Subject: NA Digest, V. 18, # 31 NA Digest Monday, August 06, 2018 Volume 18 : Issue 31 Today's Editor: Daniel M. Dunlavy Sandia National Labs [log in to unmask] Today's Topics: Symposium Honoring Frank Stenger's 80th, Greece, Sep 2018 IWR Mathematical Optimization, Germany, Oct 2018 Fast Direct Solvers, USA, Nov 2018 RICAM High-dimensional Problems and UQ, Austria, Dec 2018 GAMM Optimization, Austria, Feb 2019 Chair Position, Mathematical Optimization, Univ of Birmingham, UK Scientific Computing Positions, HPC Blue Brain Project, EPFL Software Engineer Position, Earth System Modeling, Caltech Open-rank Positions, Mathematical and Computational Eng, Pontificia Univ Postdoc/Research Scientist Positions, Earth System Modeling, Caltech Postdoc Instructorship Position, Rice Univ PostDoc/PhD Position, UQ for Groundwater Flow/Transport, TU Chemnitz Early Stage Researcher Position, Cardiff Univ Free Access, CA Special Issues on Approximation and Statistical Physics Contents, Bulletin of Computational Applied Mathematics, 6 (1) Contents, Computational Mathematics, 36 (4) Contents, EECT Evolution Equations and Control Theory, 7 (3) Contents, IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis, 38 (3) Subscribe, unsubscribe, change address, or for na-digest archives: http://www.netlib.org/na-digest-html/faq.html Submissions for NA Digest: http://icl.utk.edu/na-digest/ ------------------------------------------------------- From: Gerd Baumann [log in to unmask] Date: August 01, 2018 Subject: Symposium Honoring Frank Stenger's 80th, Greece, Sep 2018 I like to draw your attention to our special symposium in honor of Frank Stenger's 80th birthday. The symposium takes place within the frame of ICNAAM 2018 at Rhodes, Greece, during the period September 13th till 18th, 2018. Talks are welcome and will be published in a special volume dedicated to Frank's anniversary. We also accept contributions to the special volume published by Springer. If you like to join at Rhodes you need to register your talk via the ICNAAM 2018 web site: http://icnaam.org/ Send me a short notice including your title and a few words for an abstract. Information on accommodation and travel are also available from the sites http://icnaam.org/accomodation.htm http://icnaam.org/transfers ------------------------------------------------------- From: Ekaterina Kostina [log in to unmask] Date: August 05, 2018 Subject: IWR Mathematical Optimization, Germany, Oct 2018 The Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing (IWR) of Heidelberg University will organize the IWR School 2018 "Advances in Mathematical Optimization", October 8-12, 2018. The IWR School 2018 focuses on important modern methods in the field of mathematical optimization. We target young researchers who want to deepen their knowledge of the methods that play a crucial role in solving demanding optimization problems in many application domains in science and engineering, economics, medicine, data analysis and increasingly in industrial and societal problems. The IWR School 2018 covers fundamental concepts, latest innovations and many practical applications of continuous, discrete and mixed-integer optimization as well as optimal control and game theory. The IWR School 2018 is taught in a series of courses by: - Tobias Achterberg, Gurobi - Hans Georg Bock, Heidelberg University - Christian Kirches, Technical University of Braunschweig - Ekaterina Kostina, Heidelberg University - Martine Labbe, Universite Libre de Bruxelles and INRIA - Gerhard Reinelt, Heidelberg University - Andrea Tramontani, CPLEX Optimization, IBM Italy - Stephen J. Wright, University of Wisconsin-Madison Registration deadline: August 31, 2018 (150,- EURO). The fee covers the attendance to the IWR school, class materials, welcome reception, lunch and coffee breaks on the course days as well as the social program. The IWR school offers a mobility program to support participants to attend the event. For further information and registration please visit the website of the IWR School 2018 at http://www.iwr.uni-heidelberg.de/events/iwr-school-2018 ------------------------------------------------------- From: Jianlin Xia [log in to unmask] Date: August 05, 2018 Subject: Fast Direct Solvers, USA, Nov 2018 Purdue CCAM (Center for Computational & Applied Mathematics) is hosting the 2018 Conference on Fast Direct Solvers on Nov 9-11, 2018 (it will start from the afternoon of Fri, Nov 9). The purpose of the conference is to discuss and exchange ideas on topics related to fast direct solvers, structured matrices, sparsity and data sparsity, high performance