NA Digest Saturday, February 26, 2005 Volume 05 : Issue 09

Today's Editor:
Cleve Moler
The MathWorks, Inc.
moler@mathworks.com

Submissions for NA Digest:

Mail to na.digest@na-net.ornl.gov.

Information via e-mail about NA-NET: Mail to na.help@na-net.ornl.gov.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Cleve Moler <moler@mathworks.com>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 08:12:23 -0500 (EST)
Subject: Carl de Boor Wins National Medal of Science

[Press release from University if Wisconsin - Madison. Posted 2/15/2005.]

Mathematician wins top national science prize
by Paroma Basu

Carl de Boor, a mathematician and computer scientist, has won the 2003 National
Medal of Science, the most prestigious science award in the country.

Administered by the National Science Foundation, the National Medal of Science
has since 1959 recognized pioneers in a range of scientific fields. A committee
of scientists and engineers appointed by the president of the United States
annually evaluates the award nominees.

A professor emeritus of computer sciences and mathematics, de Boor will
receive his medal at a White House ceremony on March 14.

Nine UW-Madison scientists have received the esteemed medal in past years.
An expert in numerical analysis, de Boor is the second university
mathematician to be honored.

"This quite took my breath away," says de Boor. "I had never thought of myself
as belonging to that class [of scientists]". John Marburger, President Georgei
Bush's science adviser, personally telephoned de Boor to inform him about the
medal.

"Carl de Boor's selection for the nation's highest scientific award reflects
the significance of his work and the tradition of excellence among our
mathematics and computer sciences faculty," says Gary Sandefur, dean of the
College of Letters and Science.

The author of more than 150 papers and four books, de Boor has earned world
recognition for his work on spline functions, mathematical expressions that
describe free-form curves and surfaces. In particular, de Boor developed
simpler approaches to complex spline calculations, a contribution that
revolutionized computer-aided geometric design. His work is now routinely
applied in a range of fields that rely on precise geometry, including the use
of special effects in films, and in the aircraft and automotive industries.

De Boor grew up in East Germany and came to the United States in 1959. He
received a doctorate from the University of Michigan in 1966 and joined the
UW-Madison faculty in 1972. Until 2003, de Boor was the Steenbock Professor
of Mathematical Sciences and the P.L. Chebyshev Professor of Mathematics and
Computer Sciences. Currently, de Boor is also an affiliate professor at the
University of Washington.


------------------------------

From: Valerie J Yaw <vyaw@cambridge.org>
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 16:55:35 -0500
Subject: New Book, Simulating Hamiltonian Dynamics

Simulating Hamiltonian Dynamics
B. Leimkuhler and S. Reich

The simulation of matter by direct computation of individual atomic
motions has become an important element in the design of new drugs and in
the construction of new materials. This book demonstrates how to implement
the numerical techniques needed for such simulation, thereby aiding the
design of new, faster and more robust solution schemes. Clear explanations
and many examples and exercises will ensure the value of this text for
students, professionals, and researchers.

Contents:
1. Molecular models and simulation; 2. Canonical Hamiltonian systems; 3.
Numerical methods; 4. Development of geometric integrators; 5. Multiple
time scales in molecular dynamics; 6. Constraints in molecular dynamics;
7. Properties of geometric integrators; Bibliography; Index

Series: Cambridge Monographs on Applied and Computational Mathematics
$75.00: Hardback: 0-521-77290-7: February 2005: 396 pages: 71 line
diagrams: 5 tables: 80 exercises: 39 worked examples

Please visit www.cambridge.org/0521772907 to order.


------------------------------

From: Cleve Moler <moler@mathworks.com>
Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 22:12:23 -0500 (EST)
Subject: Short Course in San Francisco on Numerical Computing in MATLAB

We will be offering a two-day short course, Numerical Computing
in MATLAB, in San Francisco on March 14 and 15. For details, see:
http://www.mathworks.com/services/training/courses/NM01.html


------------------------------

From: Peter Pacheco <peter@cs.usfca.edu>
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 11:38:47 -0800
Subject: Bay Area Scientific Computing Day

The Sixth Bay Area Scientific Computing Day will be held at the University
of San Francisco on Saturday, March 5, 2004. If you want to present a
poster, please contact Peter Pacheco (peter@usfca.edu). A website is
currently under construction at

http://cs.usfca.edu/peter/bascd.

