Today's Editor:
Alex Townsend
Cornell University
townsend@cornell.edu
Today's Topics:
Contents, AIMS new journal article: JMD Vol. 21, Art. 4
ASCR Inverse Methods for Complex Systems under Uncertainty Workshop
Celebrating Prof. Chris Budd, 23 April 2025, Bath, UK
JuliaCon Local Paris 2025
SIAM North/Central California Sectional Conference, Oct 2025
SIAM TX-LA Conference: September 26-28, Austin TX
Special Topic School, Optimality of adaptive finite element methods, Bonn, Sep 2025
Spring 2025 Finite Element Circus, Oakland University, MI, USA
Workshop in honor of Anders Szepessy’s 65th Birthday, Aug 2025
PhD Research Fellow in applied and computational mathematics
PhD position in Numerical Analysis, at University Wuppertal, Germany
PhD position in computational modeling of wind-wave-structure interactions in floating solar
PhD position, Scientific Computing, University of Innsbruck
Postdoc position, Scientific Computing, University of Innsbruck
Research engineer position in scientific computing, Paris, France
Scientist and Research Software Engineer, Berlin, Germany
Contents, AIMS new journal issue: EECT 14-4
Contents, AIMS new journal volume: AMMC Volume 3
Contents, AIMS new journal volume: CAC Volume 3
Contents, Computational methods in applied mathematics 2025(2)
Call for papers, Algorithms Special Issue on Nonlinear Optimization
Nonlinear Optimization: Algorithmic Advances and Innovative Applications
See this issue of NA Digest on the web at:
https://na-digest.coecis.cornell.edu/na-digest-html/25/v25n14.html
Submissions, FAQs, and archives:
https://na-digest.coecis.cornell.edu/
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Charley Denton cdenton@aimsciences.org
Date: April 04, 2025
Subject: Contents, AIMS new journal article: JMD Vol. 21, Art. 4
Journal of Modern Dynamics
2025, Vol. 21, Art. No.: 4
https://www.aimsciences.org/jmd/article/2025/21/0
Coboundaries and eigenvalues of finitary S-adic systems
Valérie Berthé, Paulina Cecchi Bernales and Reem Yassawi
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Jeffrey Donatelli jjdonatelli@lbl.gov
Date: April 04, 2025
Subject: ASCR Inverse Methods for Complex Systems under Uncertainty Workshop
On behalf of the Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) program in
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science, we are pleased to
announce a workshop on the basic research needs for inverse methods for
complex systems under uncertainty. We invite community input in the form of
two-page position papers that identify key challenges and opportunities for
inverse methods for complex systems under uncertainty. These position papers
will be used to select workshop participants, define the workshop agenda, and
form the basis of a post-workshop report. For more information, please visit
https://orau.gov/InverseMethods.
The workshop will be held at the Hilton Washington DC/Rockville Hotel and
Executive Meeting Center, 1750 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD, from June 10-12,
2025. If you are interested in participating, please submit your position paper at
the above website by April 21. Notifications of position paper acceptance will
be sent around May 9.
Please forward this announcement to anyone who may be interested in the
workshop.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Lisa Kreusser lmk54@bath.ac.uk
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: Celebrating Prof. Chris Budd, 23 April 2025, Bath, UK
Prof. Chris Budd turned 65 and has been at the Department of Mathematical
Sciences at the University of Bath for 30 years this year. To celebrate Chris's
significant contributions, a one-day workshop is held on April 23 at the
University of Bath.
You can find more details about the event on the workshop webpage:
https://sites.google.com/view/chris-budd-65/home
For those unable to join in person, it will be possible to join the talks online.
The registration deadline is on 14 April 2025.
If you have any questions, please contact Dr Lisa Kreusser
(lmk54@bath.ac.uk).
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From: Joseph Gergaud joseph.gergaud@toulouse-inp.fr
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: JuliaCon Local Paris 2025
Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to announce that the conference JuliaCon Local Paris 2025 will
take place on October 2nd and 3rd at Conservatoire National des Arts et
Métiers. This scientific event revolves around the Julia programming language,
which is heavily used across scientific computing, numerical optimization,
machine learning and physical modeling. The goal of this meetup is to grow the
European open-source community, exchange ideas and code, and foster new
scientific or industrial projects.