direct solvers, randomized algorithms, structured preconditioning, fast PDE and IE solvers, related applications, and other relevant subjects. The organizers are Jie Shen and Jianlin Xia. The following is a tentative list of invited speakers: Eric Darve, Stanford University Ming Gu, UC Berkeley Daniel Kressner, EPFL, Switzerland Sabine Le Borne, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Eric Michielssen, University of Michigan Olaf Schenk, Universita della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland Contributed talks are welcome. Please see the following webpage for more information: http://www.math.purdue.edu/~xiaj/FastSolvers2018/ ------------------------------------------------------- From: Dirk Nuyens [log in to unmask] Date: July 31, 2018 Subject: RICAM High-dimensional Problems and UQ, Austria, Dec 2018 Workshop 4: "Frontier Technologies for High-Dimensional Problems and Uncertainty Quantification" In the RICAM special semester on "Multivariate Algorithms and their Foundations in Number Theory" December 17-21, 2018 + tutorials on Friday December 14, 2018. https://www.ricam.oeaw.ac.at/specsem/specsem2018/workshop4/ Invited speakers: Albert Cohen (Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris), Ivan Graham (University of Bath), Michael Griebel (University of Bonn), Christoph Schwab (ETH Zurich), Ian H. Sloan (University of New South Wales, Sydney), Aretha Teckentrup (University of Edinburgh), Raul Tempone (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology), Stefan Vandewalle (KU Leuven). There will be a small number of contributed talks at the workshop. Please register by September 15. We invite PhD students to apply for 8 travel funds of 600 euro each to cover travel and accommodation. To apply send a 1 page resume + 3 paragraphs of motivation + a support letter from the supervisor to before September 15. PhD students applying for travel and accommodation support need to participate in the tutorials on the Friday before the workshop. The tutorials give an introduction to the main topics and will be given by Anthony Nouy (Ecole Centrale Nantes), Dirk Nuyens (KU Leuven) and Rob Scheichl (University of Bath) on Friday December 14. ------------------------------------------------------- From: Christian Kirches [log in to unmask] Date: August 02, 2018 Subject: GAMM Optimization, Austria, Feb 2019 The 90th Annual Meeting of the International Association of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics (GAMM) will take place from February 18-22, 2019 in Vienna, Austria (http://jahrestagung.gamm-ev.de/). On behalf of the organizing committee we would like to invite you and the members of your group to contribute a talk to the Section S16 "Optimization". This year, we are happy to have two distinguished speakers on this topic: - Alexandra Schwartz (TU Darmstadt) (http://www.graduate-school-ce.de/index.php?id=schwartz) - Andreas Potschka (Heidelberg University) (https://typo.iwr.uni-heidelberg.de/groups/mobocon/research-group/dr-andreas- potschka/) Contributed talks will have a length of 15 minutes plus 5 minutes for discussion. For more detailed information concerning the submission of abstracts as well as registration, please visit the conference website at http://jahrestagung.gamm-ev.de/index.php/2019/2019-online-registration Deadline for abstract submission this year is already on October 31, 2018; notification of acceptance of abstract November 23, 2018. Online registration for speakers opens in August, 2018 and will close on December 14, 2018. Deadline for early bird registration is November 30, 2018. We are looking forward to seeing and in Vienna! In the meantime, if you have any questions regarding the scope or organization of Section S16 (in particular regarding the distinction to S19 "Optimization of differential equations"), don't hestitate to contact us. Christian Kirches ([log in to unmask]) Christian Clason ([log in to unmask]) (Section Organizers) ------------------------------------------------------- From: Michal Kocvara [log in to unmask] Date: August 01, 2018 Subject: Chair Position, Mathematical Optimization, Univ of Birmingham, UK School of Mathematics, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences University of Birmingham, UK Applications are invited for a Chair/Reader post in Mathematical Optimization. The School is seeking to appoint an active and committed researcher in one of the emerging areas of modern Mathematical Optimization, such as Stochastic Optimization, Distributed Optimization, Optimization for Data Analytics. The successful candidates will