If you plan to attend, we'd be grateful if you'd visit the site and fill
out a short pre-registration form.

The Bay Area Scientific Computing Day (BASCD) is an informal gathering to
encourage the interaction and collaboration of researchers in the field
of computational science and engineering from the San Francisco Bay Area.
This event provides an opportunity for new researchers to present their
work to the local community and for the Bay Area scientific computing
community at large to exchange views on today's computational challenges.

Peter Pacheco
Department of Computer Science
University of San Francisco
San Francisco, CA 94117
(415) 422-6630
peter@cs.usfca.edu


------------------------------

From: Steven Dufour <steven.dufour@polymtl.ca>
Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2005 18:15:44 -0500
Subject: Workshop in Corsica on Multiphase Flows

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce that the 3rd International Workshop on
"Trends in Numerical and Physical Modeling for Industrial Multiphase
Flows" will take place in Cargese, Corsica, from September 19th to 23rd
2005. The purpose of this conference is to bring together academic and
industrial researchers from all over the world (10 countries were
represented in 2003) so that they can exchange ideas concerning the
physical and numerical modeling of multiphase flows, with an emphasis
on real problems of industrial nature.

More information on this event as well as on the Call for Papers can be
found at
http://www.mathappl.polymtl.ca/cargese2005/.

We would appreciate if you could forward this email to anyone who may
be interested by this conference.

Best regards,

Prof. F. Bertrand
Conference Chair
Department of Chemical Engineering
Ecole Polytechnique de Montr?eal
francois.bertrand@polymtl.ca

Prof. S. Dufour
Conference Vice-Chair
Department of Mathematics and Industrial Engineering
Ecole Polytechnique de Montre?al
steven.dufour@polymtl.ca

Prof. Jean-Michel Ghidaglia
Conference Vice-Chair
CMLA
ENS Cachan
jmg@cmla.ens-cachan.fr


------------------------------

From: Laurent Hascoet <Laurent.Hascoet@sophia.inria.fr>
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 10:06:27 +0100
Subject: Workshop in Nice on Automatic Differentiation

First European Workshop on Automatic Differentiation

http://www-sop.inria.fr/tropics/adNice2005/

April 14-15, 2005

Maison du Seminaire,
29, boulevard Franck Pilatte,
Nice, France

This 2-day workshop replaces the UK Automatic Differentiation
Workshops, which took place twice a year at Cranfield University
(Shrivenham) and the University of Hertfordshire. These workshops
provide a forum for the presentation of theoretical developments in
and applications of Automatic Differentiation (AD) and adjoint
methods. The workshop is informal and presentations on subjects such
as work in progress, problem areas for AD, or possible application
areas, as well as completed work are welcome. We particularly
encourage PhD students and those new to the field to attend and
present their work. This workshop will put some emphasis on
development of AD tools and perhaps other topics to be announced
later.

Confirmed speakers include:
Shaun Forth - "Developments in the MAD package"
Andreas Griewank - Title to be confirmed
Mohamed Tadjoudine - "Differentiating a time-dependent CFD solver"
Jean Utke - "Automatic checkpoints and adaptive reversal schemes"


Local Organiser: Laurent Hascoet - INRIA
Co-organisers: Bruce Christianson - University of Hertfordshire
Shaun Forth - Cranfield University
Martin Bucker - RWTH Aachen

Administration: Dany Sergeant Fax: +33 492 38 79 55

Please visit our web-page
http://www-sop.inria.fr/tropics/adNice2005/
for further details.


