-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Janos D. Pinter" <jdpinter@hfx.eastlink.ca>
Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 15:48:20 -0300
Subject: Free LGO demo software available for education and non-profit research
Dear Colleagues,
We have made available an easy-to-use demonstration version of the
LGO global and local optimization solver suite. Solvable model sizes
are limited to 10 model variables and 10 model functions, in addition
to model variable bounds. This demo software can be freely used for
educational, non-profit research, and evaluation purposes.
Please contact us, if you wish to receive further information and/or
the software. The LGO demo software is currently available in two
versions: one of these can be used with the free Tiny C compiler (by
Fabrice Bellard), the other with the free C# compiler (by Microsoft).
Sincerely,
Frank Kampas and Janos Pinter
<fkampas@msn.com> <jdpinter@hfx.eastlink.ca>
-------------------------------------------------------
From: chaoqun liu <cliu@omega.uta.edu>
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2007 12:40:13 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: New CFD Textbook
COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS
A Practical Approach
By
Jiyuan TU, Professor of Computational Fluid Dynamics, School of Aerospace,
Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, RMIT University, Australia
Guan Heng YEOH, Senior Research Scientist, ANSTO (Australian Nuclear
Science and Technology Organizations) and Visiting Professor, City
University of Hong Kong
Chaoqun LIU, Director of the Center for Numerical Simulation and Modeling,
and Professor at the Department of Mathematics, University of Texas at
Arlington, US
Description
A senior level undergraduate and graduate textbook for a wide audience of
engineering students taking a first course in CFD or Computer Aided
Engineering. Fully course matched, with the most extensive and rigorous
pedagogy and features of any book in the field. The first book in the
field aimed at CFD users rather than developers.
Audience
Senior level undergraduate and graduate students of mechanical, aerospace,
civil, chemical, environmental and marine engineering. Beginner users of
commercial CFD software tools (including CFX and FLUENT)
More information about this book can be found at
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/bookdescription.cws_home/712893/description
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Kees Oosterlee <c.w.oosterlee@tudelft.nl>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 21:37:22 +0200
Subject: Numerics in Finance, Germany, Nov 2007
Announcement for a Workshop "Numerics for Finance",
at the Commerzbank in Frankfurt am Main, Germany,
November 5th and 6th 2007.
-- PDE methods for pricing financial derivatives;
-- Recent development in monte Carlo methods;
-- Numerical techniques in risk management.
Complete programme now available at:
http://castor.iwr.uni-heidelberg.de/Numerics_of_Finance/Programm.pdf
Registration under:
http://castor.iwr.uni-heidelberg.de/Numerics_of_Finance/
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Pierre-Antoine Absil <absil@inma.ucl.ac.be>
Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2007 11:49:36 +0200
Subject: Workshop on Optimization On Manifolds, New Orleans, Dec 2007
One-day pre-conference workshop on "Optimization On Manifolds" at the
46th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, New Orleans, LA, USA,
Tuesday December 11, 2007.
Organizers:
P.-A. Absil, Knut Hueper, Rodolphe Sepulchre
Additional Lecturers:
Uwe Helmke, Michel Journee, Shankar Sastry, Jochen Trumpf
The recent years have witnessed an increasing interest in the
development of efficient optimization algorithms defined on manifolds.
Applications abound in numerical linear algebra (eigenproblems),
statistical analysis (Principal and Independent Component analysis),
signal processing (blind source separation, subspace tracking), machine
learning (clustering), computer vision (pose estimation), to name a few.
Good algorithms result from the combination of insights from
differential geometry, optimization and numerical analysis.
The purpose of the workshop is to provide a tutorial introduction to
this rich field of applied mathematics with a parsimonious selection of
topics in differential geometry and in numerical algebra, and with an
illustration of engineering problems where the theory is currently applied.
The details of the workshop can be found at
http://www.inma.ucl.ac.be/~absil/oom/cdc07/
with a link to the conference and workshop web sites.