All the information about the conference is available on the official website
https://juliacon.org/local/paris2025/. In particular, the call for contributions is
open until May 15th at https://pretalx.com/juliacon-local-paris-2025/. If you are
using Julia for your work, we invite you to submit a proposal for a talk or poster.
And if you are or know a company willing to sponsor the conference, please
send us an email at paris25@julialang.org.
See you in October!
The organizing committee of JuliaCon Local Paris 2025
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Stefan Wild wild@lbl.gov
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: SIAM North/Central California Sectional Conference, Oct 2025
We are excited to announce the 2nd SIAM Northern and Central California
Sectional Conference (NCC25) to be held October 27-28, 2025 in Berkeley, CA.
NCC25 aims to attract and energize students and researchers working in
applied and computational mathematics and related fields, and offer an
opportunity for those in the NCC region to attend a local meeting of the
community. Topics of interest include research related to any of the SIAM Activity Groups.
In addition to plenary speakers and thematic research talk sessions, the
conference will also feature poster sessions and poster "blitzes", panel
discussions, a speed mentoring event, a CV and interviewing workshop, and
tours of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center's Perlmutter
supercomputer. We encourage you to submit your work via the submissions
page linked at https://siamncc25.lbl.gov/
Important deadlines:
Talk Abstract Submission: April 11, 2025
Poster Abstract Submission: April 11, 2025
Travel Award Application: August 1, 2025
Early Registration: August 1, 2025
All are welcome to submit their work, however SIAM's Section meetings
prioritize participation for researchers in the corresponding geographic region.
Please visit the NCC25 website for more information and a tentative
conference program. If you have any questions, please email the Organizing Committee at siamncc25@lbl.gov.
Hope to see you all at NCC25!
-NCC25 Organizing Committee
-------------------------------------------------------
From: John Zweck zweck@utdallas.edu
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: SIAM TX-LA Conference: September 26-28, Austin TX
The 8th annual meeting of the SIAM Texas-Louisiana section will be held at
The Oden Institute for Computational Engineering & Sciences
The University of Texas at Austin
Friday September 26 to Sunday September 28.
Our plenary speakers are
Robert P. Lipton, Louisiana State University
Robert Ghrist, University of Pennsylvania
Jean-Luc Guermond, Texas A&M University
Xiaoye Sherry Li, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
In addition, the conference will feature mini-symposia, poster sessions and a
career panel.
The deadline for mini-symposium proposals is JUNE 1st.
Some student travel support will be available for eligible applicants.
Please see the annual meeting website
https://sites.google.com/view/siamtxla2025/ for more information.
We hope to see you in Austin in late September!
John Zweck
SIAM Texas-Louisiana Section president
On behalf of the conference organizing committee
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Gregor Gantner gantner@ins.uni-bonn.de
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: Special Topic School, Optimality of adaptive finite element methods, Bonn, Sep 2025
Application for participation is open until April 28, 2025.
The Hausdorff Center for Mathematics organizes a Special Topic School on
Optimality of adaptive finite element methods from September 22-26, 2025 at
the University of Bonn.
In practice, the solution of partial differential equations (PDEs) often exhibits
geometry- or data-induced singularities. The goal of adaptive finite element
methods (FEMs) is to automatically detect these singularities via a posteriori
computable error estimators and to resolve them via local refinement of the
underlying meshes. While for uniform mesh refinement, convergence to the
exact solution follows readily from standard approximation results, the rigorous
mathematical proof of convergence for adaptive mesh refinement is much
more challenging. That being said, meanwhile it has been proved for certain
classes of PDEs that adaptivity even leads to optimal convergence rates, i.e., to
the best rates over all possible refinements. The primary objective of this
summer school is to provide a comprehensive overview of the fundamental
results of optimality of adaptive FEMs.