------------------------------

From: Carolyn Sellers <Carolyn.Sellers@brunel.ac.uk>
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 13:59:12 -0000
Subject: Conference at Brunel University on Finite Elements

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT

MAFELAP 2006: 13th - 16th June 2006
Brunel University, UK

We are pleased to announce that MAFELAP 2006, the next conference on the
Mathematics of Finite Elements and Applications, will take place at Brunel
University, UK during the period 13 - 16 June, 2006. In view of his immense contributions to finite elements, his contributions to the MAFELAP Conferences, and on account of his association with Brunel University, MAFELAP 2006 will honour Professor Ivo Babuska, who will attain the age of 80 in 2006.

The MAFELAP website has now been opened up:

www.brunel.ac.uk/bicom/mafelap2006

and more details will be added to this as time progresses.

We are now at the stage when we are encouraging colleagues to propose
Mini-Symposia which they would like to organise at MAFELAP.
Briefly, the parameters for a mini-symposium are that we shall allocate
a time-slot to the organisers, during which they can have four
speakers, each giving a presentation (probably 30 minutes, 25 minutes talk
plus 5 minutes for questions). If organisers want more than four talks,
then we could give them two two-hour slots. If you are interested in
running a mini-symposium, please submit a title to us as soon as possible,
with a tentative list of speakers.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Carolyn Sellers
MAFELAP Secretary
Brunel University, UK
mafelap2006@brunel.ac.uk


------------------------------

From: Ajith Abraham <abraham.ajith@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 11:48:50 +0900
Subject: Conference in Poland on Intelligent System Design

ISDA'05: Fifth International Conference on Intelligent System Design
and Applications
September 08-10, 2005, Wroclaw, Poland
Conference web site: http://www.isda2005.pwr.wroc.pl or
http://isda05.softcomputing.net

Related events
International Conference on Artificial Neural Networks
September 11-15, 2005
http://www.phys.uni.torun.pl/ICANN-2005/

2005 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation
September 2-5, 2005
http://www.dcs.ex.ac.uk/~dwcorne/cec2005/

TECHNICAL SPONSORS

European Neural Network Society (ENNS)
European Society of Fuzzy Logic and Technology (EUSFLAT)
World Federation of Soft Computing (WFSC)
IEEE - Systems, Man and Cybernetics Society (IEEE-SMC) (pending approval)
Warsaw School of Social Psychology (WSSP)

ISDA'05 OBJECTIVE

Intelligent Systems Design and Applications (ISDA 2005) is the fifth
International conference that brings together international soft
computing, artificial intelligence, computational intelligence
researchers, developers, practitioners and users. The aim of ISDA 2005
is to serve as a forum to present current and future work as well as
to exchange research ideas in this field.

For further information please contact:

Halina Kwasnicka,
Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland

E-mail: halina.kwasnicka@pwr.wroc.pl
Conference e-mail: isda2005@pwr.wroc.pl


------------------------------

From: Peter Hertling <hertling@informatik.unibw-muenchen.de>
Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2005 12:51:24 +0100
Subject: Conference in Kyoto on Computability and Complexity in Analysis

Second Announcement and Call for Papers
CCA 2005

Second International Conference on
Computability and Complexity in Analysis

August 25-29, 2005, Kyoto, Japan

25-26: Satellite seminars
27-29: Main conference

http://cca-net.de/cca2005

Scope

The conference is concerned with the theory of computability
and complexity over real-valued data.

Computability and complexity theory are two central areas
of research in mathematical logic and theoretical computer
science. Computability theory is the study of the limitations
and abilities of computers in principle. Computational
complexity theory provides a framework for understanding the
cost of solving computational problems, as measured by the
requirement for resources such as time and space.
The classical approach in these areas is to consider
algorithms as operating on finite strings of symbols from a
finite alphabet. Such strings may represent various discrete
objects such as integers or algebraic expressions, but cannot
represent general real or complex numbers, unless they are
rounded.

Most mathematical models in physics and engineering, however,
are based on the real number concept. Thus, a computability
theory and a complexity theory over the real numbers and over
more general continuous data structures is needed. Unlike the
well established classical theory over discrete structures,
the theory of computation over continuous data is still in
its infancy, despite remarkable progress in recent years.
Many important fundamental problems have not yet been studied,
and presumably numerous unexpected and surprising results are
waiting to be detected.