Pre-registration for the pre-CDC workshops is strongly encouraged.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Nicole C. Jorlett" <Jorlett@siam.org>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 15:26:48 -0400
Subject: SIAM Conference on the Life Sciences (LS08), Quebec, Aug 2008
Call for Submissions
SIAM Conference on the Life Sciences (LS08)
Hyatt Regency Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
August 4-7, 2008
Invited Plenary Speakers:
Paul Bressloff, University of Utah
Richard L. Ehman, Mayo Clinic
Jeff Hasty, University of California, San Diego
Sharon Lubkin, North Carolina State University
Ilya Shmulevich, Institute for Systems Biology
Karl Sigmund, University of Vienna, Austria
Kai E. Thomenius, GE Global Research
Claire J. Tomlin, University of California, Berkeley and Stanford University
The Call for Presentations for this conference is available at:
http://www.siam.org/meetings/ls08/
**Deadlines**
Minisymposium proposals: January 4, 2008
Abstracts for all contributed and minisymposium presentations: February 4, 2008
For additional information, contact SIAM Conference Department at
meetings@siam.org.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Nicole C. Jorlett" <Jorlett@siam.org>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 14:22:41 -0400
Subject: SIAM Conference on Discrete Mathematics (DM08), Vermont, Jun 2008
Call for Submittions
SIAM Conference on Discrete Mathematics (DM08)
University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont
June 16-19, 2008
Invited Plenary Speakers:
Anne Condon, The University of British Columbia, Canada
Chris Godsil, University of Waterloo, Canada
David S. Johnson, AT&T
Milena Mihail, Georgia Institute of Technology
Bojan Mohar, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Patric Östergård, Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
Baruch Schieber, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Angelika Steger, Institute of Theoretical Computer Science, Zürich, Switzerland
The Call for Presentations for this conference is available at:
http://www.siam.org/meetings/dm08/
**Deadlines**
Minisymposium proposals: January 7, 2008
Abstracts for all contributed and minisymposium presentations: January 21, 2008
For additional information, contact SIAM Conference Department at
meetings@siam.org.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: MACIS 2007 <macis2007@unican.es>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2007 22:56:44 +0200
Subject: Math. Aspects of Computer and Info. Sciences (MACIS), Paris, Dec 2007
MACIS 2007 - International Conference on
Mathematical Aspects of Computer and Information Sciences
Paris, France, December 5-7, 2007
http://www-spiral.lip6.fr/MACIS2007
CALL FOR PAPERS
Mathematical Aspects of Computer and Information Sciences (MACIS) is a
new series of conferences where foundational research on theoretical
and practical problems of mathematics for computing and information
processing may be presented and discussed. MACIS also addresses
experimental and case studies, scientific and engineering computation,
design and implementation of algorithms and software systems, and
applications of mathematical methods and tools to outstanding and
emerging problems in applied computer and information sciences. Each
conference focuses on two or three themes.
The themes for MACIS 2007 are:
* Computational Geometry and Computer Aided Geometric Design
* Polynomial System Solving
* Algorithms and Complexity
The first MACIS conference took place in Beijing (China), July 24-26,
2006 (see http://www.cc4cm.org/macis2006/ for more details).
SUBMISSION
Potential participants of MACIS 2007 are invited to submit extended
abstracts (3-4 pages) or full papers describing their work to be
presented at the conference. The submitted extended abstracts and full
papers will be reviewed by members of the Program Committee (PC) for
soundness and relevance to the conference. Submission of original
research papers is encouraged, while published material and work in
progress will also be considered for presentation at the
conference. Electronic submissions are strongly preferred by using the
web page http://www.easychair.org/MACIS2007/ or should be sent in PDF
or PS format as e-mail attachments to the PC chair:
E_mail: macis2007@unican.es
Accepted extended abstracts and full papers will be printed for
distribution at the conference. Authors of the extended abstracts and
full papers accepted for presentation at the conference will be
invited to submit their full and/or revised papers for publication in
special issues of Mathematics in Computer Science (MCS -
http://www.cc4cm.org/mcs) by Birkhauser/Springer after the
meeting. The submitted papers will be formally reviewed by PC members
and external referees according to the refereeing procedure of MCS.