For more details and registration see:
https://www.mathematics.uni-bonn.de/hsm-school/programs/schools/hsm-
special-topic-schools/sts-finite-element-methods
Organizers:
Gregor Gantner (University of Bonn)
Joscha Gedicke (University of Bonn)
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Tamas Horvath thorvath@oakland.edu
Date: April 02, 2025
Subject: Spring 2025 Finite Element Circus, Oakland University, MI, USA
The Spring 2025 Finite Element Circus will be hosted at Oakland University on
April 25-26, 2025. Please visit the conference website for registration, hotel
information, and further details.
https://sites.google.com/oakland.edu/fec2025-spring-at-ou/
Registration for the conference dinner closes on April 11.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Håkon Hoel haakonah@math.uio.no
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: Workshop in honor of Anders Szepessy’s 65th Birthday, Aug 2025
We are pleased to announce the workshop "Advances in Stochastic Processes
and Numerical Analysis", celebrating the 65th birthday of Anders Szepessy.
The event will take place on August 19-20 at KTH and will feature invited talks
and a poster session. The program is available on the conference website
https://sites.google.com/view/szepessy65workshop/home
We warmly encourage contributions to the poster session and would greatly
appreciate your participation.
We look forward to welcoming you to the workshop! Please remember to
register on the website by June 10, 2025. (Note: there is a limited number of
lunch spots available, so please register as soon as possible).
Best regards,
The Organizing Committee
Håkon Hoel, Raul Tempone, Erik von Schwerin, Sara Zahedi
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Jan Martin Nordbotten jan.nordbotten@uib.no
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: PhD Research Fellow in applied and computational mathematics
A fully funded PhD position is available at the Department of Mathematics,
University of Bergen, within the Norwegian Research Council funded Center for
Sustainable Subsurface Resources (CSSR). The position is for 3 years, with a
possible 4th year involving teaching duties.
This is the right position if you are a highly motivated candidate, looking to join
an interdisciplinary research environment where you can further the state of the
art in applied mathematics and data analysis.
The candidate will develop and analyze tools for data from experimental research
on porous media, collaborating closely with CSSR's experimental activities at the
Department of Physics and Technology. The focus is on processing 4D spatial and
temporal data using methods from numerical and functional analysis, image
processing, statistical analysis, and machine learning.
Applicants must hold a Master’s degree in applied/computational mathematics,
scientific computing, computational physics, or computational geoscience. They
should have expertise in applied/computational mathematics and software
development. Experience with partial differential equations, image processing,
statistics, and big data is advantageous.
Instructions for how to apply as well as further details about the
project can be found at:
https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/278155/phd-research-fellow-in-
applied-and-computational-mathematics
The application deadline is April 20, 2025.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Andreas Bartel bartel@uni-wuppertal.de
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: PhD position in Numerical Analysis, at University Wuppertal, Germany
Recently, the CRC 1701 "Port-Hamiltonian Systems" was approved at University
of Wuppertal. For the CRC project „Goal-oriented multirate and dynamic
iteration methods“ we seek a highly motivated PhD student. This project is
located in the field of numerical analysis and will develop novel and efficient
time-integration techniques for the simulation and (optimal) control of
port-Hamiltonian. The PhD position can start at the earliest possible date with a
maximum duration until 31st December 2028 with 75% of the tariff working
hours (pay grade: 13 TV-L).
The CRC offers an excellent research environment and a vibrant
interdisciplinary community, international cooperation and exchange. Moreover,
supportive supervision and professional trainings are provided, which prepare
you to excel in research. The CRC is led by Birgit Jacob, and the project
(mentioned above) by Manuel Schaller and Andreas Bartel.
Your profile: A completed university degree in mathematics, computer science,
physics or related field. Sound knowledge in numerical analysis and time
integration. Programming expertise and the readiness to implement numerical
methods. A good command of English.