have a PhD (or equivalent) in Mathematics or Computer Science, a first-class research record in Mathematics, and a commitment to teaching, along with excellent communication skills. Candidates will demonstrate experience in attracting external funding. Informal enquiries may be addressed to Professor Michal Kocvara, tel: +44 (0) 121 414 6598, email: [log in to unmask] Salary: Competitive package for outstanding candidate Closing date: 22 August 2018 To download the details and submit an electronic application online visit: https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/jobs/ -> Current vacancies online -> post number 1406 See also https://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/BLN495/chair-reader-in-mathematics/ ------------------------------------------------------- From: Melchior Samuel [log in to unmask] Date: August 04, 2018 Subject: Scientific Computing Positions, HPC Blue Brain Project, EPFL The HPC team of the Blue Brain Project at EPFL is expanding and looking for C++, Python developers interested in scientific computing / HPC (junior/senior level); we have multiple open positions for our fascinating and challenging project: - HPC Developer/Performance Engineer (http://bit.ly/2K8hbe0) - C++/Python Software Engineer (http://bit.ly/2K4n23P) - Big Data Engineer (http://bit.ly/2LWwlEH) - Scientific Developer (Numerical Methods): (http://bit.ly/2OnErYI) - Machine Learning / Deep Learning (http://bit.ly/2Ls3DPT) Starte Date : Flexible Contract : Full time, Renewable Location : Geneva, Switzerland If more information is needed about project/positions/relocation, we will be happy to discuss; don't hesitate to contact me! ------------------------------------------------------- From: Tapio Schneider [log in to unmask] Date: August 01, 2018 Subject: Software Engineer Position, Earth System Modeling, Caltech Software Engineers in Data-Informed Earth System Modeling at Caltech Climate change projections continue to be marred by large uncertainties. But breakthroughs in their accuracy are within reach, thanks to recent advances in the computational and data sciences and in the availability of Earth observations from space and from the ground. The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and partner institutions are developing a new Earth system modeling platform to harness these advances. It will fuse an Earth system model (ESM) with global observations and targeted local high-resolution simulations of clouds, turbulence, and other elements of the Earth system. As a Software Engineer, you will collaborate with a dynamic, multi- disciplinary team of scientists, engineers, and applied mathematicians, spanning Caltech, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Naval Postgraduate School. You will Work on a fast-paced, high-profile project with a significant opportunity for impacting Earth system modeling worldwide; Design, develop, test, deploy, maintain, and improve the ESM platform software; and Be a hands-on coder applying the best industry standards for code health, scalability, and robustness. As a Lead Software Engineer, you will additionally Devise innovative ideas and technical designs for an ESM platform that is scalable and adaptable to a variety of hardware architectures, including distributed computing architectures; Provide technical leadership and solve end-to-end the most difficult design and implementation problems; and Mentor more junior Software Engineers. We are seeking to fill several software engineering positions within this initiative. As minimum qualification, you are expected to have Completed a BS degree in computer science or a different science and engineering field; Experience developing large software projects in a distributed fashion, e.g., contributing to an open source project with distributed contributors; Experience working with high-performance computing systems including manycore processors and accelerators; and Experience with at least two general purpose programming languages (e.g., C/C++, C#, Objective C, Python, Fortran). For more information about the modeling initiative and positions, please visit climate-dynamics.org or contact Professors Tapio Schneider or Andrew Stuart at [log in to unmask] Applications with a resume, a one-page statement of interests, and three references should be submitted at https://chm.tbe.taleo.net/chm03/ats/careers/v2/viewRequisition? org=CALTECH&cws=37&rid=3829 for the software engineer positions, and at https://chm.tbe.taleo.net/chm03/ats/careers/v2/viewRequisition? org=CALTECH&cws=37&rid=3831 for the lead software engineer