-------------------------------------------------------
From: Eric Grosse <eric@n2vi.com>
Date: Sun, 22 Jul 2007 01:15:32 -0400
Subject: netlib news
If you've had occasion recently to submit codes to netlib,
you'll have noticed the increased role of David Gay and
the move of netlib.bell-labs.com to netlib.sandia.gov.
David had retired from Bell Labs a few years ago and
moved to Sandia. In April, I retired from Bell Labs
and moved to Google in Mountain View, California. I'll
continue to help maintain netlib, but my work is
now security more than numerics. Having been a fan of
David's software for many years, I was delighted when
he agreed to take on an expanded role.
With any luck, these changes will remain almost
invisible and you'll get everything you need unchanged
at http://www.netlib.org.
Eric
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Dr Jennifer Scott <j.a.scott@rl.ac.uk>
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 12:04:32 +0100
Subject: Finite element test problems wanted
For some time now, we have been working on developing new out-of-core
direct solvers. These codes are designed to solve large-scale linear
systems using a multifrontal algorithm, optionally holding the matrix
data, its factors and some of the workspace used by the algorithm
out-of-core. The first release is for real matrices. We are
currently looking for test problems from practical applications.
For element applications, our solvers accept the problem data
element-by-element. Thus we need problems in unassembled format. The
University of Florida Sparse Matrix Collection is an excellent source
of test data but it currently holds very few problems in unassembled
element format.
We would be really grateful if anyone can provide us with test data in
unassembled format (in particular, we currently need unsymmetric
element problems). Ideally, we would like the data in Rutherford
Boeing format (see: RAL-TR-97-031, I. S. Duff , R. G. Grimes,
J. G. Lewis, "The Rutherford-Boeing Sparse Matrix Collection" which
can be downloaded from
http://www.numerical.rl.ac.uk/reports/reports.shtml) But if you have
data in some other format, please let us know.
We would be happy to share with you our experiences of solving your
problems using our solvers.
Many thanks
Jennifer Scott and John Reid, The Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
-------------------------------------------------------
From: gerhardwilhelm weber <gweber@metu.edu.tr>
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 10:36:42 +0300
Subject: International Conference on Collaborative Decision Making, Jul 2008
IFIP TC8/WG8.3 Working Conference
International Conference on Collaborative Decision Making (CDM'08)
Manufacture des Tabacs, Toulouse, France
July 1st- 4th 2008
http://www.irit.fr/CDM08/
Conference chair :
P. Zaraté, IRIT-INPT-ENSIACET, Toulouse, France
Paper submission due: November 16th 2007
The IFIP TC8/WG8.3 conferences present the latest innovations
and achievements of academic communities on Decision Support Systems
(DSS). These advances include theory, systems,
computer aided methods, algorithms, techniques, and applications
related to supporting decision making.
This conference is supported by the Euro Working Group on DSS
(see http://www.euro-online.org/).
The main theme for the 2008 edition of the conference is
Collaborative Decision Making and in particular, addressing the
question of how to support Collaboration in Decision Making? Welcome
answers will incorporate key elements to deal with the complexity of
supporting collaborative decision making. Expected contributions will
try to answer to some of the following questions:
Where does the data for collaborative decision making come from
and how is it assembled?
Who is, or should be, involved in making the decision?
How do teams collaborate to build up common understanding?
How to Tackle Complexity in decision making and decision
support? A special focus on Data, Models and Actors will be
taken into account.
For additional information and submission, please visit:
http://www.irit.fr/CDM08/
A Doctoral Colloquium will be held as part of the conference July 1st
2008 is organised by G. Philips-Wren and D. Paradice.
SUBMISSIONS:
Authors are requested to submit original, complete papers to the
following email cdm08@irit.fr Each paper will be reviewed by at
least two referees. Accepted papers will be published only if at
least one of the authors is registered to attend the conference in
due time. Accepted papers with at least one registered author will
appear in the Proceedings of the Conference published as a book.
Formatting Instructions for submissions will be delivered in the
second Call for Papers.
Best papers will be forwarded for submission to several special
issues for high level journals in the DSS area like Journal of
Decision Systems, Intelligent Decision technologies, European
Journal of Operational Research (EJOR).
