- An Update,
Moshe Goldberg, Anna Pidgirnyak, pp.423-435.
A Priori Convergence Theory for Reduced-Basis Approximations of Single-Parameter
Elliptic Partial Differential Equations,
Yvon Maday, Anthony T. Patera, Gabriel Turinici, pp.437-446.
A Reduced-Basis Element Method,
Yvon Maday, Einar M. Ronquist, pp.447-459.
Towards Reduced Basis Approaches in ab initio Electronic Structure Computations,
Eric Cances, Claude LeBris, Yvon Maday, Gabriel Turinici, pp.461-469.
A Hierarchical 3-D Poisson Modified Fourier Solver by Domain Decomposition,
Moshe Israeli, Elena Braverman, Amir Averbuch, pp.471-479.
A Robust Multigrid Algorithm for the Simulation of a Yawed Flat Plate,
Ruben S. Montero, Ignacio M. Llorente, Manuel D. Salas, pp.481-490.
A Particle Method for the KdV Equation,
Alina Chertock, Doron Levy, pp.491-499.
Absorbing Boundary Conditions of the Second Order for the Pseudospectral
Chebyshev Methods for Wave Propagation,
A. Gelb, Z. Jackiewicz, B. D. Welfert, pp.501-512.
Doubling the Degree of Precision Without Doubling the Grid When Solving a
Differential Equation with a Pseudo-Spectral Collocation Method,
D. Dijkstra, pp.513-527.
A Modified Fourier-Galerkin Method for the Poisson and Helmholtz Equations,
Ole F. Naess, Knut S. Eckhoff, pp.529-539.
Deferred Correction in Space and Time,
Bertil Gustafsson, Lina Hemmingsson-Franden, pp.541-550.
A Compact Higher Order Finite Difference Method for the Incompressible
Navier-Stokes Equations,
Arnim Bruger, Jonas Nilsson, Wendy Kress, pp.551-560.
An hp-Analysis of the Local Discontinuous Galerkin Method for Diffusion
Problems,
Ilaria Perugia, Dominik Schotzau, pp.561-571.
A Spectral Element Projection Scheme for Incompressible Flow with Application
to the Unsteady Axisymmetric Stokes Problem,
Mejdi Azaiez, pp.573-584.
A Semi-Lagrangian Method for Turbulence Simulations Using Mixed Spectral
Discretizations,
Jin Xu, Dongbin Xiu, George Em Karniadakis, pp.585-597.
High Resolution Relaxed Upwind Schemes in Gas Dynamics,
H. Joachim Schroll, pp.599-607.
ADER: Arbitrary High Order Godunov Approach,
V. A. Titarev, E. F. Toro, pp.609-618.
Application of a Spectral Element Method to Two-Dimensional Forward-Facing
Step Flow,
D. Wilhelm, L. Kleiser, pp.619-627.
FETI and FETI-DP Methods for Spectral and Mortar Spectral Elements: A
Performance Comparison,
Dan Stefanica, pp.629-638.
Steady Gap Flows by the Spectral and Mortar Element Method,
D. Weill, M. O. Deville, pp.639-648.
Simulations of Time-Dependent Flows of Viscoelastic Fluids with Spectral
Element Methods,
Nicolas Fietier, Michel O. Deville, pp.649-657.
Sparse Two-Scale FEM for Homogenization Problems,
A.-M. Matache, pp.659-669.
Implementation of Generalized Finite Element Methods for Homogenization
Problems,
A. W. Ruegg, pp.671-681.
Numerical Simulation of the Sedimentation of Rigid Bodies in an Incompressible
Viscous Fluid by Lagrange Multiplier/Fictitious Domain Methods Combined with
the Taylor-Hood Finite Element Approximation,
L. H. Juarez, R. Glowinski, T. W. Pan, pp.683-694.
Generalization of the Spline Interpolation Based on the Principle of the
Compact Schemes,
Gennaro Coppola, Carlo Meola, pp.695-706.
------------------------------
From: Peter Matus <matus@im.bas-net.by>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2002 15:17:56 +0300
Subject: Contents, Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics
Contents, Comp. Meth. Appl. Math., Vol. 2 (2002), No. 1
Dear colleagues,
I would like to inform about appearance of the first issue in Volume 2
(2002) of the journal "Computational Methods in Applied Mathematics" (CMAM)
at our website www.cmam.net
During the year 2002 the electronic version will be available at no cost.
CONTENTS
CMAM, Vol. 2 (2002), No. 1
Higher-order time-accurate schemes for singularly perturbed parabolic
convection-diffusion problems with Robin boundary conditions
P.W. Hemker, G.I. Shishkin, and L.P. Shishkina 3-25
Geometric convergence of iterative methods for problem with $M$-matrices and
diagonal multivalued operators
A. Lapin 26-40
Finite difference schemes for convection-diffusion problems with a
concentrated source and a discontinuous convection field
T. Linss 41-49
The maximum principle and some of its applications
P. Matus 50-91
AMRVAC: a multidimensional grid-adaptive magnetofluid dynamics code
M. Nool and R. Keppens 92-109
------------------------------
End of NA Digest
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