A full job description and instructions for application can be found at:
(Job-ID 25065)
https://stellenausschreibungen.uni-wuppertal.de
The application deadline is April 14, 2025.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Oriol Colomés j.o.colomesgene@tudelft.nl
Date: March 29, 2025
Subject: PhD position in computational modeling of wind-wave-structure interactions in floating solar
We have a PhD opportunity in the DigiOcean4Solar project, focusing on
advancing computational modeling for offshore floating solar. This project aims
to develop a Digital Ocean environment to enable fast and reliable simulations
of wind-wave-structure interactions in large-scale offshore floating solar farms.
The PhD candidate will be based at TU Delft, working within the Computational
Multiphysics in Offshore Engineering (CMOE) group, supervised by Oriol
Colomés (j.o.colomesgene@tudelft.nl). The selected PhD candidate will work
on developing a novel computational framework for multi-fidelity modeling of
offshore floating solar platforms. The goal is to advance numerical methods for
coupled fluid-structure interactions using unfitted finite element techniques in
a multi-fidelity setting. If selected, you will collaborate with offshore floating
solar developers to bridge the gap between simulation and real-world
applications and interact with other international research institutions.
We are looking for candidates with a strong background in computational
mechanics, numerical modeling, or offshore engineering, and a keen interest in
applying advanced simulation techniques to renewable energy challenges.
📍 Location: TU Delft, Civil Engineering and Geosciences faculty, The
Netherlands
📅 Application Deadline: 21 April 2025
🔗 More details & application: https://careers.tudelft.nl/job/Delft-PhD-Position-
Modeling-of-Wind-Wave-Structure-Interactions-of-Floating-Solar-Platforms-
2628-CD/816651302/
If you would like more information about this vacancy or the selection
procedure, please contact Oriol Colomés, e-mail: j.o.colomesgene@tudelft.nl.
Please feel free to share this opportunity with potential candidates in your
network.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Heiko Gimperlein heiko.gimperlein@uibk.ac.at
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: PhD position, Scientific Computing, University of Innsbruck
A Ph.D. position is available at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, to develop
efficient and highly accurate numerical methods for time-dependent
simulations in soft matter / bio-nano physics. The position is funded by the
Austrian Science Fund FWF.
The project will be in close cooperation with colleagues from both numerical
analysis and theoretical physics. It will develop new boundary element and
finite element methods for parabolic equations, which allow to address open
physical questions about the long-time dynamics of many-particle systems
outside equilibrium.
A strong background is expected in scientific computing, numerical analysis or
an application area. Some background knowledge of physics is helpful, but not
required. Candidates must have obtained an M.Sc. in mathematics or a related
subject preceding the start date of appointment.
Further information is available from Heiko Gimperlein (heiko.gimperlein@uibk.ac.at, https://mat1.uibk.ac.at/heiko) and Thomas
Franosch (thomas.franosch@uibk.ac.at, https://www.uibk.ac.at/th-physik/bio_nano).
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Heiko Gimperlein heiko.gimperlein@uibk.ac.at
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: Postdoc position, Scientific Computing, University of Innsbruck
Applications are invited for a postdoctoral position in scientific computing and
numerical analysis. The successful candidates will contribute to the research
activities of the group in engineering mathematics: https://mat1.uibk.ac.at/heiko .
A strong background and excellent track record of accomplishments is expected
in scientific computing, numerical analysis or an application area. Candidates
must have obtained a Ph.D. in mathematics or a related subject preceding the
start date of appointment.
The position is partly financed by a project of the Austrian Science Fund FWF to
develop efficient and highly accurate finite and boundary element methods for
parabolic equations arising in soft matter physics, in collaboration with
theoretical physicists: https://www.uibk.ac.at/th-physik/bio_nano. Some
background knowledge of physics is helpful, but not required. The successful
applicant should contribute to the wider research activities of our group and
pursue their own research program.
Contact: Heiko Gimperlein (heiko.gimperlein@uibk.ac.at) and Thomas Franosch
(thomas.franosch@uibk.ac.at).
