Colloquium

  • Bernard Deconinck, Professor and Chair of Applied Mathematics, University of WashingtonPole dynamics of solutions of integrable equationsKruskal (1974) suggested that the dynamics of solutions of the KdV equation could be understood by examining
  • Philippe Naveau, Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement, IPSL-CNRS, FranceDetecting changes in multivariate extremes from climatological time series Joint work with Sebastian Engelke (Geneva University) and Chen Zhou (Erasmus
  • Julie K. Lundquist, Dept. of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and Fellow, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute at University of Colorado, º£½ÇÉçÇøTurbulence to turbine wakes: challenges in the atmospheric science of wind energy (that
  • Michael D. Schneider, Group Leader for Astronomy & Astrophysics Analytics, Physics Division, Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryQuantum Machine Learning using Gaussian ProcessesQuantum computers may be transformative for a variety of
  • Béatrice M. Rivière, Noah Harding Chair and Professor of Computational and Applied Mathematics, Rice UniversityDiffuse Interface Methods for Two-Phase Flows in Digital RockModeling multicomponent flows in porous media is important for many
  • Persi Diaconis, Mary V. Sunseri Professor of Statistics and Mathematics, Stanford UniversityADDING NUMBERS AND SHUFFLING CARDSWhen numbers are added in the usual way, 'carries' accrue along the way. It is natural to ask 'how do the carries go
  • Lou Pecora, Naval Research LaboratoryCluster Synchronization of Chaotic Systems in Complex NetworksThe concept of synchronized systems has been around for centuries with one of the earliest studies being on the synchronization of clocks by
  • Owen Miller, Department of Applied Physics, Yale UniversityUpper bounds to electromagnetic response via convexity, causality, and dualityNanophotonics, the study of light interacting with materials patterned at the scale of the wavelength, is
  • Laura Miller, Department of Biology, University of North Carolina - Chapel HillFlow through the hairy appendages of small animals: The leaky rake to solid plate transition.Numerous small organisms that swim, fly, smell, or feed in flows at the
  • Bengt Fornberg, Department of Applied Mathematics, º£½ÇÉçÇøEuler-Maclaurin without analytic derivativesWe consider here the Euler-Maclaurin (EM) formulas in the context of approximating infinite sums. If the function to be
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