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for extended abstract submission: October 21, 2007
Notification of acceptance or rejection: November 12, 2007
Conference taking place: December 5-7, 2007
Deadline for full paper submission: January 31, 2008
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Nicole C. Jorlett" <Jorlett@siam.org>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2007 14:25:39 -0400
Subject: Deadline extended --- SIAM Conf. on Optimization, Boston, May 2008
Conference Name: SIAM Conference on Optimization
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Dates: May 10 - 13, 2008
SUBMISSION DEADLINES HAVE BEEN EXTENDED
November 8, 2007: Minisymposium proposals
November 8, 2007: Abstracts for contributed and minisymposium speakers
Visit http://www.siam.org/meetings/op08/participation.php to submit.
For more information about the conference, visit
http://www.siam.org/meetings/op08/ or contact SIAM Conference Department
at meetings@siam.org.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Miguel A. Ben=?ISO-8859-1?B?7Q==?=tez" <miguelangel.benitez@uam.es>
Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2007 13:36:26 +0200
Subject: Seminar Iserles & Farrelly, Spain, Oct 24, 2007
We are glad to inform that two seminars will take place on October 24
within the IMDEA Mathematics Seminar Series. The event will be hosted
at the facilities of the Institute, in the Faculty of Sciences of the
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. The first seminar will be given by
Prof. Iserles (Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Cambridge
University), entitled " On a Lie - Poisson system and its Lie algebra
", and the second one will be given by Prof. Farrelly (Department of
Chemistry, Utah State University), entitled "Chaos and the formation
of binary objects in the Kuiper-belt."
www.imdea.org/mathematics
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "K. Baier" <kmb255@cornell.edu>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2007 11:53:58 -0400
Subject: Conell University - OR&IE Tenured/Tenure-Track Faculty Positions
Cornell University
School of Operations Research and Information Engineering
Cornell University's School of Operations Research and Information
Engineering (OR&IE) is seeking candidates for tenured/tenure-track faculty
positions. The search is focused on statistics, applied operations research
and financial engineering. The ability to teach courses in data mining or
simulation is desirable but not essential. The ranks of the appointments are
open. Candidates should have a Ph.D. in Operations Research, Industrial
Engineering, Statistics, Computer Science, Mathematics, or a related
discipline by the start date of the appointment and have demonstrable
excellence in teaching and research.
The School of OR&IE and the College of Engineering at Cornell University
embrace diversity and seek candidates who will foster a climate that attracts
students of all races, nationalities and genders. We strongly encourage
women and underrepresented minorities to apply.
Applicants should provide a c.v., 1-page statements of research directions
and of teaching interests, a doctoral transcript for junior applicants, and
any other supporting materials. Please apply online at
https://fast.orie.cornell.edu/ as early as possible. Applications received
by January 31, 2008 will receive full consideration.
Cornell University is an equal opportunity, affirmative action educator and
employer.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: George Biros <biros@seas.upenn.edu>
Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2007 11:29:12 -0400
Subject: Faculty position at University of Pennsylvania
THE DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING AND APPLIED MECHANICS at the
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA invites applications for tenure-track
positions in the area of computational science and engineering, with
applications to mechanics of solids, fluids, and interfaces, transport
phenomena, biomechanics, biophysics and complex mechanical systems.
Candidates at the assistant, associate, and full professor level will
be considered. Opportunities exist for joint appointments with other
engineering and/ or science departments. Applicants must have a
doctoral degree, exceptional promise for or proven record of research
achievement, and commitment to undergraduate and graduate
education. The successful candidate will be expected to initiate and
participate in high quality, externally-funded research
programs.
Applicants should submit their applications electronically
at the website http://www.me.upenn.edu/compsearch.html.
The Department maintains strong collaborations with other engineering
departments, the Medical School, the School of Arts and Sciences, and
the Wharton School. Information about the Department is available at
http:// www.me.upenn.edu. The University of Pennsylvania is an equal
opportunity employer. Minorities, women, individuals with
disabilities, and veterans are encouraged to apply.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Sarah MacKinnon-Cormier" <sarah.mackinnon-cormier@acceleware.com>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:16:41 -0600
Subject: Software Developer position in Numerical Algebra at Acceleware Corp.
Position: Software Developer - Numerical Algebra
Acceleware is looking for software developers to join a
high-performance scientific computing products development team.
Qualifications:
- 5+ years of professional software development or equivalent academic
experience.
- Extensive knowledge of iterative solvers and preconditioning
techniques for the solution of large sparse linear systems.