Scientists working in the area of computation on real-valued
data come from different fields, such as theoretical computer
science, domain theory, logic, constructive mathematics,
computer arithmetic, numerical mathematics and all branches
of analysis. The conference provides a unique opportunity for
people from such diverse areas to meet and exchange ideas and
knowledge.

The topics of interest include foundational work on various
models and approaches for describing computability and
complexity over the real numbers. They also include
complexity-theoretic investigations, both foundational and
with respect to concrete problems, and new implementations of
exact real arithmetic, as well as further developments of
already existing software packages. We hope to gain new
insights into computability-theoretic aspects of various
computational questions from physics and from other fields
involving computations over the real numbers.

Invited Speakers

Vasco Brattka (Cape Town, South Africa)
Masami Hagiya (Tokyo, Japan)
Daisuke Takahashi (Waseda, Japan)

Satellite Seminars

On August 25 and 26, 2005, there will be satellite seminars
that will consist of introductory lectures to CCA and
related areas. The following speakers have agreed to give
introductory lectures (topic in brackets):

Andrej Bauer (Realizability for constructive and
computable mathematics)
Martin Escardo (Synthetic topology of computational spaces)
Peter Hertling (Computable analysis via representations)
Hideyuki Suzuki (Analog computation)
Mariko Yasugi (Computable versions of basic theorems in
functional analysis)
Atsushi Yoshikawa (Computable versions of basic theorems in
functional analysis)


------------------------------

From: Fayssal Benkhaldoun <fayssal@math.univ-paris13.fr>
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 20:22:02 +0100
Subject: Symposium in Morocco on Finite Volumes

The International Symposium on Finite Volumes
will take place at Marrakech, Morocco from 4 to 8 July 2005,
http://averoes.math.univ-paris13.fr/fvca4

The deadline to submit papers is extended to March 15, 2005.

The organisers

Objectives:

The goal of the symposium is to bring together mathematicians, physicists
and engineers who are concerned with Finite Volume Techniques in a wide
context. Examples for the broad field of applications are fluid dynamics,
magnetohydrodynamics, structural analysis or nuclear physics.

A closer look reveals many interesting phenomena and mathematical or
numerical difficulties, such as true error analysis and adaptivity,
modelling of multi-phase phenomena or fitting problems, stiff terms in
convection/diffusion equations and sources. To overcome existing problems
and to find solution methods for future applications requires many efforts
and always new developments.

The main issue of the symposium is thus a critical look at the subject. New
ideas may be presented, even if they have not yet shown full success. The
demonstration of limits or drawbacks of methods is explicitly welcome.
Contributions may put main emphasis on theoretical as well as applied
topics. Most welcome are contributions, concerned with unsolved or not yet
fully solved problems and possible new attempts.

Topics of Main Interest:
Among the wide range of topics main emphasis is put on the following

* New schemes and methods
* New fields of application
* Non Homogeneous systems
* Convergence and stability analysis
* Global error analysis
* Purely multidimensional difficulties
* Limits of methods
* Complex geometries and adaptivity
* Complexity, efficiency and large computations
* Distributive computation
* Multi- phase problems and fitting
* Combustion problems
* Climate and Ocean modelling, Atmospheric pollution


------------------------------

From: Ashok Srinivasan <asriniva@cs.fsu.edu>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 11:18:45 -0500
Subject: IMACS Seminar in Tallahassee on Monte Carlo Methods

Fifth IMACS Seminar on Monte Carlo Methods: Deadline Extended to March 11th

The Organizers and the Program Committee invite your participation in:

The 5th IMACS Seminar on Monte Carlo Methods to be held May 16-20, 2005
in Tallahassee, FL, USA on the campus of Florida State University. This
is an important international conference on mathematical and
computational issues in Monte Carlo methods and their applications.

We solicit abstracts for contributed papers and proposals for special
sessions on subjects covered by the conference March 14, 2005.
Exceptional papers given at the conference will be invited to contribute
to a special issue of "Mathematics and Computers in Simulation," a
refereed journal published IMACS.

More information on the conference, including a conference poster and
examples for abstract and session submissions, can be found at
http://mcm2005.fsu.edu.

