Forthcoming events in this series


Mon, 18 Mar 2024 12:30 -
Fri, 22 Mar 2024 13:00
Lecture Room 2, Mathmatical Institute

National PDE Network Meeting: Nonlinear PDEs of Mixed Type in Geometry and Mechanics /Joint with the 13th Oxbridge PDE Conference

Abstract

Meeting Theme:      

Analysis of Nonlinear PDEs of Mixed-Type (esp. Elliptic-Hyperbolic and Hyperbolic-Parabolic Mixed PDEs) and Related Topics

Meeting Place:    

Lecture Theatre 2, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford

For more information and to view the programme

Registration is now closed.

Mon, 15 Aug 2022 09:30 -
Fri, 19 Aug 2022 15:00
L3

PDE WORKSHOP: Stability Analysis for Nonlinear PDEs

((Department of Mathematics)
Further Information

 

Monday 15th August

09:30     10:30     Morning Refreshments

10:30     11:20     Session 1: Mikhail Feldman

11:30     12:20     Session 2: Cleopatra Christoforou

12:30     14:30     Lunch Break

14:30     15:20     Session 3: Jiang-Lun Wu

 

Tuesday 16th August

09:30     10:30     Morning Refreshments

10:30     11:20     Session 4: Jonathan Ben-Artzi

11:30     12:20     Session 5: Mikhail Perepelita

12:30     14:30     Lunch Break

14:30     15:20     Session 6: Monica Torres

 

Wednesday 17th August

09:30     10:30     Morning Refreshments

10:30     11:20     Session 7: Aram Karakhanyan

11:30     12:20     Session 8: Piotr Gwiazda

12:30     14:30     Lunch Break

14:30     15:20     Session 9: Cheng Yu

15:30     16:20     Session 10: Steve Shkoller (UC-Davis, USA) [online]

 

Thursday

09:30     10:00     Morning Refreshments

10:00     10:50     Session 11: Susana Gutierrez

11:00     11:25     Session 12: Matthew Schrecker

11:30     12:00     Morning Break (30mins)

12:00     12:25     Session 13: Timon Salar Gutleb

12:30     12:55     Session 14: Yucong Huang

13:00     14:30     Conference Lunch (90mins)

14:30     15:20     Session 15: Nicolas Dirr

15:30     16:20     Session 16: Dehua Wang (U. Pittsburgh, USA) [online]

16:30     17:00     Afternoon Break (20mins)

17:00     17:50     Session 17: Pierre-Emmanuel Jabin (Penn State, USA) [online]

18:30     21:00     Conference Dinner

 

Friday

09:30   10:30   Morning Refreshments

10:30   11:20   Session 18: Ewelina Zatorska 

11:30   12:20   Session 19: Alexis Vasseur

12:30   12:45  Closing Remarks

13:00    ** **   Conference Lunch

 

PDE Workshop Programme.pdf

 

Slides: Alexis Vasseur_2.pdf / Cheng Yu_1.pdf / Cleopatra Christoforou_0.pdf / Ewelina Zatorska.pdf / Jiang-Lun Wu.pdf / Jonathan Ben-Artzi.pdf / Matthew Schrecker.pdf / Mikhail Feldman.pdf / Mikhail A Perepelitsa.pdf / Monica Torres.pdf / Nicolas Dirr.pdf / Pierre-Emmanuel.pdf / Susana Gutierrez.pdf / Timon Salar Gutleb.pdf / Yucong Huang.pdf

 

Organisers: 

Prof. Gui-Qiang G. Chen

Prof. José A. Carrillo

Prof. Endre Süli

 

Administrators:

Charlotte Turner-Smith 

Sarah Randall

Kerri Louise Howard FInstAM ACIM

Abstract

Maths PNG

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PDE Workshop in Stability Analysis for Nonlinear PDEs will be running Monday 15th - Friday 19th August.

Location: L3, AWB

Our goal was to bring together leading experts in the stability analysis of nonlinear partial differential equations across multi-scale applications. Some of the topics to be addressed include: 

  • Stability analysis of shock wave patterns of reflections/diffraction.
  • Stability analysis of vortex sheets, contact discontinuities, and other characteristic discontinuities for multidimensional hyperbolic systems of conservation laws.
  • Stability analysis of particle to continuum limits including the quantifying asymptotic/mean-field/large-time limits for pairwise interactions and particle limits for general interactions among multi-agent systems
  • Stability analysis of asymptotic limits with emphasis on the vanishing viscosity limit of solutions from multidimensional compressible viscous to inviscid flows with large initial data.
Wed, 14 Nov 2018

11:00 - 13:00
L5

Divergence-free positive tensors and applications to gas dynamics (2/2)

Denis Serre
(ENS Lyon)
Abstract

A lot of physical processes are modelled by conservation laws (mass, momentum, energy, charge, ...) Because of natural symmetries, these conservation laws express often that some symmetric tensor is divergence-free, in the space-time variables. We extract from this structure a non-trivial information, whenever the tensor takes positive semi-definite values. The qualitative part is called Compensated Integrability, while the quantitative part is a generalized Gagliardo inequality.

