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This volume collects ten surveys on the modeling, simulation, and
applications of active particles using methods ranging from
mathematical kinetic theory to nonequilibrium statistical
mechanics. The contributing authors are leading experts working in
this challenging field, and each of their chapters provides a
review of the most recent results in their areas and looks ahead to
future research directions. The approaches to studying active
matter are presented here from many different perspectives, such as
individual-based models, evolutionary games, Brownian motion, and
continuum theories, as well as various combinations of these.
Applications covered include biological network formation and
network theory; opinion formation and social systems; control
theory of sparse systems; theory and applications of mean field
games; population learning; dynamics of flocking systems; vehicular
traffic flow; and stochastic particles and mean field
approximation. Mathematicians and other members of the scientific
community interested in active matter and its many applications
will find this volume to be a timely, authoritative, and valuable
resource.
The International Conference on "Hyperbolic Problems: Theory, Numerics and Applications'' was held in CalTech on March 25-30, 2002. The conference was the ninth meeting in the bi-annual international series which became one of the highest quality and most successful conference series in Applied mathematics. This volume contains more than 90 contributions presented in this conference, including plenary presentations by A. Bressan, P. Degond, R. LeVeque, T.-P. Liu, B. Perthame, C.-W. Shu, B. Sjögreen and S. Ukai. Reflecting the objective of series, the contributions in this volume keep the traditional blend of theory, numerics and applications. The Hyp2002 meeting placed a particular emphasize on fundamental theory and numerical analysis, on multi-scale analysis, modeling and simulations, and on geophysical applications and free boundary problems arising from materials science and multi-component fluid dynamics. The volume should appeal to researchers, students and practitioners with general interest in time-dependent problems governed by hyperbolic equations.
This edited volume collects six surveys that present
state-of-the-art results on modeling, qualitative analysis, and
simulation of active matter, focusing on specific applications in
the natural sciences. Following the previously published Active
Particles volumes, these chapters are written by leading experts in
the field and reflect the diversity of subject matter in theory and
applications within an interdisciplinary framework. Topics covered
include: Variability and heterogeneity in natural swarms Multiscale
aspects of the dynamics of human crowds Mathematical modeling of
cell collective motion triggered by self-generated gradients
Clustering dynamics on graphs Random Batch Methods for classical
and quantum interacting particle systems The consensus-based global
optimization algorithm and its recent variants Mathematicians and
other members of the scientific community interested in active
matter and its many applications will find this volume to be a
timely, authoritative, and valuable resource.
This volume collects ten surveys on the modeling, simulation, and
applications of active particles using methods ranging from
mathematical kinetic theory to nonequilibrium statistical
mechanics. The contributing authors are leading experts working in
this challenging field, and each of their chapters provides a
review of the most recent results in their areas and looks ahead to
future research directions. The approaches to studying active
matter are presented here from many different perspectives, such as
individual-based models, evolutionary games, Brownian motion, and
continuum theories, as well as various combinations of these.
Applications covered include biological network formation and
network theory; opinion formation and social systems; control
theory of sparse systems; theory and applications of mean field
games; population learning; dynamics of flocking systems; vehicular
traffic flow; and stochastic particles and mean field
approximation. Mathematicians and other members of the scientific
community interested in active matter and its many applications
will find this volume to be a timely, authoritative, and valuable
resource.
This edited volume collects six surveys that present
state-of-the-art results on modeling, qualitative analysis, and
simulation of active matter, focusing on specific applications in
the natural sciences. Following the previously published
Active Particles volumes, these chapters are written by leading
experts in the field and reflect the diversity of subject matter in
theory and applications within an interdisciplinary framework.
Topics covered include: Variability and heterogeneity in natural
swarms Multiscale aspects of the dynamics of human crowds
Mathematical modeling of cell collective motion triggered by
self-generated gradients Clustering dynamics on graphs Random Batch
Methods for classical and quantum interacting particle systems The
consensus-based global optimization algorithm and its recent
variants Mathematicians and other members of the scientific
community interested in active matter and its many applications
will find this volume to be a timely, authoritative, and valuable
resource.
This volume compiles eight recent surveys that present
state-of-the-art results in the field of active matter at different
scales, modeled by agent-based, kinetic, and hydrodynamic
descriptions. Following the previously published volume, these
chapters were written by leading experts in the field and
accurately reflect the diversity of subject matter in theory and
applications. Several mathematical tools are employed throughout
the volume, including analysis of nonlinear PDEs, network theory,
mean field approximations, control theory, and flocking analysis.
The book also covers a wide range of applications, including:
Biological network formation Social systems Control theory of
sparse systems Dynamics of swarming and flocking systems Stochastic
particles and mean field approximations Mathematicians and other
members of the scientific community interested in active matter and
its many applications will find this volume to be a timely,
authoritative, and valuable resource.
The thematic program Quantum and Kinetic Problems: Modeling,
Analysis, Numerics and Applications was held at the Institute for
Mathematical Sciences at the National University of Singapore, from
September 2019 to March 2020. Leading experts presented tutorials
and special lectures geared towards the participating graduate
students and junior researchers.Readers will find in this
significant volume four expanded lecture notes with self-contained
tutorials on modeling and simulation for collective dynamics
including individual and population approaches for population
dynamics in mathematical biology, collective behaviors for Lohe
type aggregation models, mean-field particle swarm optimization,
and consensus-based optimization and ensemble Kalman inversion for
global optimization problems with constraints.This volume serves to
inspire graduate students and researchers who will embark into
original research work in kinetic models for collective dynamics
and their applications.
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