- Solid knowledge of matrix factorizations: eigenvalue, singular value,
QR, LU.
- Understanding of stability, conditioning, and convergence of numerical
algorithms.
- Knowledge of numerical techniques for solving PDEs, especially finite
element, method of moments, and multigrid.
- Demonstrated ability in the complete software development cycle.
- Object-oriented programming knowledge, preferably in C++.
- Minimum of Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science, Mathematics,
Engineering, or related field. Advanced degrees an asset.
- Excellent technical communication skills.
Information about the position and application procedures can be found
at http://acceleware.com (under position DVX NA107-2).
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Steven Kleinstein <steven.kleinstein@yale.edu>
Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2007 21:39:19 -0400
Subject: Postdoc, Computational Immunology, Yale University School of Medicine
Department of Pathology
Postdoc Associate Position
Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Pathology is seeking
one (1) postdoctoral associate in the Computational Laboratory for
Immunology and Pathology (CLIP). The successful candidate will develop
and apply computational methods/models and bioinformatics approaches to
disease processes and the immune response in close collaborations with
experimentalists. The ideal candidate will have strong quantitative and
programming abilities, along with a demonstrated interest in applying
these skills to problems in biology.
Interested candidates should forward a CV and short description of
research interests together with the names and addresses of three
references to steven.kleinstein@yale.edu
Review of applications will begin on September 30th, 2007.
Yale University is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
Minority and female applicants are encouraged to apply.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "T.R.Hopkins" <T.R.Hopkins@kent.ac.uk>
Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 10:11:00 +0100
Subject: Position in Bergen, Norway
Position in Bergen, Norway: MPI Parallel Programming for Industrial
Applications
BSSI (http://www.bssi.no) is an international SME software company
devoted to developing software for industrial applications --
presently applications for painting processes in the automotive
industry. The topic of MPI programming on multi-core architectures is
a strategic part of BSSI's R&D activities and BSSI has a position that
it is seeking to fill in this area. Being part of an SME naturally
means the topics of work and the manner of working may not appeal to
everyone but those seeking a challenge with the opportunity to make a
substantial contribution to industry and who feel the following
profile is not too daunting should send a resume to one of the people
mentioned at the foot of this note.
Profile of a successful candidate
* Strong background in software development preferably with exposure
to Fortran.
* Should not be afraid of mathematics or numerical methods.
* Exposure to MPI programming is a definite plus.
* Should be able to work long hours, under pressure, with time
constraints, and with a team of professional programmers,
scientists, and mathematicians.
* Should be able and willing to talk with, meet, and travel to
clients from any country.
Topics Covered
* The main topic is the development of methods and strategies for
parallel programming using MPI on multi-core architectures.
* The implementation of these methods and strategies in Fortran
code integrated with BSSI's suite of tools for industrial applications.
* Testing, verification, and documentation of all written code
using real-world examples from industry.
The position is ideal for a Research Assistant or Visiting scientist.
BSSI staff would also be willing and able to act as academic
supervisor to students with a strong first degree in a computer
science oriented subject who wish to consider the listed topics as the
basis for a research degree. Students could be registered at the
University of Kent or at one of the other Universities that BSSI works
with.
Females are encouraged to apply.
Environment: The environment supporting this activity is located in
Bergen, Norway. The successful candidate is expected to either live in
Bergen or to visit Bergen.
Language: The working language is English.
