Thu, 07 Mar 2013

12:00 - 13:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Characterisation of electric fields in periodic composites

Marc Briane
(Université de Rennes)
Abstract
This is work done in collaboration with G.W. Milton and A. Treibergs (University of Utah). Our purpose is to characterise, among all the regular periodic gradient fields, the ones which are isotropically realisable electric fields, namely solutions of a conduction equation with a suitable isotropic conductivity. In any dimension a sufficient condition of realisability is that the gradient field does not vanish. This condition is also necessary in dimension two but not in dimension three. However, when the conductivity also needs to be periodic, the previous condition is shown to be not sufficient. Then, using the associated gradient flow a necessary and sufficient condition for the isotropic realisability in the torus is established and illustrated by several examples. The realisability of the matrix gradient fields and the less regular laminate fields is also investigated.
Thu, 23 May 2013
12:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Quasistatic evolution problems in perfect plasticity for generalized multiphase materials

Francesco Solombrino
(Technical University of Munich)
Abstract

Inspired by some recents developments in the theory of small-strain elastoplasticity, we

both revisit and generalize the formulation of the quasistatic evolutionary problem in

perfect plasticity for heterogeneous materials recently given by Francfort and Giacomini.

We show that their definition of the plastic dissipation measure is equivalent to an

abstract one, where it is defined as the supremum of the dualities between the deviatoric

parts of admissible stress fields and the plastic strains. By means of this abstract

definition, a viscoplastic approximation and variational techniques from the theory of

rate-independent processes give the existence of an evolution statisfying an energy-

dissipation balance and consequently Hill's maximum plastic work principle for an

abstract and very large class of yield conditions.

Thu, 16 May 2013
12:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

The plasma-vacuum interface problem with external excitation

Paolo Secchi
(University of Brescia)
Abstract
    We consider the free boundary problem for the plasma-vacuum interface in ideal compressible magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). In the plasma region the flow is governed by the usual compressible MHD equations, while in the vacuum region we consider the pre-Maxwell dynamics for the magnetic field. At the free-interface, driven by the plasma velocity, the total pressure is continuous and the magnetic field on both sides is tangent to the boundary. The plasma density does not go to zero continuously at the interface, but has a jump, meaning that it is bounded away from zero in the plasma region and it is identically zero in the vacuum region. The plasma-vacuum system is not isolated from the outside world, because of a given surface current on the fixed boundary that forces oscillations.
    Under a suitable stability condition satisfied at each point of the initial interface, stating that the magnetic fields on either side of the interface are not collinear, we show the existence and uniqueness of the solution to the nonlinear plasma-vacuum interface problem in suitable anisotropic Sobolev spaces.
    The proof follows from the well-posedness of the homogeneous linearized problem and a basic a priori energy estimate, the analysis of the elliptic system for the vacuum magnetic field, a suitable tame estimate in Sobolev spaces for the full linearized equations, and a Nash-Moser iteration.
    This is a joint work with Y. Trakhinin (Novosibirsk).
Wed, 15 May 2013
12:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Decay of positive waves to hyperbolic systems of balance laws

Cleopatra Christoforou
(University of Cyprus)
Abstract

Historically, decay rates have been used to provide quantitative and qualitative information on the solutions to hyperbolic conservation laws. Quantitative results include the establishment of convergence rates for approximating procedures and numerical schemes. Qualitative results include the establishment of results on uniqueness and regularity as well as the ability to visualize the waves and their evolution in time.

In this talk, I will present two decay estimates on the positive waves for systems of hyperbolic and genuinely nonlinear balance laws satisfying a dissipative mechanism. The result is obtained by employing the continuity of Glimm-type functionals and the method of generalized characteristics. Using this result on the spreading of rarefaction waves, the rate of convergence for vanishing viscosity approximations to hyperbolic balance laws will also be established. The proof relies on error estimates that measure the interaction of waves using suitable Lyapunov functionals. If time allows, a further application of the recent developments in the theory of balance laws to differential geometry will be addressed.

Thu, 25 Apr 2013
12:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

From nonlinear to linearized elasticity via $\Gamma$-convergence: the case of multi-well energies satisfying weak coercivity conditions

Konstantinos Koumatos
(OxPDE, University of Oxford)
Abstract
We derive geometrically linear elasticity theories as $\Gamma$-limits of rescaled nonlinear multi-well energies satisfying a weak coercivity condition, in the sense that the standard quadratic growth from below of the energy density $W$ is replaced by the weaker p-growth far from the energy wells, where $1

Mon, 11 Mar 2013

10:00 - 12:00
Gibson 1st Floor SR

Dislocations

Tim Blass
(Carnegie Mellon University & OxPDE)
Abstract

Please note the unusual day of the week for this workshop (a Monday) and also the unusual location.

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