We anticipate being able to provide partial support to attend the
conference to students and other participants with compelling financial
circumstances. Please send requests for support to the conference
organizers.


------------------------------

From: Sven Leyffer <leyffer@mcs.anl.gov>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 12:41:42 -0600 (CST)
Subject: Institute at University of Chicago on Computational Economics

Institute on Computational Economics

The Economic Research Center at the University of Chicago in conjunction
with the Argonne National Laboratory announces the 2005 Institute on
Computational Economics (ICE05). The institute will be a five-day program
held at Argonne National Laboratory from July 18 - 22, 2005.

The primary focus of ICE05 will be to train young scholars (advanced
graduate students and junior faculty) in state-of-the-art numerical
methods and computer technology, and their application to economic
modeling and analysis.

Summer institute activities will include formal morning tutorials on a
range of topics - numerical optimization, dynamic programming, solution
methods for dynamic economic models, and statistical computing - followed
by afternoon sessions that offer opportunities for less formal
interactions via seminars and workshops featuring recent advances in
quantitative economic policy research. Participating students will have
an opportunity to present their work in a poster session.

Young scholars are encouraged to apply to the Institute. Fellowships are
available to help qualified applicants who need funding assistance.

For more information on the program, topics, and application procedures,
see http://jenni.uchicago.edu/summer/index.htm.

Any e-mail inquiries should be directed to [mailto:ice05@mcs.anl.gov]

Sincerely,

Lars Hansen, University of Chicago
James J. Heckman, University of Chicago
Kenneth Judd, Hoover Institution
Sven Leyffer, Argonne National Laboratory
Rosa Matzkin, Northwestern University
Jorge More, Argonne National Laboratory
Todd Munson, Argonne National Laboratory
Myrna Wooders, Vanderbilt University and the University of Warwick


------------------------------

From: David Bruhwiler <bruhwile@txcorp.com>
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 11:25:56 -0700 (Mountain Standard Time)
Subject: Staff Positions at Tech-X Corporation

Hi all,

Tech-X Corp. has 3 open positions for PhD level researchers in the
areas of computational physics and applied mathematics.

Point your browser to URL http://www.txcorp.com/corporation/Jobs/
to see the job announcement and instructions on how to apply.

Best regards,
David

David Bruhwiler -- bruhwile@txcorp.com -- 303.448.0732
Tech-X Corp., 5621 Arapahoe Ave, Suite A, Boulder CO 80303
http://www.txcorp.com -- fax: 303.448.7756


------------------------------

From: Stephan Oestmann <oestmann@ifam.uni-hannover.de>
Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 09:49:17 +0100
Subject: Postdoctoral and PhD Positions at Hannover University

Postdoctoral position in Numerical Analysis / Scientific Computation /
Computational Engineering at Hannover University, Germany

The position is part of the Graduiertenkolleg GRK 615 "Interaction of
Modeling, Computation Methods and Software Concepts for
Scientific-Technological Problems" which is funded by German Research
Foundation (DFG). The position runs for up to two years. The positionholder
is supposed to contribute (besides research) the orginisation of the
interdisziplinary Graduiertenkolleg and to further develop the existing links
between the various projects from different departments such as Civil,
Mechanical and Engineering, Computer Science and Applied Mathematics. He
should assist the speaker (Prof. Stephan, Institute for Applied Mathematics)
in running the Graduiertenkolleg at Hannover University and intensifying the
connections with the european partner universities, Chalmers University of
Technology, Göteborg, Sweden, and Universidad Politecnica de Cataluna,
Barcelona, Spain.

The postdoc position will suit doctoral graduates with experience in the
numerical solution of partial differential equations by fem and in particular
by modern computation techniques such as adaptivity and multilevel iterative
solvers. An essential prerequisite for the position will be an interest in
and experience of efficient methods in scientific computing.

Applicants should in addition be interested in engineering applications.
The postdoctoral fellow will be expected to interact with members of the
Graduiertenkolleg from the above mentioned disciplines.