positions. Review of applications will begin August 9 and will continue until the positions are filled. ------------------------------------------------------- From: Carlos Jerez-Hanckes [log in to unmask] Date: July 31, 2018 Subject: Open-rank Positions, Mathematical and Computational Eng, Pontificia Univ The Institute for Mathematical and Computational Engineering was recently created as a joint endeavor between the School of Engineering and the Faculty of Mathematics of the Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile in Santiago. The Institute aims to become an international referent on addressing complex problems in science, technology, and society, pushing forward interdisciplinary research, connecting advanced mathematical modeling with various disciplines. Current faculty members of the Institute conduct research in a wide variety of areas such as data science, optimization (continuous and discrete), inverse problems, uncertainty quantification, theory of computing, numerical analysis, and high-performance computing. This recent interdisciplinary effort has already generated important collaborations with several leading international centers. Application areas include industrial problems and management sciences, social sciences, astronomical instrumentation, optics and nanophotonics, biological and medical engineering, among others. The Institute is also responsible for the Mathematical Engineering program---a highly selective undergraduate program within the School of Engineering---and is in the process of creating interdisciplinary graduate programs in Mathematical and Computational Engineering leading to master and doctoral degrees. As part of its strategic plans, the Institute is offering two open-rank positions at the assistant or associate level. We invite highly qualified candidates in all areas of applied mathematics addressed by the Institute to apply to these positions, although preference might be given to applicants interested in the mathematical, computational and statistical interplay between machine learning, data science, uncertainty quantification and stochastic modeling, and also the potentials of high- performance computing in those areas, as well as in connection with online algorithms, optimization and numerical problems. Applicants should have completed or be close to complete a Ph.D. degree in Applied Mathematics, Statistics, Operations Research, Computer Science or related areas. An Engineering background is highly desirable. The selected candidates will be expected to conduct interdisciplinary research and be able to connect with other disciplines in the University. The ability to address relevant applied problems in industry and public sector, among others, is also very valuable. Selected candidates will also be expected to teach and contribute to the Mathematical and Computational Engineering curriculum. Typical teaching load is three semester long courses a year, which could be graduate or undergraduate level. Command of Spanish is not required to apply but the selected candidates are expected to learn the language. The deadline for applying is October 1, 2018 and more details and application instructions are available at the following link: https://imc.uc.cl/index.php/noticias/77-open-positions-at-the-institute-for- mathematical-and-computational-engineering-pontificia-universidad- catolica-de-chile ------------------------------------------------------- From: Tapio Schneider [log in to unmask] Date: August 01, 2018 Subject: Postdoc/Research Scientist Positions, Earth System Modeling, Caltech Postdoctoral Scholars and Research Scientists in Data-Informed Earth System Modeling at Caltech Climate change projections continue to be marred by large uncertainties. But breakthroughs in their accuracy are within reach, thanks to recent advances in the computational and data sciences and in the availability of Earth observations from space and from the ground. The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and partner institutions are developing a new Earth system modeling platform to harness these advances. It will fuse an Earth system model (ESM) with global observations and targeted local high-resolution simulations of clouds, turbulence, and other elements of the Earth system. As a postdoctoral scholar or research scientist, you will collaborate with a dynamic, multi-disciplinary team of scientists, engineers, and applied mathematicians, spanning Caltech, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Naval Postgraduate School. You will contribute to the development of a data-informed ESM by