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Pierre-Henri Tournier pierre-henri.tournier@sorbonne-universite.fr
Date: March 29, 2025
Subject: Research engineer position in scientific computing, Paris, France
This 2-year research engineer position in scientific computing is associated to
the ERC Synergy project "Phase-space-inspired numerical methods for high-
frequency wave scattering: from semiclassical analysis through numerical
analysis to implementation" (https://psinumscat.com)
The hired research engineer will work under the direction of the scientific
computing team of Laboratoire Jacques-Louis Lions in Paris, in close
collaboration with the researchers and post-doctoral fellows of the project at
University of Bath and University College London, and will be tasked with
developing and implementing new efficient numerical methods for high-
frequency wave propagation problems in the finite element open-source
software FreeFEM developed at Laboratoire Jacques Louis Lions.
You can find more information about the position and apply at
https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Offres/CDD/UMR7598-PIETOU-004/Default.aspx
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Marie Stöbe jobs@wias-berlin.de
Date: April 01, 2025
Subject: Scientist and Research Software Engineer, Berlin, Germany
The Weierstrass Institute for Applied Analysis and Stochastics (WIAS) is an
institute of the Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V. (FVB). The FVB comprises seven
non-university research institutes in Berlin which are funded by the federal and
state governments. The research institutes belong to the Leibniz Association.
WIAS invites applications as
Scientist and Research Software Engineer (f/m/d)
(Ref. 25/05)
in the Research Group
“Numerical Mathematics and Scientific ComputingNumerical Mathematics and
Scientific Computing“
(Head: Prof. Dr. V. John) starting as soon as possible.
The work tasks include: active research in the topics of numerical simulations
for problems from applications, especially those which are studied in the
research group (e.g., in connection with fluid mechanics, biomedical
applications, semiconductors or electro-chemistry). In addition, it is expected
that the staff of the institute is supported in the development and publication
of scientific software, e.g., by organizing appropriate qualification measures.
We are looking for: Applicants should have relevant scientific publications and
experience in the development numerical methods for application-oriented
problems, of the implementation of scientific software or open-source software
and a good knowledge of modern software development methods, such as
version control, continuous integration and documentation tools. The
successful candidate is expected to support projects from the above mentioned
applications in cooperation with partners inside and outside WIAS, to
contribute to WIAS software development, and be willing to provide instruction
and training to scientists (also in English).
A university diploma or master degree in mathematics or a closely related
discipline as well as a PhD degree are required.
What we offer:
• WIAS Berlin is a premier research institution known for its strength in
optimization, optimal control, dynamical systems, and applied mathematics in
general.
• Mobile working
• A certified (Audit berufundfamilie) family-friendly work environment.
• Berlin is one of the most culture-rich and diverse international cities in the
world. It offers endless opportunities to enjoy life outside work, while being
very affordable compared to other major cities. Neither the job nor living in
Berlin requires German language (although WIAS offers free German courses).
We highly welcome international applications. Scientifically, Berlin offers a rich
landscape with numerous opportunities for research, as well as job prospects in
academia and industry.
Technical queries should be directed to Prof. Dr. V. John (john@wias-berlin).
The working hours are 39 hours per week and the position is remunerated
according to TVoeD Bund and is initially limited to three years.
The Weierstraß Institute is an equal opportunity employer. We explicitly
encourage female researchers to apply for the offered position. Among equally
qualified applicants, disabled candidates will be given preference.
Please upload complete application documents including cover letter,
curriculum vitae, certificates, and a copy of your Ph.D. thesis (or relevant
publications) via our online job-application facility (https://short.sg/j/55013428)
until April 30, 2025 using the button “Apply online”
(https://short.sg/a/55013428).
We are looking forward to your application!