-------------------------------------------------------
From: John Mackenzie <caas61@maths.strath.ac.uk>
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 11:23:34 +0100 (BST)
Subject: Scottish Computational Mathematics Symposium, Sep 2007
16th Scottish Computational Mathematics Symposium (First Announcement)
10:00-17:00 Tuesday September 11th, 2007
University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK
SPEAKERS:
Mike Baines (Reading)
Gabriel Barrenechea (Strathclyde)
Catherine Powell (Manchester)
Jason Reese (Strathclyde)
Holger Wendland (Sussex)
DETAILS:
Anyone interested is welcome. The meeting is supported by the London
Mathematical Society, and they have allocated some funding for travel
for UK-based PhD students (apply as soon as possible please).
Registration, student funding and other details are at:
http://www.ma.hw.ac.uk/scms
John Mackenzie
-------------------------------------------------------
From: I G Graham <igg@maths.bath.ac.uk>
Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2007 11:19:38 +0100 (BST)
Subject: Multiscal Methods, Adaptivity, and Complexity, Sep 2007
NUMERICAL ANALYSIS: MULTISCALE METHODS, ADAPTIVITY AND COMPLEXITY
Bath Institute for Complex Systems,
University of Bath,
United Kingdom
4th - 7th September 2007
THIRD ANNOUNCEMENT
CALL FOR REGISTRATION (deadline 10th August 2007)
The themes of this conference will be: Numerical analysis for
multiscale problems, Stochastic and high-dimensional problems,
Adaptive methods, Inverse problems and applications,
Numerical methods for wave propagation problems.
Invited speakers include:
H. Ammari (Ecole Polytechnique, Paris), D. Bird (Bath),
M. Burger (Muenster), S.N. Chandler-Wilde (Reading),
M. Cullen (U.K. Met Office), W. Dahmen (Aachen),
C. M. Elliott (Sussex), T.-Y. Hou (Caltech),
W. Huang (Kansas), P.K. Jimack (Leeds),
I.G. Kevrekidis (Princeton), M. Kirkilionis (Warwick),
C. Mitchell (Bath), R. Potthast (Reading),
C. Reisinger (Oxford), C. Schwab (ETH, Zuerich),
V. P. Smyshlyaev (Bath), I.H. Sloan (New South Wales),
E. Suli (Oxford), R. Tempone (Florida State)
As well as the invited talks the conference will feature a limited
number of contributed talks. The conference will not have any
parallel sessions. The registration fee is set at \pounds 30 plus
the cost of accommodation and meals during the meeting.
http://www.bath.ac.uk/math-sci/BICS/nammac/
Conference Scientific Enquiries:
I.G. Graham (I.G.Graham@bath.ac.uk),
R. Scheichl (R.Scheichl@bath.ac.uk)
Administrative Enquiries:
Mrs Ann Linfield (bics@maths.bath.ac.uk)
Related Meeting: Numerical Analysis of Stochastic PDEs at
Manchester, 3rd - 4th September 2007.
http://www.mims.manchester.ac.uk/events/workshops/NASPDE/
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Paul Houston <Paul.Houston@nottingham.ac.uk>
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 10:43:47 -0400
Subject: Lecturer in Applied Mathematics - University of Nottingham
Reference : CHJ41S
Closing Date : Friday 27 July 2007
Applications are invited for the above post in the Division of Applied
Mathematics. The Unit of Assessment for Applied Mathematics was graded 5 in
the 2001 RAE and the successful candidate will be expected to contribute
strongly to maintaining and enhancing our research record. Applications are
invited from researchers in any area of applied mathematics complementing
existing activity within the Division, with quantum information, scientific
computation and the interface with statistics being of particular interest.
Candidates should have achieved research distinction or show very strong
research potential in applied mathematics, and should be committed to high
quality teaching.
Salary will be within the range £29,138 - £39,160 per annum, depending on
qualifications and experience (salary can progress to £45,397 per annum,
subject to performance). This post is available from 1 October 2007 or as
soon as possible thereafter.
Informal enquiries may be addressed to Professor J R King, tel: 0115 951 3854,
fax: 0115 951 3837 or Email: John.King@Nottingham.ac.uk. Information about the
School is available at: http://www.maths.nottingham.ac.uk
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Luis Nunes Vicente <lnv@mat.uc.pt>
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 15:11:23 +0100
Subject: 5-Year Research Positions - Univ. Coimbra, Portugal
5-Year Research Positions - Univ. Coimbra, Portugal
The Centre for Mathematics of the University of Coimbra (CMUC)
invites applications for three 5-year research positions,
two in Applied and Computational Mathematics and one in
Statistics.