For more details see
http://www.grk615.uni-hannover.de

with respect to amount of the scholarship see (1.30w Anlage West)
http://www.dfg.de/forschungsfoerderung/formulare/graduiertenkollegs.html

PhD-scholarship in Numerical Analysis

The position (advisor Prof. E.P. Stephan, Institute for Applied Mathematics,
Hannover University) is in the Graduiertenkolleg GRK 615 "Interaction of
Modeling, Computation Methods and Software Concepts for
Scientific-Technological Problems" will be for 2+1 years and the PhD project
is entitled "Adaptive FEM/BEM coupling for elastoplastic and electromagnetic
interface problems" (A10).

For more details see
http://www.grk615.uni-hannover.de

with respect to amount of the scholarship see (1.30w Anlage West)
http://www.dfg.de/forschungsfoerderung/formulare/graduiertenkollegs.html

Further enquiries and expressions of interest in this position should be
directed to:

Prof. Dr. Ernst P. Stephan
Institut für Angewandte Mathematik
Universität Hannover
Welfengarten 1
30167 Hannover
email: stephan@ifam.uni-hannover.de
or
Stephan Oestmann
Institut für Angewandte Mathematik
Universität Hannover
Welfengarten 1
30167 Hannover
email: oestmann@ifam.uni-hannover.de


------------------------------

From: Levent Gurel <lgurel@ee.bilkent.edu.tr>
Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 17:07:22 -0600
Subject: Postdoctoral Position at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey

Postdoctoral Position at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey

Research involves fast solution algorithms for computational
electromagnetics (CEM). In particular, the fast multipole method (FMM), the
multi-level fast multipole algorithm (MLFMA), iterative solvers,
signal-processing techniques, and high-frequency solvers employing
asymptotic techniques will be considered.

Applications are sought immediately and will be accepted until the position
is filled, with no specific deadline. Modern setting, friendly environment,
satisfactory compensation package. For more info, please see
http://www.cem.bilkent.edu.tr. For applications and further details, please
contact Prof. Levent Gurel, Dept. of Electrical and Electronics Engineering,
Bilkent University, TR-06800, Ankara, Turkey, e-mail: lgurel@bilkent.edu.tr.


------------------------------

From: Christos Davatzikos <Christos.Davatzikos@uphs.upenn.edu>
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 15:05:21 -0500
Subject: Postdoctoral Positions at the University of Pennsylvania

Postdoctoral positions are available at the Section of Biomedical Image
Analysis (SBIA), of the Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania
(http://www.rad.upenn.edu/sbia). The successful candidates must have
background in Applied Math, Electrical or Biomedical Engineering, or
Computer Science. Several project opportunities exist, involving work on
image analysis of medical images, with emphasis on shape modeling and
analysis, deformable models, statistical image analysis and machine
learning, among others. SBIA has been a dynamically growing medical image
analysis group, including 16 researchers and many collaborators from diverse
fields and offers diverse opportunities to researchers with interests in
applying math and engineering knowledge and models to the rapidly growing
biomedical imaging field. Please e-mail or mail CV's to

Christos Davatzikos
Chief, Section of Biomedical Image Analysis
3600 Market street, Suite 380
Philadelphia, PA 19104
christos@rad.upenn.edu


------------------------------

From: Mark Ainsworth <ma@maths.strath.ac.uk>
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2005 10:57:22 +0000 (GMT)
Subject: Lectureship Positions at Strathclyde University

Lectureships in Mathematics,
Department of Mathematics,
Strathclyde University,
Glasgow, Scotland.

£23,643 - £35,883 per annum

Applications are invited for two permanent Lectureships in the Department of
Mathematics. For one post (Ref:18/05) applicants should have strong research
interests in Numerical Analysis, Applied Analysis or Scientific Computing
related to partial differential equations. For the second post (Ref: 19/05)
applicants should have strong research interests in any of Applied Analysis,
Continuum Mechanics, Industrial Mathematics, Numerical Analysis or
Mathematical Biology.

