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This book treats Modelling of CFD problems, Numerical tools for
PDE, and Scientific Computing and Systems of ODE for Epidemiology,
topics that are closely related to the scientific activities and
interests of Prof. William Fitzgibbon, Prof. Yuri Kuznetsov, and
Prof. O. Pironneau, whose outstanding achievements are recognised
in this volume. It contains 20 contributions from leading
scientists in applied mathematics dealing with partial differential
equations and their applications to engineering, ab-initio
chemistry and life sciences. It includes the mathematical and
numerical contributions to PDE for applications presented at the
ECCOMAS thematic conference "Contributions to PDE for Applications"
held at Laboratoire Jacques Louis Lions in Paris, France, August
31- September 1, 2015, and at the Department of Mathematics,
University of Houston, Texas, USA, February 26-27, 2016. This event
brought together specialists from universities and research
institutions who are developing or applying numerical PDE or ODE
methods with an emphasis on industrial and societal applications.
This volume is of interest to researchers and practitioners as well
as advanced students or engineers in applied and computational
mathematics. All contributions are written at an advanced
scientific level with no effort made by the editors to make this
volume self-contained. It is assumed that the reader is a
specialist already who knows the basis of this field of research
and has the capability of understanding and appreciating the latest
developments in this field.
This volume represents the findings of the first test cases
considered by ERCOFTAC (European Research Consortium on Flow
Turbulence and Combustion). The workshop, held in Lausanne,
Switzerland, in 1990, studied five test cases: boundary layer in an
S-shaped duct; periodic array of cylinders; transition in a
boundary layer under the influence of free-stream turbulence;
axisymmetric confined jet flows. These test cases represented the
interests of both the academic and industrial groups in finding out
the limits of various models and codes to predict real problems
supported by experimental data. The articles summarise the work of
each group and point to refinements and further study to perfect
the models. As such there will be much of interest to all
professionals and researchers concerned with the prediction of
flows and turbulence.
The study of optimal shape design can be arrived at by asking the
following question: "What is the best shape for a physical system?"
This book is an applications-oriented study of such physical
systems; in particular, those which can be described by an elliptic
partial differential equation and where the shape is found by the
minimum of a single criterion function. There are many problems of
this type in high-technology industries. In fact, most numerical
simulations of physical systems are solved not to gain better
understanding of the phenomena but to obtain better control and
design. Problems of this type are described in Chapter 2.
Traditionally, optimal shape design has been treated as a branch of
the calculus of variations and more specifically of optimal
control. This subject interfaces with no less than four fields:
optimization, optimal control, partial differential equations
(PDEs), and their numerical solutions-this is the most difficult
aspect of the subject. Each of these fields is reviewed briefly:
PDEs (Chapter 1), optimization (Chapter 4), optimal control
(Chapter 5), and numerical methods (Chapters 1 and 4).
Optimal Shape Design is concerned with the optimization of some
performance criterion dependent (besides the constraints of the
problem) on the "shape" of some region. The main topics covered
are: the optimal design of a geometrical object, for instance a
wing, moving in a fluid; the optimal shape of a region (a harbor),
given suitable constraints on the size of the entrance to the
harbor, subject to incoming waves; the optimal design of some
electrical device subject to constraints on the performance. The
aim is to show that Optimal Shape Design, besides its interesting
industrial applications, possesses nontrivial mathematical aspects.
The main theoretical tools developed here are the homogenization
method and domain variations in PDE. The style is mathematically
rigorous, but specifically oriented towards applications, and it is
intended for both pure and applied mathematicians. The reader is
required to know classical PDE theory and basic functional
analysis.
This book treats Modelling of CFD problems, Numerical tools for
PDE, and Scientific Computing and Systems of ODE for Epidemiology,
topics that are closely related to the scientific activities and
interests of Prof. William Fitzgibbon, Prof. Yuri Kuznetsov, and
Prof. O. Pironneau, whose outstanding achievements are recognised
in this volume. It contains 20 contributions from leading
scientists in applied mathematics dealing with partial differential
equations and their applications to engineering, ab-initio
chemistry and life sciences. It includes the mathematical and
numerical contributions to PDE for applications presented at the
ECCOMAS thematic conference "Contributions to PDE for Applications"
held at Laboratoire Jacques Louis Lions in Paris, France, August
31- September 1, 2015, and at the Department of Mathematics,
University of Houston, Texas, USA, February 26-27, 2016. This event
brought together specialists from universities and research
institutions who are developing or applying numerical PDE or ODE
methods with an emphasis on industrial and societal applications.
This volume is of interest to researchers and practitioners as well
as advanced students or engineers in applied and computational
mathematics. All contributions are written at an advanced
scientific level with no effort made by the editors to make this
volume self-contained. It is assumed that the reader is a
specialist already who knows the basis of this field of research
and has the capability of understanding and appreciating the latest
developments in this field.
This volume represents the findings of the first test cases
considered by ERCOFTAC (European Research Consortium on Flow
Turbulence and Combustion). The workshop, held in Lausanne,
Switzerland, in 1990, studied five test cases: boundary layer in an
S-shaped duct; periodic array of cylinders; transition in a
boundary layer under the influence of free-stream turbulence;
axisymmetric confined jet flows. These test cases represented the
interests of both the academic and industrial groups in finding out
the limits of various models and codes to predict real problems
supported by experimental data. The articles summarise the work of
each group and point to refinements and further study to perfect
the models. As such there will be much of interest to all
professionals and researchers concerned with the prediction of
flows and turbulence.
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