Visiting Scholars Seminar Series

Please join us on April 19, from noon to 2pm in Donovan Hall Room G152 to hear Dr. Holger Heumann speak on " Lagrangian and Eulerian Methods for Generalized Advection-Diffusion". Dr. Heumann will lecture by invitation of Dr. Andrea Dziubek and Dr. Edmond Rusjan. Light refreshments will be served.
"We study stationary and transient advection diffusion equations
for
differential forms and their Lagrangian and Eulerian
discretization by
means of discrete differential forms. The discretizations with
discrete differential forms provide models both for the
classical scalar
advection diffusion equation, as well as for the transport of
magnetic
fields in moving conducting fluids (magnetohydrodynamics). The
challenge
is robustness and optimal a priori error estimates in the case
of
vanishing diffusion. Exterior calculus involving the Lie
derivative will
be harnessed to achieve streamlined formulations and sharper a
priori
convergence estimates."
About the Speaker
"Holger Heumann received his PhD in Mathematics from Swiss
Federal
Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETH) in 2011, where he
developed and implemented efficient multi-grid methods or stable
mixed
finite element methods for magnetohydrodynamics. For this he
used
exterior calculus of differential forms, a coordinate-free
approach to
multivariable calculus invented by E. Cartan a century ago,
which offers
a unified approach to integration over curves, surfaces and
higher
dimensional manifolds, and has recently received much attention
in the
construction of structure preserving numerical methods.
At the LRC Fusion in Nice (France) he contributed to the
development of
software for plasma and nuclear fusion simulations. Currently he
is a
visiting professor at Rutgers University (NJ).
Dr. Heumann works with experts (Ralf Hiptmair, Jacques Blum, Michael Vogelius), he was an Oberwolfach Leibniz graduate student, and was awarded a fellowship by the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He was also the lead developer of LehrFEM, a Matlab finite element library for teaching numerical mathematics."