The Centre is interested in a variety of research topics,
including:
- analysis and control of PDEs
- applied harmonic analysis
- high-performance computing
- modeling and simulation of complex systems
- optimization
- statistical estimation and inference
and applications to biology, engineering, finance, and imaging.
Applicants should have a PhD in Mathematical Sciences, at
least three years of post-doctoral experience, and a strong
command of English.
The positions are part of a prestigious national program for
research. The applications will be screened by an international
panel of the highest quality. The candidates selected will
participate in a stimulating and interdisciplinary research
environment. The positions might revert to tenure-track in
the future.
The salary is highly competitive, in the order of 42500 euros
a year. The positions do not involve teaching duties, but there
will be the opportunity to teach graduate courses if desired.
CMUC will provide social benefits and a professional travel
allowance.
The deadline for application is September 10, 2007, and the
application details are given in
http://www.mat.uc.pt/~cmuc/5-year.pdf
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Paul Houston <Paul.Houston@nottingham.ac.uk>
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 10:39:34 -0400
Subject: Post of Research Associate/Fellow - University of Nottingham
Adaptive Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Element Methods for Compressible Fluid
Flows
Applications are invited for the above EU-funded post to develop reliable and
efficient adaptive finite element algorithms for the numerical approximation
of compressible fluid flows, based on employing non-conforming discontinuous
Galerkin methods. This project is part of the EU sixth framework ADIGMA
project, which aims to develop the next generation of advanced computational
fluid dynamics algorithms for complex aerodynamical flows. More information
on ADIGMA is available at:
http://www.dlr.de/as/en/Desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-2035/2979_read-4582/.
Candidates must hold, or be working towards, a PhD degree in computational
applied mathematics/numerical analysis. Research experience in the theory and
practical development of finite element methods is essential. This post will
require the person appointed to be able to work independently and as part of a
team, to be flexible and to have good communication and interpersonal skills.
Salary will be within the range £21,682 - £30,913 per annum, depending on
qualifications and experience (salary can progress to £34,793 per annum,
subject to performance) (£23,692 maximum without PhD). This post is
available from 1 October 2007 and will be offered on a fixed-term contract for
a period of 23 months.
Informal enquiries may be addressed to Professor P Houston, tel: 0115 846
7468, fax: 0115 951 3837 or Email: Paul.Houston@Nottingham.ac.uk.
To apply send a detailed CV, together with the names and addresses of two
referees, to Professor P Houston, School of Mathematical Sciences, The
University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Warchall, Henry A." <hwarchal@nsf.gov>
Date: Sat, 21 Jul 2007 16:58:45 -0400
Subject: NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) update
Dear Colleague,
Please forward the following information to senior undergraduates and
beginning graduate students in your department.
An updated NSF program solicitation is now available:
Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)
Please see
http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=6201
for details.
Deadlines (for graduate study in Mathematics or Statistics):
* Applications due November 2, 2007.
* Official Academic Transcript(s) (Required) due November 2, 2007.
* Reference Letters (Three Required) due December 1, 2007.
* GRE Subject and General Test Scores (Recommended) due November 30, 2007.
Synopsis of Program:
The National Science Foundation aims to ensure the vitality of the human
resource base of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in
the United States and to reinforce its diversity by offering
approximately 1,100 graduate fellowships in this competition. The
Graduate Research Fellowship provides three years of support for
graduate study leading to research-based master's or doctoral degrees
and is intended for students who are in the early stages of their
graduate study. The Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) invests
in graduate education for a cadre of diverse individuals who demonstrate
their potential to successfully complete graduate degree programs in
disciplines relevant to the mission of the National Science Foundation.
Notable changes from the previous program solicitation:
(1) Application deadlines have changed.
(2) It is now required to use 12-point, Times New Roman font (which may
be single spaced).
(3) The description of eligibility requirements was clarified regarding
previous graduate education, work experience, and change in field of
study.
(4) A statement was introduced to indicate that acceptance of a Graduate
Research Fellowship is a commitment to be enrolled in an approved
program of graduate study by the following Fall term.
(5) Guidelines for the use of Reserve status and descriptions of
allowable alternate activities were provided.
