6th Applied Mathematics Symposium Münster
Recent advances in the Calculus of Variations
The Calculus of Variations is a research field whose boundaries have been constantly pushed by questions emerging both in pure mathematics and in the applied sciences. The scope of this Workshop is to bring together experts in the field who will present talks on recent advances in theoretical and applied problems in the Calculus of Variations.
Speakers
- Giovanni Alberti (Pisa)
- Lisa Beck (Augsburg)
- David Bourne (Heriot-Watt Edinburgh)
- Andrea Braides (Rome II)
- Martin Burger (Erlangen)
- Antonin Chambolle (Ecole Polytechnique Paris)
- Marco Cicalese (TU Munich)
- Sergio Conti (Bonn)
- Antoine Gloria (Sorbonne Paris)
- Martin Kružík (Prague)
- Stephan Luckhaus (Leipzig)
- Alexander Mielke (WIAS Berlin)
- Maria Giovanna Mora (Pavia)
- Massimiliano Morini (Parma)
- Matteo Novaga (Pisa)
- Mark Peletier (TU Eindhoven)
- Marcello Ponsiglione (Rome I)
- Lucia Scardia (Heriot-Watt Edinburgh)
- Bernd Schmidt (Augsburg)
- Ulisse Stefanelli (Vienna)
- Florian Theil (Warwick)
Organizers
- Manuel Friedrich (Münster)
- Caterina Ida Zeppieri (Münster)
Registration
Workshop participation is free of charge. However, a registration is required. Please register until July 15, 2019, by writing an email to am.symposium@uni-muenster.de.
Financial Support
The accomodation expenses in Münster Youth Hostel for a limited number of young researchers, will be covered. Please contact us and send us a CV together with a short description (half a page) of your research interests.
Schedule
The Book of Abstracts can be downloaded here.
Monday
8:30-9:00 | Registration |
9:00-9:10 | Welcome |
9:10-10:00 | Stephan Luckhaus Rigidity estimates on the sphere |
10:00-10:50 | Matteo Novaga Almost minimal configurations for nonlocal energies |
10:50-11:20 | Coffee break |
11:20-12:10 | Lucia Scardia Multiscale problems in dislocation theory |
12:10-14:00 | Lunch |
14:00-14:50 | Martin Kruzik Quasistatic evolution for dislocation-free finite plasticity |
14:50-15:40 | Marco Cicalese Does the N-clock model approximate the XY model? |
15:40-16:10 | Coffee break |
16:10-17:00 | Bernd Schmidt Surface energy and boundary layers for a chain of atoms at low temperature |
18:30 | Reception in the lounge (2. floor of SRZ) |
Tuesday
9:00-09:50 | Alexander Mielke Gamma convergence of dissipation functionals and EDP convergence for gradient systems |
09:50-10:40 | Martin Burger Pattern Formation in Vectorial Variational Problems modelling Biological Interactions |
10:40-11:10 | Coffee break |
11:10-12:00 | Ulisse Stefanelli Two structure-preserving discretizations for gradient flows |
12:10-14:00 | Lunch |
14:00-14:50 | Antonin Chambolle On Poincare-Korn and Korn inequalities for functions with small jump set |
14:50-15:40 | Marcello Ponsiglione Uniform distribution of dislocations at semi-coherent interfaces |
15:40-16:10 | Coffee break |
18:00-19:30 | Guided tour of the city. Meeting point: St.-Paulus-Dom |
Wednesday
9:00-09:50 | Andrea Braides Limits of convolution functionals |
09:50-10:40 | Mark Peletier Continuum limit for annihilating dislocations in one dimension |
10:40-11:10 | Coffee break |
11:10-12:00 | Massimiliano Morini Existence and uniqueness of anisotropic and crystalline mean curvature flows |
12:10-14:00 | Lunch |
14:00-14:50 | Lisa Beck Lipschitz bounds and non-uniform ellipticity |
14:50-15:40 | Florian Theil Presence of order in atomistic models for solids |
15:40-16:10 | Coffee break |
16:10-17:00 | Antoine Gloria Effective properties of a fluid with suspensions |
19:00 | Social dinner at Ratskeller |
Thursday
9:00-09:50 | Giovanni Alberti Minimal planar N-partitions and N-clusters for large N |
09:50-10:40 | David Bourne Semi-discrete optimal transport and applications |
10:40-11:10 | Coffee break |
11:10-12:00 | Sergio Conti Dislocation microstructures and strain-gradient plasticity with a single active slip plane |
12:10-14:00 | Lunch |
Venue
The workshop takes place in room SRZ 217 on the second floor of the seminar building located at
Orleansring 12
48149 Münster
Germany
Travel Information
The University of Münster is located in Münster, Germany. (An alternative spelling of Münster is Muenster - note that this is different from Munster, Germany!)
By plane:
The airport Münster-Osnabrück (FMO) is located 30 km from Münster. A bus service to Münster central station is available (45 min). The airport Düsseldorf (DUS) is further away, but offers far more international connections. The train ride to Münster central station is 90 minutes. Details about connecting busses and trains are available via bahn.de.
Public transport:
Münster is well connected by train. For details see bahn.de. Starting at central station, several bus lines lead to the department. Best choices are probably bus routes 5, 11, 12, 22 direction Gievenbeck or Nienberge. Get off at bus stop Coesfelder Kreuz after about 15 minutes. To get to the department, go right and cross the street with traffic lights. There is a flat building right after the corner which is connected to a 9-story-building, the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science. Behind these buildings, there are two modern buildings with an aluminium-colored corrugated sheet facade. The workshop takes place in the modern building on the left.
By car:
Use your favourite routing service. There are parking lots next to the buildings at Orleansring 10-12, 48149 Münster, Germany. The buildings are new, and so is their address. Google Maps has them correctly listed.
Sponsor
The workshop is supported by the Cluster of Excellence "Mathematics Münster: Dynamics - Geometry - Structure".