devising scalable data assimilation and machine learning (DA/ML) algorithms, to allow them to learn systematically from diverse data sources, such as satellite observations or high-resolution simulations of turbulent flows; developing physically informed parameterizations of subgrid- scale processes in the atmosphere that are suitable for DA/ML approaches, including models for boundary layer turbulence, clouds, and convection; or building and prototyping numerical and computational methods for an atmosphere dynamical core that is scalable and adaptable to emerging hardware architectures. We are seeking to fill several postdoctoral and research scientist positions within this initiative, spanning a range of expertise from computational and applied mathematics to the atmospheric and oceanic sciences. As minimum qualification, you are expected to have Completed a doctoral degree in applied mathematics, atmospheric or oceanic sciences, computer science, engineering, physics, statistics or a related field at the time of the appointment; A strong physical, mathematical, and/or computational background; Programming experience in at least one general purpose language; and Demonstrated effective written and verbal communication skills. We prefer for you to have Experience with high-performance parallel computing; and Experience working in multi-disciplinary teams and interacting cross-functionally with a wide variety of people. For the research scientist positions, at least 2 years of postdoctoral research experience and leadership experience of research projects as demonstrated by publications are also required. For more information about the modeling initiative and positions, please visit climate-dynamics.org or contact Professors Tapio Schneider or Andrew Stuart at [log in to unmask] Applications with a curriculum vitae, a one-page statement of research interests, and three letters of recommendation should be submitted at https://applications.caltech.edu/jobs/earthsystem. Review of applications will begin August 9 and will continue until the positions are filled. ------------------------------------------------------- From: Fran Moshiri [log in to unmask] Date: August 03, 2018 Subject: Postdoc Instructorship Position, Rice Univ Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics (CAAM) Rice University The Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics (www.caam.rice.edu) at Rice University in Houston, Texas, invites applications for a Pfeiffer Postdoctoral Instructorship. All postdoctoral instructors in the Department are appointed for two academic years, with possible extension for a third year. The term of appointment may begin at any time after July 1, 2019. Candidates must have a recent PhD in Applied Mathematics and have demonstrated potential for excellence in both research and teaching. This opportunity is restricted to U.S. Citizens and Permanent Residents only. Instructors teach one lecture course each semester, and conduct research in collaboration with a faculty mentor. The Pfeiffer Instructorships honor Professor Paul Pfeiffer (1917-2012), a founding member of the department. Interdisciplinary work is a fundamental aspect of the Department's program. The research interests of the Pfeiffer Postdoctoral Instructors should align with the research programs of the Department. Applications consisting of a letter of application, current vita, and descriptions of research plans and teaching experience should be submitted via the website www.MathJobs.Org. In addition, candidates should arrange for at least three letters of recommendations, which may be submitted on the same website. To receive full consideration the complete application must be received by December 15, 2018, but the committee will continue to accept applications until the position is filled. Equal Opportunity Employer: Females/Minorities/Veterans/ Disabled/Sexual Orientation/ Gender Identity. ------------------------------------------------------- From: Oliver Ernst [log in to unmask] Date: August 02, 2018 Subject: PostDoc/PhD Position, UQ for Groundwater Flow/Transport, TU Chemnitz The Numerical Analysis Group of the TU Chemnitz Department of Mathematics has an immediate opening in the EU-funded Junior Research Group "NitraMon" as a full-time research associate (German pay scale E13 TV-L) at the doctoral or postdoctoral level. The position is restricted to applicants who received their PhD degree no less than 4 years before July 1, 2018 and is funded through June 30, 2021. NitraMon is a multidisciplinary research project to develop a sensor network for the