(6) A description of cyberinfrastructure resources available to Fellows
and recipients of Honorable Mention was provided.
(7) The descriptions of eligibility and application procedures for
Interdisciplinary Fields of Study were reorganized and clarified.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Maubach, J.M.L." <J.M.L.Maubach@tue.nl>
Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2007 10:32:15 +0200
Subject: Phd position, CASA, Eindhoven Univ. of Technology, The Netherlands
PhD position: Modeling and control of an electron microscope in
Eindhoven University of Technology, Department Mathematics and Computer
Science, Center for Analysis, Scientific Computing and Applications
(CASA), prof.dr. R.M.M. Matteij
Required: MSc in mathematics, physics, electrical engineering, systems
and control, or a related field. The applicant should have good
analytical and modeling skills as well as good communication skills.
Research topic: Modeling and control of an electron microscope. The
research will concentrate on image analysis. From observed images we aim
to reconstruct the geometry of the observed entity as well as the (or
some) control settings of the microscope. The ultimate goal is to
automate the electron microscope's controls for inserted specific
specimen under, in order to get focused, astigmatic etc. images without
the aid of the user. The research includes the modeling how the image
depends on the microscope's controls and specimen as well as the related
optimization to match desired images. The microscope can be modeled
based on FEM direct computations or database based interpolations. Just
as the specimen all should be modeled in such a representation that
calculations can take place as fast as possible. Iterative and
non-linear solution techniques will be exploited to get an efficient
optimization procedure.
Applications should be addressed to: r.m.m.mattheij@tue.nl
Please include: Presentation letter; Curriculum Vitae; List of MSc.
Grades; List of people for recommendation.
Starting date: As soon as possible.
The salary is conforming the Dutch VSNU salary scale for PhDs.
About the project
(http://www.embeddedsystems.nl/site/frames.html?/site/projects/condor/ho
me.asp)
Information on CASA (http://www.win.tue.nl/casa/)
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Liz Martin <liz.Martin@iop.org>
Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 11:20:03 +0100
Subject: Contents, Nonlinearity, volume 20, issue 8, August 2007
NONLINEARITY
Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2007
Individual articles are free for 30 days following their publication on
the web. This issue is available at: URL:
http://stacks.iop.org/0951-7715/20/i=8
Pages: 1773--2034
PAPERS
1773
Finite-dimensionality of attractors for degenerate equations of
elliptic--parabolic type
A Miranville and S Zelik
1799
Unstable sixth-order thin film equation: I. Blow-up similarity solutions
J D Evans, V A Galaktionov and J R King
1843
Unstable sixth-order thin film equation: II. Global similarity patterns
J D Evans, V A Galaktionov and J R King
1883
A free boundary problem for a predator--prey model
Zhigui Lin
1893
Nonsingular solutions of Hitchin's equations for noncompact gauge groups
Ricardo A Mosna and Marcos Jardim
1907
Classification of phase singularities for complex scalar waves and their
bifurcations
Jiro Adachi and Go-o Ishikawa
1927
Euler--Lagrange change of variables in conservation laws
Yue-Jun Peng
1955
The positive entropy kernel for some families of trees
Esther Barrab\'es and David Juher
1969
Higher-dimensional multifractal value sets for conformal infinite graph
directed Markov systems
Marc Kesseb\"ohmer and Mariusz Urba\'nski
1987
Attractors of retarded first order lattice systems
Caidi Zhao and Shengfan Zhou
2007
Positive topological entropy for magnetic flows on surfaces
Jos\'e Ant\^onio Gon\c{c}alves Miranda
CORRIGENDUM
2033
The stationary 2D Smoluchowski equation in strong homogeneous flow
Arghir Zarnescu
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Chi-Wang Shu <shu@dam.brown.edu>
Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2007 14:26:20 -0400
Subject: Contents, Journal of Scientific Computing
Journal of Scientific Computing
http://www.springeronline.com/journal/10915
Volume 31, Number 3, June 2007
On the Eigenvalues of the Spectral Second Order Differentiation
Operator and Application to theBoundary Observability of the
Wave Equation
T. Z. Boulmezaoud and J. M. Urquiza, pp.307-345.
An HLLC Scheme to Solve The M 1 Model of Radiative Transfer in
Two Space Dimensions
Christophe Berthon, Pierre Charrier and Bruno Dubroca, pp.347-389.
