×
This is the old CSCAMM website made available for archival purposes. For the current CSCAMM website, please visit www.cscamm.umd.edu.

Research Activities > Programs > Incompressible Flows 2006

Analytical and Computational Challenges of
Incompressible Flows at High Reynolds Number

Oct 23 - Oct 26, 2006

CSIC Building (#406), Seminar Room 4122.
Directions: home.cscamm.umd.edu/directions


Quick Navigator
Organizing Committee Scientific Content Schedule Lectures
Funding Confirmed Participants Information for Participants
Contact Poster Photos

 

REGISTRATION REQUESTED

Due to space limitations, please register/RSVP at /programs/inc06/rsvp.htm

(Due to the large number of applications for the workshop on Incompressible Flows at High Reynolds Number (October 23-26), we regret that RSVP is now closed to new applicants.)

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Name

Affiliation

Email

Peter Constantin University of Chicago const@math.uchicago.edu
Thomas Hou California Institute of Technology hou@acm.caltech.edu
Jian-Guo Liu University of Maryland jliu@math.umd.edu
Eitan Tadmor University of Maryland tadmor@cscamm.umd.edu

SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND

High Reynolds number flow is a classical research theme that retains its vitality  at several levels, from real-world applications, through physical  and  computational modeling, up to rigorous mathematical analysis. There are two reasons for the continued relevance of this topic. The first is the ubiquity  of such flows in situations of practical interest, such as blood flow in  large caliber vessels, fluid-structure interaction, aerodynamics, geophysical and astrophysical flow modeling. The second issue is that, despite of half a  century of vigorous efforts, there is still a lack of systematic understanding  how different scales interact to form the inertial range from a smooth initial condition. The description of the behavior of solutions of the Navier-Stokes equations at high Reynolds number is at the heart of the problem, and surprisingly, mathematical analysis seems to be a promising route for gaining insight. Is singularity formation of incompressible flows at high Reynolds number necessary for the formation of the inertial range in a turbulent flow? or is the dynamical generation of extremely small but finite scales sufficient for this purpose? The choice of the singularity problem for the incompressible  Navier-Stokes equation as one of the seven Millennium prize problems highlights the fundamental role that mathematical analysis may yet play in this subject, while attesting to the quality of the mathematical challenge posed by problems in this area.

This is the second CSCAMM workshop on this topic, following our Spring 2004 meeting.


Back to Top

GOALS

  • to examine the ongoing research on the mathematical analysis of incompressible flows;
  • to identify promising avenues of research;
  • to formulate a number of problems that are at once tractable and have potential to provide further insight into the nature of high Reynolds number flows.


Back to Top


SCIENTIFIC CONTENT

This field has seen substantial progress in several independent directions. Let us cite a few prominent examples: the understanding of the interplay between the local geometric properties of the vorticity field and vortex stretching, the use of the Kato method applied to the Navier-Stokes equations in identifying critical spaces for well-posedness, the solution of the water wave problem and related research on interfacial dynamics, the mathematical understanding of the problem of boundary layers. A wide variety of methods have been employed, from classical functional analysis and operator theory to modern harmonic analysis and geometric measure theory.

Several interesting problems remain open. Beyond the singularity problem we highlight the uniqueness of weak solutions with p-th power integrable  vorticity, existence of weak solutions with vortex sheet initial data for  the two dimensional ideal flow equations and the convergence of the  vanishing viscosity approximation in the presence of boundaries. This workshop is intended as a forum where the recent progress is examined from the point of view of understanding the large time behavior of the incompressible  flows at high Reynolds number. The participants will include a representative sample of researchers active in the field of mathematical analysis of incompressible flows, together with a few specialists in fluid dynamics.


Back to Top

SCHEDULE

Click here for Schedule

FUNDING

A limited amount of funding for participants at all levels is available, especially for researchers in the early stages of their career who want to attend the full program.


Back to Top

CONFIRMED PARTICIPANTS

 

Name

Affiliation

Claude Bardos University of Paris VII
Hakima Bessaih University of Wyoming
Animikh Biswas University of North Carolina at Charlotte
David Bourne University of Maryland
Luis Caffarelli University of Texas at Austin
Russel Caflisch University of California, Los Angeles
Dongho Chae Sungkyunkwan University
Peter Constantin University of Chicago
Diego Cordoba Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC)
James Duncan University of Maryland
William Dorland University of Maryland
Karthikeyan Duraisamy University of Maryland
Gregory Eyink Johns Hopkins University
Charles Fefferman Princeton University
Mark Freidlin University of Maryland
Francisco Gancedo Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC)
John Gibbon Imperial College London
Nail Gumerov University of Maryland
Karl Gustafson University of Colorado
Thomas Hou California Institute of Technology
Ning Jiang New York University
Ning Ju Oklahoma State University
Robert M. Kerr University of Warwick
Alex Kiselev University of Wisconsin
Dan Lathrop University of Maryland
Ruo Li Peking University
Fang-Hua Lin New York University
Jian-Guo Liu University of Maryland
Dionisios Margetis University of Maryland
Charles Meneveau Johns Hopkins University
Helena Nussenzveig Lopes Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP)
Hisashi Okamoto Kyoto University
Gregory Seregin Steklov Institute of Mathematics
Thomas Sideris University of California Santa Barbara
Mike Siegel New Jersey Institute of Technology
Panagiotis Stinis Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Eitan Tadmor University of Maryland
Edriss Titi University of California Irvine and Weizamnn Institute of Science
Xiaoming Wang Florida State University
Xinwei Yu University of California, Los Angeles
Norman Zabusky Rutgers University and Weizmann Institute of Science
Weigang Zhong University of Maryland

 

Back to Top

INFORMATION FOR PARTICIPANTS

CSCAMM Visitor Guide: home.cscamm.umd.edu/visitors


CONTACT

Center for Scientific Computation And Mathematical Modeling (CSCAMM)
Computer Science Instructional Center (Building #406)
University of Maryland, College Park
College Park, MD 20742-3289

Email: inc06@cscamm.umd.edu

Web: /programs/inc06


POSTER

Click here for Poster [PDF]


PHOTOS

Click Here for Photos

Back to Top


University of Maryland    

UM Home | Directories | Calendar
Maintained by CSCAMM
Direct questions and comments to webmaster@cscamm.umd.edu

CSCAMM is part of the
College of Computer, Mathematical & Natural Sciences (CMNS)