11:00
11:00
11:00
Invariant manifolds for model reduction in physical kinetics
Abstract
The concept of the slow invariant manifold is the central idea underpinning a transition from micro to macro and model reduction in kinetic theories. We present the constructive methods of invariant manifolds for model reduction in physical and chemical kinetics, developed during last two decades. The physical problem of reduced description is studied in the most general form as a problem of constructing the slow invariant manifold. The invariance conditions are formulated as the differential equation for a manifold immersed in the phase space. The equation of motion for immersed manifolds is obtained.
Invariant manifolds are fixed points for this equation, and slow invariant manifolds are Lyapunov stable fixed points, thus slowness is presented as stability.
A collection of methods to derive analytically and to compute numerically the slow invariant manifolds is presented. The systematic use of thermodynamic structures and of the quasi-chemical representation allows us to construct approximations which are in concordance with physical restrictions.
The following examples of applications are presented: Nonperturbative derivation of physically consistent hydrodynamics from the Boltzmann equation and from the reversible dynamics, for nudsen numbers Kn~1; construction of the moment equations for nonequilibrium media and their dynamical correction (instead of extension of the list of variables) in order to gain more accuracy in description of highly nonequilibrium flows; model reduction in chemical kinetics.
17:00
17:00
15:45
Dyadic Parametrization of non-rectifiable curves
Abstract
Using the dyadic parametrization of curves, and elementary theorems and
probability theory, examples are constructed of domains having bad properties on
boundary sets of large Hausdorff dimension (joint work with F.D. Lesley).
14:15
Multifractal aspects of Beta coalescence and stable random trees.
Abstract
Lambda-coalescents were introduced by Pitman in (1999) and Sagitov (1999). These processes describe the evolution of particles that
undergo stochastic coagulation in such a way that several blocks can merge at the same time to form a single block. In the case that the measure Lambda has the Beta$(2-\alpha,\alpha)$ they are also known to describe the genealogies of large populations where a single individual can produce a large number of offsprings. Here we use a recent result of Birkner et al. (2005) to prove that Beta-coalescents can be embedded in continuous stable random trees, for which much is known due to recent progress of Duquesne and Le Gall. This produces a number of results concerning the small-time behaviour of Beta-coalescents. Most notably, we recover an almost sure limit theorem for the number of blocks at small times, and give the multifractal spectrum corresponding to the emergence of blocks with atypical size. Also, we are able to find exact asymptotics for sampling formulae corresponding to the infinite site frequency spectrum associated with mutations in the context of population genetics.
12:00
Topological membranes
Abstract
It is suggested that topological membranes play a fundamental role
in the recently proposed topological M-theory. We formulate a topological theory
of membranes wrapping associative three-cycles in a seven-dimensional target
space with G_2 holonomy. The topological BRST rules and BRST invariant action
are constructed via the Mathai-Quillen formalism. We construct a set of local
and non-local observables for the topological membrane theory. As the BRST
cohomology of local operators turns out to be isomorphic to the de Rham
cohomology of the G_2 manifold, our observables agree with the spectrum of
d=4, N=1 G_2 compactifications of M-theory.
16:30
14:15
14:00
Computer simulation of the Darwinian model of cell differentiation : a new approach to biological systems
12:00
16:30
Equation-free computation for complex/multiscale systems
Instability & transition of steady and pulsatile flow in stenotic/constricted pipes
Abstract
Through the advent of enhanced medical imaging computational modelling can now be applied to anatomically correct arterial geometries. However many flow feautures under physiological and pathological flow paraemeters, even in idealised problems, are relatively poorly understood. A commonly studied idealisation of an arterial blockage or stenosis, potentially generated by atherosclerosis, is a sinusoidally varying constricted tube. Although most physiological flow conditions are typically laminar, in this configuration turbulent flow states can arise due to the local increase in sectional Reynolds number. To examine the onset of turbulence in this geometry, under a simple non-reversing pulsatile flows, we have applied Floquet stability analysis and direct
numerical simulation.
As illustrated in the above figure, a period-doubling absolute instability mode associated with alternating tilting of the vortex rings that are ejected out of the stenosis/constriction during each pulse. This primary instability occurs for relatively large reduced velocities associated with long pulse periods (or low Womersley numbers). For lower reduced velocities the primary instability typically manifests itself as azimuthal waves (Widnall instability modes) of low wavenumber that grow on each vortex ring. We have also observed the shear layer of the steady axisymmetric flow is convectively unstable at still shorter temporal periods.
In this presentation we shall outline the challenges of modelling vascular flow problems with a particular focus on idealised stenotic flow. After briefly outlining the numerical analysis methods we shall discuss the flow investigations outlined above and their relation to more classical vortex instabilities.