Contacts
* Patrick Gaffney, D.Phil., (pat@bssi.no) ~ Norway
* Leonard Gray, PhD, (len@bssi-tt.com) ~ USA
* Brian Ford, PhD, (brian.ford9@btinternet.com) ~ UK
* Tim Hopkins, PhD, (T.R.Hopkins@kent.ac.uk) ~ UK
* Suh, Soo-Hyun, P.E. (shush@sstcorp.co.kr) ~ Korea
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Bartosz Protas <bprotas@mcmaster.ca>
Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2007 10:57:46 -0400
Subject: Ph.D. Opening at McMaster University
An opening for a Ph.D. student is available at McMaster University
with a start date in January 2008. The student will be enrolled in the
graduate program in the School of Computational Engineering & Science,
or in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, and will work with
Dr. Protas on problems of PDE-constrained optimization using
adjoint-based techniques (the project will involve collaboration with
an Industrial Partner). Candidates should have an M.Sc. degree in
Applied Mathematics, Computer Science or a relevant engineering
discipline. For further details, including admission procedures and
requirements and a description of the CES and Applied Mathematics
programs, please consult the following URLs:
http://computational.mcmaster.ca/
http://www.math.mcmaster.ca/graduate/
Inquiries should be directed to Dr. Protas at the address:
Bartosz Protas
Department of Mathematics & Statistics
McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario, CANADA L8S 4K1
Phone: +1 (905) 525 9140 ext. 24116
Fax: +1 (905) 522 0935
Email: bprotas@mcmaster.ca
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "LAI, Choi-Hong" <C.H.Lai@gre.ac.uk>
Date: Tue, 09 Oct 2007 09:46:24 +0100
Subject: MSc and PhD studies in applied mathematics
University of Greenwich
MSc Applied Mathematical Modelling and Scientific Computing (AMMSC)
PhD Applied Mathematics
This advertisement is aimed at students who wish to consider January
entrance. Potential students aiming at distinctive MSc results with
migration to PhD studies in applied mathematics are invited to apply.
Fundings are not available for students at the MSc level. However
students successfully completed the MSc with distinctive results will
be selected to continue a PhD research programme, which will then be
fully funded, at the Centre for Numerical Modelling and Process
Analysis. Please refer to http://www.cms.gre.ac.uk for a full
description of the research activities.
Deadline for application: 30/11/2007.
Application form from http://cse.gre.ac.uk
The Masters programme is run by the Department of Mathematical
Sciences at Greenwich, within the School of of Computing and
Mathematical Sciences. This highly regarded department was ranked
10th in the 2007 UK departmental ranking
(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/section/0,,6734,00.html),
and the MSc is taught by members of the Centre for Numerical Modelling
and Process Analysis, an award winning research group.
This Masters programme aims to train and equip Honours graduates in
engineering, science or mathematics and suitably qualified
professionals, with the skills required to understand, and use, applied
mathematical modelling techniques and scientific computing technologies
in industry. Emphasis will be placed on modelling phenomena governed by
the physics of fluid flow, heat transfer, electromagnetics and solid
mechanics using CFD, FEA and other software tools. A core philosophy of
the programme is to introduce the students to the concept of
multi-physics modelling, where interactions between the governing
physics, and hence the relevant solution and software technologies, are
important. A strand of the programme is devoted to Fire and Evacuation
modelling, for candidates with Fire Safety degree background. Details of
available modules can be found at:
http://cse.gre.ac.uk
Entry requirements: A good Bachelor's degree in engineering, physics,
mathematics or a relevant related discipline. Those who have
substantial commercial or industrial experience but lack formal
qualifications should seek an interview with the programme leader.
Further details of the programme, applications, enquiries should
reach cmsinfo@gre.ac.uk (Mrs. Marilyn Nichols) or cse@gre.ac.uk
Professor C.-H. Lai
Programme leader - MSc AMMSC
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Chi-Wang Shu <shu@dam.brown.edu>
Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 23:27:32 -0400
Subject: Contents, Journal of Scientific Computing
Journal of Scientific Computing
http://www.springeronline.com/journal/10915
Volume 33, Number 2, November 2007
A Nonlinear Multigrid Method for Total Variation Minimization
from Image Restoration
Ke Chen and Xue-Cheng Tai, pp.115-138.
On Time Staggering for Wave Equations
J. G. Verwer, pp.139-154.
A Posteriori Error Estimates of Recovery Type for Distributed
Convex Optimal Control Problems
Ruo Li, Wenbin Liu and Ningning Yan, pp.155-182.