The successful candidate(s) will join an active research group in numerical
analysis consisting of nine permanent faculty within a department consisting
of 28 faculty working in applied mathematics. Further information about the
Department can be obtained at http://www.maths.strath.ac.uk

Informal enquiries should be addressed to: Professor Mark Ainsworth (m.ainsworth@strath.ac.uk)

For application forms and further particulars (available on request in
alternative formats for applicants with a disability) visit Vacancies at our
website http://www.mis.strath.ac.uk/Personnel/open/182005.htm
or contact the Personnel Office, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XQ,
tel 0141 553 4133 (24 hour Voicemail service) quoting appropriate reference.

Applications closing Date: 18 March 2005.


------------------------------

From: Raimondas Ciegis <Raimondas.Ciegis@fm.vtu.lt>
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 11:15:51 +0200 (WET)
Subject: Contents, Mathematical Modelling and Analysis

MATHEMATICAL MODELLING AND ANALYSIS

The Baltic Journal
on Mathematical Applications,
Numerical Analysis and Differential Equations

ISSN 1392-6292
Electronical edition: http://www.vtu.lt/rc/mma/

Raimondas {\v C}iegis (Editor)
Volume 10, Number 1, 2005

CONTENTS

K. Batrakov, S. Sytova
Nonstationary Stage of Quasi-Cherenkov Beam Instability in Periodical Structures
(p. 1-8)

A. Buikis, H. Kalis
The Vortex Formation in a Horizontal Finite Cylinder by Alternating Electric Current
(p. 9-18)

J. Cepîtis, H. Kalis, A. Reinfelds
Comparison of Numerical Methods for the Problem Arising in the Gyrotron Theory
(p. 19-30)

A. Grakovski, A. Alexandrov
Spectral Method for Numerical Calculation of Derivatives in Digital Processing of
Subsurface Radar Sounding Signals
(p. 31-40)

I. Yermachenko, F. Sadyrbaev
Quasilinearization and Multiple Solutions of the Emden-Fowler Type Equation
(p. 41-50)

J. Jegorovs, J. Mohring
A Third Order Correction to the Helmholtz Equation
(p. 51-62)

I. Kaldo, O.Vaarmann
Some Rapidly Convergent Methods for Nonlinear Fredholm Integral Equation
(p. 63-72)

Yu. S. Semerich
The Construction of Loci with a Cyclical Symmetry by the R-functions
(p. 73-82)

R. {\v S}iug{\v z}dait{\.e}
Stability Analysis of Cellular Automata Generated Clusters
(p. 83-90)

Yu. Tokovyy, A. Rychahivskyy
Reduction of Plane Thermoelasticity Problem in Inhomogeneous Strip to Integral
Volterra Type Equation
(p. 91-100)


------------------------------

From: Fayssal Benkhaldoun <fayssal@math.univ-paris13.fr>
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 20:07:20 +0100
Subject: Contents, International Journal on Finite Volumes

Contents: International Journal on Finite Volumes
online at: http://averoes.math.univ-paris13.fr

Convergence of a streamline method for hyperbolic problems
Author: Bilal Atfeh

A staggered finite volume scheme on general meshes for the generalized
Stokes problem in two space dimensions
Authors: Ph. Blanc, R. Eymard and R. Herbin

On the numerical simulation of multiphase water flows with changes of phase
and strong gradients using the Homogeneous Equilibrium Model
Authors: Florian De Vuyst, Jean-Michel Ghidaglia and Gerard Le Coqq

A staggered finite volume scheme on general meshes for the
Navier-Stokes equations in two space dimensions
Authors: R. Eymard and R. Herbin

A well-balanced numerical scheme for shallow-water equations with
topography : resonance phenomena
Authors: Ashwin Chinnayya, Alain-Yves LeRoux, Nicolas Seguin

Code Saturne: A Finite Volume Code for Turbulent flows
Authors : Frederic Archambeau, Namane Mehitoua, Marc Sakiz

Practical computation of axisymmetrical multifluid flows
Authors: Thomas BARBERON, Philippe HELLUY, Sandra ROUY

Some refined Finite volume methods for elliptic problems with corner
singularities
Authors : Karim Djadel, Serge Nicaise and Jalel Tabka


------------------------------

End of NA Digest

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