Tue, 26 Jan 2021
14:00
Virtual

Preconditioners for computing multiple solutions in three-dimensional fluid topology optimisation

John Papadopoulos
(Mathematical Institute)
Abstract

Topology optimisation finds the optimal material distribution of a fluid or solid in a domain, subject to PDE, volume, and box constraints. The optimisation problem is normally nonconvex and can support multiple local minima. In recent work [1], the authors developed an algorithm for systematically discovering multiple minima of two-dimensional problems through a combination of barrier methods, active-set strategies, and deflation. The bottleneck of the algorithm is solving the Newton systems that arise. In this talk, we will present preconditioning methods for these linear systems as they occur in the topology optimization of Stokes flow. The strategies involve a mix of block preconditioning and specialized multigrid relaxation schemes that reduce the computational work required and allow the application of the algorithm to three-dimensional problems.

[1] “Computing multiple solutions of topology optimization problems”, I. P. A. Papadopoulos, P. E. Farrell, T. M. Surowiec, 2020, https://arxiv.org/abs/2004.11797

 

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An exact method for quantifying the reliability of end-of-epidemic declarations in real time.
Parag, K Donnelly, C Jha, R Thompson, R PLoS computational biology volume 16 issue 11 e1008478 (30 Nov 2020)
Mon, 01 Feb 2021

16:00 - 17:00

Extremal distance and conformal radius of a CLE_4 loop.

TITUS LUPU
(Sorbonne Université)
Abstract

The CLE_4 Conformal Loop Ensemble in a 2D simply connected domain is a random countable collection of fractal Jordan curves that satisfies a statistical conformal invariance and appears, or is conjectured to appear, as a scaling limit of interfaces in various statistical physics models in 2D, for instance in the double dimer model. The CLE_4   is also related to the 2D Gaussian free field. Given a simply connected domain D and a point z in D, we consider the CLE_4 loop that surrounds z and study the extremal distance between the loop and the boundary of the domain, and the conformal radius of the interior surrounded by the loop seen from z. Because of the confomal invariance, the joint law of this two quantities does not depend (up to a scale factor) on the choice of the domain D and the point z in D. The law of the conformal radius alone has been known since the works of Schramm, Sheffield and Wilson. We complement their result by deriving the joint law of (extremal distance, conformal radius). Both quantities can be read on the same 1D Brownian path, by tacking a last passage time and a first hitting time. This joint law, together with some distortion bounds, provides some exponents related to the CLE_4. This is a joint work with Juhan Aru and Avelio Sepulveda.

 

Tue, 02 Mar 2021
14:15
Virtual

Graded Clifford-Drinfeld algebras

Kieran Calvert
(Manchester University)
Abstract

We combine the notions of graded Clifford algebras and Drinfeld algebras. This gives us a framework to study algebras with a PBW property and underlying vector space $\mathbb{C}[G] \# Cl(V) \otimes S(U) $ for $G$-modules $U$ and $V$. The class of graded Clifford-Drinfeld algebras contains the Hecke-Clifford algebras defined by Nazarov, Khongsap-Wang. We give a new example of a GCD algebra which plays a role in an Arakawa-Suzuki duality involving the Clifford algebra.

Mon, 08 Mar 2021

16:00 - 17:00

A backward Ito-Ventzell formula with an application to stochastic interpolation

PIERRE DEL MORAL
(INRIA)
Abstract


We discuss a novel backward Ito-Ventzell formula and an extension of the Aleeksev-Gröbner interpolating formula to stochastic flows. We also present some natural spectral conditions that yield direct and simple proofs of time uniform estimates of the difference between the two stochastic flows when their drift and diffusion functions are not the same, yielding what seems to be the first results of this type for this class of  anticipative models.

We illustrate the impact of these results in the context of diffusion perturbation theory, interacting diffusions and discrete time approximations.

Tue, 09 Feb 2021
14:30
Virtual

A unified iteration scheme for strongly monotone problems

Pascal Heid
(Mathematical Institute)
Abstract

A wide variety of fixed-point iterative methods for the solution of nonlinear operator equations in Hilbert spaces exists. In many cases, such schemes can be interpreted as iterative local linearisation methods, which can be obtained by applying a suitable preconditioning operator to the original (nonlinear) equation. Based on this observation, we will derive a unified abstract framework which recovers some prominent iterative methods. It will be shown that for strongly monotone operators this unified iteration scheme satisfies an energy contraction property. Consequently, the generated sequence converges to a solution of the original problem.

 

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Thu, 28 Jan 2021

12:00 - 13:00
Virtual

Rheology of dense granular suspensions

Elisabeth Guazzelli
(MSC CNRS Université de Paris)
Further Information

We continue this term with our flagship seminars given by notable scientists on topics that are relevant to Industrial and Applied Mathematics. 

Note the new time of 12:00-13:00 on Thursdays.

This will give an opportunity for the entire community to attend and for speakers with childcare responsibilities to present.

Abstract

Suspensions are composed of mixtures of particles and fluid and are
ubiquitous in industrial processes (e.g. waste disposal, concrete,
drilling muds, metalworking chip transport, and food processing) and in
natural phenomena (e.g. flows of slurries, debris, and lava). The
present talk focusses on the rheology of concentrated suspensions of
non-colloidal particles. It addresses the classical shear viscosity of
suspensions but also non-Newtonian behaviour such as normal-stress
differences and shear-induced migration. The rheology of dense
suspensions can be tackled via a diversity of approaches that are
introduced. In particular, the rheometry of suspensions can be
undertaken at an imposed volume fraction but also at imposed values of
particle normal stress, which is particularly well suited to yield
examination of the rheology close to the jamming transition. The
influences of particle roughness and shape are discussed.

Tue, 09 Feb 2021
14:00
Virtual

Point cloud registration under algebraic variety model

Florentin Goyens
(Mathematical Institute)
Abstract

Point cloud registration is the task of finding the transformation that aligns two data sets. We make the assumption that the data lies on a low-dimensional algebraic variety.  The task is phrased as an optimization problem over the special orthogonal group of rotations. We solve this problem using Riemannian optimization algorithms and show numerical examples that illustrate the efficiency of this approach for point cloud registration. 

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