continuous monitoring of anthropogenic nitrate contamination in soil and groundwater in cooperation with teams from electrical engineering and chemistry at the TU Chemnitz. The successful candidate is expected to contribute to the collaborative project's success in the following development tasks: finite element simulation of groundwater flow and transport in saturated and unsaturated zones; parameter identification of nitrate concentration based in spatiotemporal observations with quantified uncertainty; optimal sensor placement based on methods of optimal experimental design. Eligibility: Applicants should have a master's or PhD degree in mathematics or alternatively a PhD degree in a closely related field relevant for conducting the research tasks outlined above as well as experience in the development of numerical software. Excellent programming skills are essential. Application is open until August 17, 2018. Further details can be found at https://www.tu-chemnitz.de/verwaltung/personal/stellen/225035_1_Ku.php . ------------------------------------------------------- From: Pierre Kerfriden [log in to unmask] Date: August 05, 2018 Subject: Early Stage Researcher Position, Cardiff Univ Cardiff University invites applications for an Early Stage Researcher position (Doctoral Candidate) as part of the Rapid Biomechanics and Simulation for Personalised Clinical Design (RAINBOW) MCSA European Training Network. RAINBOW is funded under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. The post holder will undertake research on "Meta Modelling for Soft Tissue Contact and Cutting Simulation" leading to a PhD degree award. The post holder will develop numerical methods to simulate the deformations of soft-tissues in the context of computer-aided surgery. In particular, he/she will contribute to bridging the gap between advanced 3D imaging techniques and physics-based computer simulations in order to improve current capabilities in the area of computer-aided diagnostic and surgical planning. A thorough knowledge of numerical methods is essential. More information and application pages https://rainbow.ku.dk/open-positions/ https://krb-sjobs.brassring.com/TGnewUI/Search/Home/HomeWithPreLoad? partnerid=30011&siteid=5460&PageType=searchResults&SearchType=linkquery&LinkID=6# jobDetails=1230317_5460 Application Deadline: 16.08.2018 ------------------------------------------------------- From: Edward B. Saff [log in to unmask] Date: July 31, 2018 Subject: Free Access, CA Special Issues on Approximation and Statistical Physics Free access is available until September 25, 2018 to Parts I and II of Constructive Approximation's Special Issue on Approximation and Statistical Physics (Vol. 47, No. 1, 2018 and Vol. 48, No. 1, 2018). The free access is available by scrolling to the bottom of the Springer Constructive Approximation home page, http://www.springer.com/365. ------------------------------------------------------- From: Saul Buitrago [log in to unmask] Date: August 04, 2018 Subject: Contents, Bulletin of Computational Applied Mathematics, 6 (1) Table of Contents Bulletin of Computational Applied Mathematics, Vol. 6, No. 1 http://www.compama.co.usb.ve/table-of-contents Transitivity of parametric family of cardinality-based fuzzy similarity measures using Lukasiewicz t-norm, M. Aslam Javed, S. Ashraf, S.M. Husnine New results on the stability, integrability and boundedness in Volterra integro-differential equations, C. Tunc, O. Tunc Fundamentals of soft category theory, S.K. Sardar, S. Gupta, B. Davvaz A new flexible extension of the generalized half-normal lifetime model with characterizations and regression modeling, E. Altun, H.M. Yousof, G.G. Hamedani On the Modified Methods for Irreducible Linear Systems with L-Matrices, S.A. Edalatpanah ------------------------------------------------------- From: Yonghui Yu [log in to unmask] Date: August 01, 2018 Subject: Contents, Computational Mathematics, 36 (4) Journal of Computational Mathematics, Volume 36 (2018), Issue 4 http://www.global-sci.org/intro/articles_list.html?journal=jcm&volume_id=1440 Table of Contents A Weak Galerkin Finite Element Method for the Linear Elasticity Problem in Mixed Form, Ruishu Wang and Ran Zhang Block-centered Finite Difference Methods for Non-Fickian Flow in Porous Media, Xiaoli Li and Hongxing Rui High Order Stable Multi-domain Hybrid RKDG and WENO-FD Methods, Fan Zhang, Tiegang Liu and Jian Cheng Quasi-Newton Waveform Relaxation Based on Energy Method, Yaolin Jiang and Zhen Miao Anomalous Diffusion in Finite Length Fingers Comb Frame with the Effects of Time and Space Riesz