Minimal Stabilization for Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Element
Methods for Hyperbolic Problems
E. Burman and B. Stamm, pp.183-208.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Joseph Traub <traub@cs.columbia.edu>
Date: Tue, 9 Oct 2007 15:34:31 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Contents, J. Complexity, Vol 23, Fall, 2007
Journal of Complexity
Volume 23, Fall, 2007
Special Issue:
Festschrift for the 60th Birthday of
Henryk Wozniakowski
Guest Editors' Preface
Boleslaw Kacewicz, Leszek Plaskota, Grzegorz Wasilkowski
On the counting function of the lattice profile of periodic sequences
Fang-Wei Fu, Harald Niederreiter
Strong tractability of multivariate integration of arbitrary high order
using digitally shifted polynomial lattice rules
Josef Dick, Friedrich Pillichshammer
Regularized collocation method for Fredholm integral equations of the
first kind
M. Thamban Nair, Sergei V. Pereverzev
Wavelet para-bases and sampling numbers in function spaces on domains
Hans Triebel
CBS constants for multilevel splitting of graph-Laplacian and application to
preconditioning of discontinuous Galerkin systems
R.D. Lazarov, S.D. Margenov
Pseudorandom numbers and entropy conditions
Istvan Berkes, Walter Philipp, Robert F. Tichy
Quadrature in Besov spaces on the Euclidean sphere
K. Hesse, H.N. Mhaskar, I.H. Sloan
A note on the complexity and tractability of the heat equation
Arthur G. Werschulz
Error propagation of general linear methods for ordinary differential
equations
J.C Butcher, Z. Jackiewicz, W.M. Wright
On the existence of higher order polynomial lattices based on a generalized
figure of merit
Joseph Dick, Peter Kritzer, Friedrich Pillichshammer, Wolfgang Ch. Schmid
A note on parallel and alternating time
Felipe Cucker, Irene Briquel
Searching for extensible Korobov rules
Hardeep S. Gill, Christiane Lemieux
Optimal approximation of elliptic problems by linear and nonlinear mappings
III: Frames
Stephan Dahlke, Erich Novak , Winfried Sickel
A note on the existence of sequences with small star-discrepancy
Josef Dick
Optimal recovery of solutions of the generalized heat equation in the unit
ball from inaccurate data
K.Yu Osipenko, E.V. Wedenskaya
Discrepancy with respect to convex polygons
W.W.L. Chen, G. Travaglini
Simple Monte-Carlo and the Metropolis algorithm
Peter Mathe, Erich Novak
Tensor-product approximation to operators and functions in high dimensions
Wolfgang Hackbusch, Boris N. Khoromskij
BDDC methods for discontinuous Galerkin discretization of elliptic problems
Maksymilian Dryja, Juan Galvis, Marcus Sarkis
An effective algorithm for generation of factorial designs with generalized
minimum aberration
Kai-Tai Fang, Aijun Zhang, Runze Li
Lattice-Nystrom method for Fredholm integral equations of the second kind
with convolution type kernels
Josef Dick, Peter Kritzer, Frances Y. Kuo , Ian H. Sloan
Sampling numbers and function spaces
Jan Vybiral
Quantum lower bounds by entropy numbers
Stefan Heinrich
On the complexity of the multivariate Sturm-Liouville eigenvalue problem
A. Papageorgiou
Cubature formulas for function spaces with moderate smoothness
Michael Gnewuch, Rene Lindloh, Reinhold Schneider, Anand Srivastav
Disintegration of Gaussian measures and average-case optimal algorithms
Vaja Tarieladze, Nicholas Vakhania
Free-knot spline approximation of stochastic processes
Jacob Creutzig, Thomas Muller-Gronbach, Klaus Ritter
On the best interval quadrature formulae for classes of differentiable
periodic functions
V.F.Babenko, D.S. Skorokhodov
Deterministic constructions of compressed sensing matrices
Ronald A. DeVore
On linear codes with large weights simultaneously for the Rosenbloom-Tsfasman
and Hamming metrics
M.M. Skriganov
Computation of local radius of information in SM-IBC identification of
nonlinear systems
Mario Milanese, Carlo Novara
A note on two fixed point problems
Ch. Boonyasiriwat, K. Sikorski, Ch. Xiong
-------------------------------------------------------
From: "Commun. Comput. Phys." <cicp@global-sci.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2007 11:20:33 +0800 (HKT)
Subject: Contents, Commun. Comput. Phys. Vol. 2 No. 5
Communications in Computational Physics (CiCP)
http://www.global-sci.com
http://www.global-sci.com/issue/contents/2/issue5.html
Volume 2, Number 5, 2007
Review Article:
O. Runborg
Mathematical models and numerical methods for high frequency waves.
Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 827-880.