See here for more information:
https://www.wias-berlin.de/jobs/index.jsp?lang=1
https://wias-berlin.softgarden.io/de/vacancies
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Charley Denton cdenton@aimsciences.org
Date: March 31, 2025
Subject: Contents, AIMS new journal issue: EECT 14-4
Evolution Equations and Control Theory
August 2025, Vol. 14, No. 4
https://www.aimsciences.org/eect/article/2025/14/4
Envelope, singular solution, and finite-time stability
Yufei Chen, Bo Tang and Qihuai Liu
Local existence and nonexistence for fractional semilinear parabolic systems with
singular initial data
Masamitsu Suzuki
Energy decay for a suspension bridge problem with variable exponent and time
dependent nonlinear damping
Mohammad M. Al-Gharabli
Weak solvability of the initial-boundary value problem for a finite-order model of
the inhomogeneous incompressible Kelvin-Voigt fluid without a positive lower
bound on the initial condition of fluid density
Victor Zvyagin and Mikhail Turbin
Stabilization of coupled unstable semilinear reaction-advection-diffusion PDEs
with spatially varying coefficients via event-triggered boundary feedback
Le-Le Wang, Jun-Jun Liu and Han-Wen Zhang
Global exponential contraction of functional differential equations
Pham Huu Anh Ngoc
Read more articles here:
https://www.aimsciences.org/eect/article/2025/14/4
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Charley Denton cdenton@aimsciences.org
Date: March 31, 2025
Subject: Contents, AIMS new journal volume: AMMC Volume 3
Applied Mathematics for Modern Challenges
Volume: 3, March 2025
https://www.aimsciences.org/AMMC/article/2025/3/0
Benchmarking learned algorithms for computed tomography image
reconstruction tasks
Maximilian B. Kiss, Ander Biguri, Zakhar Shumaylov, Ferdia Sherry, K. Joost
Batenburg, Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb and Felix Lucka
Bow echo alarm system using Topological Data Analysis
Hélène Canot, Philippe Durand and Emmanuel Frénod
Image reconstruction in cone beam computed tomography using controlled
gradient sparsity
Alexander Meaney, Mikael A. K. Brix, Miika T. Nieminen and Samuli Siltanen
Solution of an inverse problem to estimate airway resistance in mechanically
ventilated patients from 3-D electrical impedance tomography data
Emily Heavner, Jennifer L. Mueller, Tzu-Jen Kao, Nilton Barbosa da Rosa Jr., Patrick
J. Offner and Ellen Burnham
Complex extension of optical flow and its practical evaluation for undersampled
dynamic MRI
Matthias J. Ehrhardt and Marco Mauritz
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Charley Denton cdenton@aimsciences.org
Date: March 31, 2025
Subject: Contents, AIMS new journal volume: CAC Volume 3
Communications on Analysis and Computation
Volume: 3, March 2025
https://www.aimsciences.org/CAC/article/2025/3/0
Strong approximation of stochastic semiclassical Schrödinger equation with
multiplicative noise
Lihai Ji and Zhihui Liu
Eigenvalues of some third-order boundary value problems with eigenparameter-
dependent boundary conditions on time scales
Na Zhang and Ji-Jun Ao
A note on an iterative algorithm for solving an inverse problem for a fractional-
order partial differential equation
Abdallah Bradji and Daniel Lesnic
L∞(Hdiv)×W1,∞(L2)-norm superconvergence of mixed finite element schemes
applied to multidimensional parabolic equations
Fayssal Benkhaldoun and Abdallah Bradji
Determining time-dependent convection and density terms in a convection-
diffusion equation using partial data
Anamika Purohit
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Carsten Carstensen cc@math.hu-berlin.de
Date: March 31, 2025
Subject: Contents, Computational methods in applied mathematics 2025(2)
Dear Editor,
Please consider submission of the following article to NA Digest.
Thank you in advance.