A Novel Class of Symmetric and Nonsymmetric Periodizing Variable
Transformations for Numerical Integration
Avram Sidi, pp.391-417.
Two-Dimensional Extension of the Reservoir Technique for Some
Linear Advection Systems
Francois Alouges, Gerard Le Coq and Emmanuel Lorin, pp.419-458.
Volume 32, Number 1, July 2007
Implicit-Explicit Schemes for BGK Kinetic Equations
Sandra Pieraccini and Gabriella Puppo, pp.1-28.
Efficient Solution of A, x ( k ) = b ( k ) Using A -1
Adi Ditkowski, Gadi Fibich and Nir Gavish, pp.29-44.
Spectral Difference Method for Unstructured Grids II:
Extension to the Euler Equations
Z. J. Wang, Yen Liu, Georg May and Antony Jameson,
pp.45-71.
The Approximation and Computation of a Basis of the
Trace Space H 1/2
Petr Kloucek, Danny C. Sorensen and Jennifer L.
Wightman, pp.73-108.
Optimized High-Order Derivative and Dissipation
Operators Satisfying Summation by Parts, and Applications
in Three-dimensional Multi-block Evolutions
Peter Diener, Ernst Nils Dorband, Erik Schnetter and
Manuel Tiglio, pp.109-145.
Volume 32, Number 2, August 2007
Flux-free Finite Element Method with Lagrange Multipliers
for Two-fluid Flows
Katsushi Ohmori and Norikazu Saito, pp.147-173.
A Discontinuous Galerkin Scheme Based on a Space<96>Time
Expansion. I. Inviscid Compressible Flow in One Space
Dimension
F. Lorcher, G. Gassner and C.-D. Munz, pp.175-199.
Adjoint Recovery of Superconvergent Linear Functionals
from Galerkin Approximations. The One-dimensional Case
Bernardo Cockburn and Ryuhei Ichikawa, pp.201-232.
An Analysis of the Minimal Dissipation Local Discontinuous
Galerkin Method for Convection<96>Diffusion Problems
Bernardo Cockburn and Bo Dong, pp.233-262.
Finite Element Analysis for Wave Propagation in Double
Negative Metamaterials
Jichun Li and Aihua Wood, pp.263-286.
Adapted BDF Algorithms: Higher-order Methods and Their
Stability
J. Martin-Vaquero and J. Vigo-Aguiar, pp.287-313.
Total Variation Wavelet Thresholding
Tony F. Chan and Hao-Min Zhou, pp.315-341.
Preconditioned Descent Algorithms for p-Laplacian
Y. Q. Huang, Ruo Li and Wenbin Liu, pp.343-371.
A Nonoverlapping Domain Decomposition Method for Legendre
Spectral Collocation Problems
Bernard Bialecki and Andreas Karageorghis, pp.373-409.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Jerzy Wasniewski <jw@imm.dtu.dk>
Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2007 10:49:28 +0200 (METDST)
Subject: Contents, Applicable Algebra in Eng,, Comm., and Comp. 18/3
Applicable Algebra in Engineering, Communication and Computing.
Volume 18, Number 3, May 2007.
Special Issue on Computational Linear Algebra and Sparse Matrix
Computations.
The Guest editors: Jerzy Wasniewski, Jack Dongarra, Kaj
Madsen, Sivan Toledo, and Zahari Zlatev.
Contents:
David J. Barnes and Tim R. Hopkins on Improving Test Coverage
of LAPACK.
Alfredo Buttari, Pasqua D'Ambra, Daniela di Serafino, and
Salvatore Filippone on 2LEV-D2P4: a package of high-performance
preconditioners for scientific and engineering applications.
Laura Grigori and Xiaoye S. Li on Towards an Accurate
Performance Modeling of Parallel Sparse Factorization.
Anshul Gupta on A Shared- and Distributed-Memory Parallel
General Sparse Direct Solver.
Jose R. Herrero and Juan J. Navarro on Analysis of a Sparse
Hypermatrix Cholesky with Fixed-Sized Blocking.
Jose Rajesh Nishtala, Richard W. Vuduc, James W. Demmel, and
Katherine A. Yelick on When Cache Blocking of Sparse Matrix
Vector Multiply Works and Why.
On behalf of the Guest editors,
Jerzy Wasniewski
Email: jw@imm.dtu.dk
------------------------------
End of NA Digest
**************************
-------