Regular Articles:
M. F. Adams and Y. Nishimura
Parallel algebraic multigrid methods in gyrokinetic turbulence simulations.
Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 881-899.
S. Garcia
The lid-driven square cavity flow: From stationary to time periodic
and chaotic. Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 900-932.
Y. Liu, C.-W. Shu, E. Tadmor and M. Zhang
Non-oscillatory hierarchical reconstruction for central and finite
volume schemes. Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 933-963.
E. Chiavazzo, A. N. Gorban and I. V. Karlin
Comparison of invariant manifolds for model reduction in chemical kinetics.
Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 964-992.
R. Rõõm and M. Zirk
Amplitude factorization method in the atmospheric gravity-wave equation.
Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 993-1006.
S. Deng and W. Cai
Discrete image approximations of ionic solvent induced reaction
field to charges. Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 1007-1026.
J. A. Carrillo, A. Majorana and F. Vecil
A semi-Lagrangian deterministic solver for the semiconductor Boltzmann-Poisson
system.
Commun. Comput. Phys., 2 (2007), pp. 1027-1054.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Lothar Reichel <reichel@math.kent.edu>
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:20:35 -0400
Subject: Contents, ETNA, vol. 27
Table of Contents, Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis (ETNA),
vol. 27, 2006. This is a special volume on "Difference Equations and
Special Functions" edited by F. Marcellan and A. Ruffing.
ETNA is available at http://etna.math.kent.edu and at several
mirror sites. ETNA is in the extended Science Citation Index and the
CompuMath Citation Index.
i-v Table of contents and abstracts
vi Preface
1-12 E. Akin-Bohner, M. Bohner, and S. H. Saker
Oscillation criteria for a certain class of second order
Emden-Fowler dynamic equations
13-25 A. Cabada
The method of lower and upper solutions for periodic and
anti-periodic difference equations
26-33 J. DeVries and A. Hulme
Oscillation of factored dynamic equations
34-50 R. A'lvarez-Nodarse, N. M. Atakishiyev, and R. S. Costas-Santos
Factorization of the hypergeometric-type difference equation on
the uniform lattice
51-70 L. Erbe and A. Peterson
Recent results concerning dynamic equations on time scales
71-77 B. Kaymakcalan and A. Zafer
Langenhop's inequality and applications for dynamic equations
78-93 R. Meyer-Spasche
On difference schemes for quasilinear evolution problems
94-112 H. L. Pedersen
Pick functions related to entire functions having negative zeros
113-123 W. Koepf
Orthogonal polynomials and recurrence equations, operator equations
and factorization
124-139 L. L. Littlejohn and A. Zettl
Left-definite variations of the classical Fourier expansion theorem
140-155 S. K. Suslov
An algebra of integral operators
156-162 V. G. Romanovski
Periodic points of some algebraic maps
163-176 M. Robnik and V. G. Romanovski
The difference equation related to the problem of the hydrogen atom
in a strong magnetic field
-------------------------------------------------------
From: cmam <cmam@im.bas-net.by>
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2007 15:57:36 +0300
Subject: Contents, Computational methods in applied mathematics (CMAM)
Contents Comp. Meth. Appl. Math., Vol. 7 (2007), No. 3
COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN APPLIED MATHEMATICS
All papers are available at our web-site http://www.cmam.info/issues/ .
Contents:
Numerical solution of a hyperbolic-parabolic system by splitting
methods and optimal control
V.I. Agoshkov and E.A.Botvinovsky (Russia)
Stability of difference schemes for the equations of weakly
compressible liquid
P.Matus, O.Korolyova, and M.Chuiko (Belarus)
Integration of Jacobi and weighted Bernstein polynomials using bases
Transformations
Abedallah Rababah (Jordan)
A weighted residual parabolic acceleration time integration method
for problems in structural dynamics
S.H. Razavi, A. Abolmaali, and M. Ghassemieh (Iran, USA)
Finite-order integration weights can be dangerous
I.H. Sloan (Australia)
Error bounds of a fully discrete projection method for Symm's integral
equation
S.G. Solodky and E.V. Lebedeva (Ukraine)
Fully and semi-discrete fourth-order schemes for hyperbolic
conservation laws
Y.H. Zahran (Egipt)
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End of NA Digest
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