Fractional Cattaneo-Christov Flux and Poiseuille Flow, Lin Liu, Liancun Zheng, Fawang Liu and Xinxin Zhang A Modified Preconditioner for Parameterized Inexact Uzawa Method for Indefinite Saddle Point Problems, Xinhui Shao, Chen Li, Tie Zhang and Changjun Li High Order Compact Multisymplectic Scheme for Coupled Nonlinear Schrodinger-KdV Equations, Lan Wang and Yushun Wang A New Boundary Condition for Rate-type Non-Newtonian Diffusive Models and the Stable Mac Scheme, Kun Li, Youngju Lee and Christina Starkey ------------------------------------------------------- From: Irena Lasiecka [log in to unmask] Date: August 03, 2018 Subject: Contents, EECT Evolution Equations and Control Theory, 7 (3) The new issue vol 7 Number 3 of Evolution Equations & Control Theory (EECT) is now published online. http://216.227.221.143/journal/A0000-0000/2018/7/3 Energy decay for the damped wave equation on an unbounded network, Rachid Assel and Mohamed Ghazel Rate of convergence of inertial gradient dynamics with time-dependent viscous damping coefficient, Hedy Attouch, Alexandre Cabot, Zaki Chbani and Hassan Riahi Existence and continuous-discrete asymptotic behaviour for Tikhonov- like dynamical equilibrium systems, Aicha Balhag, Zaki Chbani and Hassan Riahi Exact boundary controllability for the Boussinesq equation with variable coefficients, Jamel Ben Amara and Hedi Bouzidi Control problems and invariant subspaces for sabra shell model of turbulence, Tania Biswas and Sheetal Dharmatti Null controllability of the incompressible Stokes equations in a 2-D channel using normal boundary control, Shirshendu Chowdhury, Debanjana Mitra and Michael Renardy Carleman estimates for forward and backward stochastic fourth order Schrodinger equations and their applications, Peng Gao Optimal control of second order delay-discrete and delay-differential inclusions with state constraints, Elimhan N. Mahmudov ------------------------------------------------------- From: Charlotte Parr [log in to unmask] Date: August 02, 2018 Subject: Contents, IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis, 38 (3) Contents, IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis, 38(3) IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis Links to all articles in this issue are available online at: http://bit.ly/2O29GYh Construction and implementation of asymptotic expansions for Laguerre-type orthogonal polynomials, Daan Huybrechs; Peter Opsomer A finite element method for quantum graphs, Mario Arioli; Michele Benzi On a residual-based a posteriori error estimator for the total error, Jan Papez; Zdenek Strakos New algorithms for approximating \Phi-functions and their condition numbers for large sparse matrices, Gang Wu; Lu Zhang Best polynomial approximation on the unit ball, Miguel A Pinar; Yuan Xu Error analysis of a variational multiscale stabilization for convection -dominated diffusion equations in two dimensions, Guanglian Li; Daniel Peterseim; Mira Schedensack Improved L2 estimate for gradient schemes and super-convergence of the TPFA finite volume scheme, Jerome Droniou; Neela Nataraj Avoiding order reduction when integrating linear initial boundary value problems with exponential splitting methods, I Alonso-Mallo; B Cano; N Reguera A splitting method for deep water with bathymetry, Afaf Bouharguane; Benjamin Melinand Analysis of a high-order unfitted finite element method for elliptic interface problems, Christoph Lehrenfeld; Arnold Reusken A variational H (div) finite-element discretization approach for perfect incompressible fluids, Andrea Natale; Colin J Cotter Generalizations of SIP methods to systems with p-structure, T Malkmus; M Ruzicka; S Eckstein; I Toulopoulos Error analysis of an augmented mixed method for the Navier-Stokes problem with mixed boundary conditions, Jessika Camano; Ricardo Oyarzua; Ricardo Ruiz-Baier; Giordano Tierra Discrete fourth-order Sturm-Liouville problems, Matania Ben-Artzi; Jean-Pierre Croisille; Dalia Fishelov; Ron Katzir Adaptive time-stepping strategies for nonlinear stochastic systems, Conall Kelly; Gabriel J Lord Unbiased 'walk-on-spheres' Monte Carlo methods for the fractional Laplacian, Andreas E Kyprianou; Ana Osojnik; Tony Shardlow Complexity and global rates of trust-region methods based on probabilistic models, Serge Gratton; Clement W Royer; Luis N Vicente; Zaikun Zhang Erratum to: "Computation of pseudospectral abscissa for large-scale nonlinear eigenvalue problems", Karl Meerbergen; Emre Mengi; Wim Michiels; Roel Van Beeumen ------------------------------------------------------- End of Digest **************************