Carsten Carstensen,
Editor-in-Chief of CMAM
---------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN APPLIED MATHEMATICS (2025), No 2
In Memoriam of Raytcho Lazarov
Oleg Iliev, Svetozar Margenov
A Finite Element Analysis in Balanced Norms for a Coupled System of Singularly
Perturbed Reaction-Diffusion Equations
María Gabriela Armentano, Ariel L. Lombardi, Cecilia Penessi
Analysis of a Combined Spherical Harmonics and Discontinuous Galerkin
Discretization for the Boltzmann Transport Equation
Kenneth Assogba, Grégoire Allaire, Lahbib Bourhrara
On Error Estimates of a Discontinuous Galerkin Method of the Boussinesq
System of Equations
Saumya Bajpai, Debendra Kumar Swain
Finite Element Formulations for Maxwell’s Eigenvalue Problem Using
Continuous Lagrangian Interpolations
Daniele Boffi, Ramon Codina, Önder Türk
Variational Approximation for a Non-Isothermal Coupled Phase-Field System:
Structure-Preservation & Nonlinear Stability
Aaron Brunk, Oliver Habrich, Timileyin David Oyedeji, Yangyiwei Yang, Bai-Xiang
Xu
Error Analysis of the Vector Penalty-Projection Methods for the Time-
Dependent Stokes Equations with Open Boundary Conditions
Rima Cheaytou, Philippe Angot
Numerical Analysis of a Second-Order Algorithm for the Time-Dependent
Natural Convection Problem
Yiru Chen, Yun-Bo Yang
A Space-Time Finite Element Method for the Eddy Current Approximation of
Rotating Electric Machines
Peter Gangl, Mario Gobrial, Olaf Steinbach
A P 2 H-Div-Nonconforming-H-Curl Finite Element for the Stokes Equations on
Triangular Meshes
Yunqing Huang, Xuejun Xu, Shangyou Zhang
An Inverse Matrix Eigenvalue Problem for Constructing a Vibrating Rod
Hanif Mirzaei, Vahid Abbasnavaz, Kazem Ghanbari
Anisotropic Adaptive Finite Elements for a p-Laplacian Problem
Paride Passelli, Marco Picasso
On an Optimal AFEM for Elastoplasticity
Miriam Schönauer, Andreas Schröder
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Janos D. Pinter jpinter@business.rutgers.edu
Date: April 03, 2025
Subject: Call for papers, Algorithms Special Issue on Nonlinear Optimization
Call for papers, Algorithms Special Issue on Nonlinear Optimization
Journal: Algorithms (an MDPI open access journal)
Special Issue: Nonlinear Optimization—Algorithmic Advances and Innovative
Applications
Guest Editor: János D. Pintér, Rutgers University, USA
Contact: jpinter@business.rutgers.edu
Special Issue Announcement
Nonlinear optimization—including local and global, deterministic and stochastic
optimization paradigms—is applicable to a broad range of business, engineering,
and scientific decision-making situations. We invite contributions to this Special
Issue that are related to the following topics:
- Deterministic model development and optimization applied to real-world
problems.
- Stochastic simulation, stochastic programming, and simulation optimization
applied to real-world problems.
- Algorithmic advances: novel heuristics and exact optimization algorithms.
- Applications of nonlinear optimization: challenges and innovative solutions.
- Interdisciplinary approaches: contributions that bridge disciplines—such as
business analytics, management science, operations research, industrial
engineering, and computer science—to address optimization applications.
Submission deadline: September 30, 2025.
Algorithms is a peer-reviewed, open access journal which provides an advanced
forum for studies related to algorithms and their applications. Algorithms is
published online by MDPI, https://www.mdpi.com/journal/algorithms.
-------------------------------------------------------
From: Janos D. Pinter jpinter@business.rutgers.edu
Date: March 31, 2025
Subject: Nonlinear Optimization: Algorithmic Advances and Innovative Applications
Dear Colleagues,
I am organizing a Special Issue of the open access journal Algorithms on
Nonlinear Optimization: Algorithmic Advances and Innovative Applications.
Submission deadline: September 30, 2025.
For more information and details, please visit
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/algorithms
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/algorithms/special_issues/GJUCK8AD3V
Please feel free to contact me, if you are interested in contributing.
Feel free to pass along this invitation to colleagues who may be interested.
Best regards,
Janos D. Pinter, Ph.D., D.Sc.
Department of Management Science and Information Systems
Rutgers University
Email: jpinter@business.rutgers.edu
Web: https://www.business.rutgers.edu/faculty/Janos-Pinter
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.ca/citations?
user=iHrfmDEAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
-------------------------------------------------------
End of Digest
**************************