In the first part, we shall present the theoretical analysis. The proofs of various versions involve deep results from the optimal transportation theory. Then we shall deduce new fundamental estimates for gases (Euler system, Boltzmann equation, Vlaov-Poisson equation).

One of the theorems will have been used before, during the Monday seminar (PDE Seminar 4pm Monday 12 November).

All graduate students, post-docs faculty and visitors are welcome to come to the lectures. If you aren't a member of the CDT please email @email to confirm that you will be attending.

 

Tue, 13 Nov 2018

11:00 - 13:00
L5

Divergence-free positive tensors and applications to gas dynamics (1/2)

Denis Serre
(ENS Lyon)
Abstract

 

A lot of physical processes are modelled by conservation laws (mass, momentum, energy, charge, ...) Because of natural symmetries, these conservation laws express often that some symmetric tensor is divergence-free, in the space-time variables. We extract from this structure a non-trivial information, whenever the tensor takes positive semi-definite values. The qualitative part is called Compensated Integrability, while the quantitative part is a generalized Gagliardo inequality.

In the first part, we shall present the theoretical analysis. The proofs of various versions involve deep results from the optimal transportation theory. Then we shall deduce new fundamental estimates for gases (Euler system, Boltzmann equation, Vlaov-Poisson equation).

One of the theorems will have been used before, during the Monday seminar (PDE Seminar 4pm Monday 12 November)

All graduate students, post-docs faculty and visitors are welcome to come to the lectures. If you aren't a member of the CDT please email @email to confirm that you will be attending.

 

Thu, 10 Jun 2010
10:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Lecture Series: Scaling Dynamics in Aggregation Models

Professor Bob Pego
(Carnegie Mellon University)
Abstract

Clustering phenomena occur in numerous areas of science. This series of lectures will discuss:

(i) basic kinetic models for clustering- Smoluchowski's coagulation equation, random shock clustering, ballistic aggregation, domain-wall merging;

(ii) Criteria for approach to self-similarity- role of regular variation;

(iii) The scaling attractor and its measure representation. A particular theme is the use of methods and insights from probability in tandem with dynamical systems theory. In particular there is a

close analogy of scaling dynamics with the stable laws of probability and infinite divisibility.

Fri, 21 May 2010 10:00 -
Fri, 28 May 2010 10:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Lecture Series: Scaling Dynamics in Aggregation Models

Professor Bob Pego
(Carnegie Mellon University)
Abstract

Clustering phenomena occur in numerous areas of science.

This series of lectures will discuss:

(i) basic kinetic models for clustering- Smoluchowski's coagulation equation, random shock clustering, ballistic aggregation, domain-wall merging;

(ii) Criteria for approach to self-similarity- role of regular variation;

(iii) The scaling attractor and its measure representation.

A particular theme is the use of methods and insights from probability in tandem with dynamical systems theory. In particular there is a

close analogy of scaling dynamics with the stable laws of probability and infinite divisibility.

Mon, 13 Jul 2009
18:00

Public Lecture in PDE - Analysis, models and simulations

Professor Pierre-Louis Lions
(Imperial College London)
Abstract

In this talk, Professor Lions will first present several examples of numerical simulations of complex industrial systems. All these simulations rely upon some mathematical models involving partial differential equations and he will briefly explain the nature, history and role of such equations. Examples showing the importance of the mathematical analysis (i.e. ‘understanding’) of those models will be presented, concluding with a few trends and perspectives.


Pierre-Louis Lions is the son of the famous mathematician Jacques-Louis Lions and has himself become a renowned mathematician, making numerous important contributions to the theory of non-linear partial differential equations. He was awarded a Fields Medal in 1994, in particular for his work with Ron DiPerna giving the first general proof that the Boltzmann equation of the kinetic theory of gases has solutions. Other awards Lions has received include the IBM Prize in 1987 and the Philip Morris Prize in 1991. Currently he holds the position of Chair of Partial Differential Equations and their Applications at the prestigious Collège de France in Paris.


This lecture is given as part of the 7th ISAAC Congress • www.isaac2009.org

Clore Lecture Theatre, Huxley Building, Imperial College London,
South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ

RSVP: Attendance is free, but with registration in advance
Michael Ruzhansky • @email

Thu, 05 Jun 2008

09:30 - 16:30

Oxford Centre for Nonlinear PDE - Lectures in PDE

Abstract
In St Anne's College. Confirmed Speakers:
  • Alfio Quarteroni (EPFL) — Heterogeneous Domain Decomposition Methods
  • Laure Saint-Raymond (Paris VI & ENS) — Weak compactness methods for singular penalization problems with boundary layers
  • Bryce McLeod (Oxford) — A problem in dislocation theory
  • Tom Bridges (Surrey) — Degenerate conservation laws, bifurcation of solitary waves and the concept of criticality in fluid mechanics
  • Neshan Wickramasekera (Cambridge) — Frequency functions and singular set bounds for branched minimal graphs

The meeting is being held in the Mary Ogilvie Lecture Theatre, St Anne’s College and will start promptly at 9:30am with the last talk finishing at 4:30pm.

For the full programme and registration pages please see: http://www2.maths.ox.ac.uk/oxpde/meetings/