Thursday, August 2 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant at your assigned hotel) |
09:00 - 09:40 |
Yoichiro Mori: Analysis of the Dynamics of Immersed Elastic Filaments in Stokes Flow ↓ Problems in which immersed elastic structures interact with the surrounding fluid abound in science and engineering. Despite their scientific importance, analysis and numerical analysis of such problems are scarce or non-existent. In this talk, we consider the problem of an elastic filament immersed in a 2D or 3D Stokes fluid. We first discuss our recent results on the analysis of the immersed filament problem in a 2D Stokes fluid (the Peskin problem). We prove well-posedness and immediate regularization of the elastic filament configuration, and discuss the implication of these results for numerical analysis. We will then discuss the immersed filament problem in a 3D Stokes fluid (the Slender Body problem). Here, it has not even been clear what the appropriate mathematical formulation of the problem should be. We propose a mathematical formulation for the Slender Body problem and discuss well-posedness for the stationary version of this problem. Furthermore, we prove that the Slender Body approximation, introduced by Keller and Rubinow in the 1980's and used widely in the fluid-structure interaction community, provides an approximation to the Slender Body problem with some error bound. This is joint work with Analise Rodenberg, Laurel Ohm and Dan Spirn. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
09:40 - 10:20 |
Alexandre Madureira: Localized Spectral Decomposition (LSD): a robust and efficient finite element method for solving elliptic PDEs ↓ The Localized Spectral Decomposition finite element method is based on a hybrid formulation of elliptic partial differential equations, that is then transformed via several space decompositions. Such decompositions make the fomulation embarrassingly parallel and efficient, in particular in the presence of multiscale coefficients. It differs from most of the methods out there since it requires solution's minimum regularity. Also, it is robust with respect to high contrast coefficients. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:20 - 10:50 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:50 - 11:30 |
Jean-Luc Guermond: An conservative anti-diffusion technique for the level set method ↓ A novel conservative level set method is introduced. The method
builds on recent conservative level set approaches and utilizes an
entropy production to construct a balanced artificial diffusion and
artificial anti-diffusion. The method is self-tuning,
maximum principle preserving, suitable for unstructured meshes, and
neither re-initialization of the level set function or reconstruction
of the interface is needed for long-time simulation.
Computational results in one, two and three dimensions are
presented for finite element and finite volume implementations of the
method. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:30 - 12:10 |
Gerardo Hernández Dueñas: Water vapour and rain dynamics in precipitating turbulent convection ↓ Simulations of precipitating convection are usually carried out with cloud resolving models, which typically represent all the different phases of water: water vapor, cloud water, rain water and ice. Here we investigate the question: what is the minimal possible representation of water processes that is sufficient for these models? The simplified models that we present use a Boussinesq approximation, assume fast auto conversion and neglect ice. To test the simplified models, we present simulations of squall lines and scattered convection and show that they qualitatively capture observations made in nature and also seen in more comprehensive cloud resolving models, such as propagation of squall lines with tilted profiles, cold pools, and scattered convection. This is joint work with Andrew J. Majda, Samuel N. Stechmann and Leslie M. Smith. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:10 - 14:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
14:00 - 14:40 |
Andre Massing: CUTFEM: Discretizing Geometry and Partial Differential Equations ↓ Many advanced engineering problems require the numerical solution of multidomain,
multidimension, multiphysics and multimaterial problems with interfaces. When the interface
geometry is highly complex or evolving in time, the generation of conforming meshes may
become prohibitively expensive, thereby severely limiting the scope of conventional
discretization methods.
For instance, the simulation of blood flow dynamics in vessel geometries requires a series of
highly non-trivial steps to generate a high quality, full 3D finite element mesh from
biomedical image data. Similar challenging and computationally costly preprocessing steps
are required to transform geological image data into conforming domain discretizations which
respect complex structures such as faults and large scale networks of fractures. Even if an
initial mesh is provided, the geometry of the model domain might change substantially in the
course of the simulation, as in, e.g., fluid-structure interaction and free surface flow problems,
rendering even recent algorithms for moving meshes infeasible. Similar challenges arise in
more elaborated optimization problems, e.g. when the shape of the problem domain is subject
to the optimization process and the optimization procedure must solve a series of forward
problems for different geometric configuration.
In this talk, we focus on recent finite element methods on cut meshes (CutFEM) as one
possible remedy. CutFEM technologies allow flexible representations of complex or rapidly
changing geometries by decomposing the computational domain into several, possibly
overlapping domains. Alternatively, complex geometries only described by some surface
representation can easily be embedded into a structured background mesh. In the first part of
this talk, we briefly review how finite element schemes on cut and composite meshes can be
designed by using Nitsche-type imposition of interface and boundary conditions. To make the
formulations robust, optimally convergent and to avoid ill-conditioned linear algebra systems,
so-called ghost-penalties are added in the vicinity of the boundary and interface. In the
second part we demonstrate how CutFEM techniques can be employed to address various
challenges from mesh generation to fluid-structure interaction problems, solving PDE systems
on embedded manifolds of arbitrary co-dimension and PDE systems posed on and coupled
through domains of different topological dimensionality (Conference Room San Felipe) |
14:40 - 15:20 |
Jesse Chan: Energy-based methods for time-dependent acoustic and elastic wave propagation ↓ Weight-adjusted inner products are easily invertible approximations to weighted L2 inner products and mass matrices. These approximations make it possible to formulate very simple time-domain discontinuous Galerkin (DG) discretizations for wave propagation based on the the energy of the system. The resulting methods are low storage, energy stable, and high-order accurate for acoustic and elastic wave propagation in arbitrary heterogeneous media and curvilinear meshes. We conclude with numerical results confirming the stability and high-order accuracy of weight-adjusted DG for acoustic, elastic, and coupled acoustic-elastic waves. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
15:20 - 15:50 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
15:50 - 16:30 |
María Luisa Sandoval Solís: Numerical modeling of injection/extraction tracer tests in a single-well ↓ In tracer tests in oil reservoirs, a fluid (water) with a radioactive substance pulse is injected into the porous medium and it is monitoring until its arrival in neighboring extraction wells. From the observations of each extraction well, a tracer breakthrough curve is generated (time vs. tracer concentration). These curves are used to determine the existence of communication channels in underground formations and to characterize the porous medium properties, such as porosity, dispersivity, thickness of the production layer and residual oil saturation, among other applications. In this talk we will present the numerical modeling of the dynamics of the tracers, when the injection/extraction tests are performed in a single-well. We will show results for bipolar flow and a study for the injection phase in partially penetrating wells. Numerical simulations are generated by finite element with bilinear elements.
Bibliography
[1] J. Cosler: Effect of rate-limited Mass-Transfer on Water Sampling with Partially Penetrating Wells. Ground Water, 42(2) (2004), pp. 203--222 .
[2] J.-Sh Chen, Ch.-L. Wu and Ch.-W. Liu: Analysis of contaminant transport towards a partially penetrating extraction well in an anisotropic aquifer. Hydrological Processes, 44 (2010), pp. 2125--2136.
[3] J.S. Chen, C.W. Liu. Effect of transverse dispersion on solute transport in a vertical dipole flow test with a tracer. Journal of Hydrology, (2011), pp. 1--11.
[4] Coronado M., Sandoval M. L., Escobar-Alfaro G. S. Modeling fluid flow and tracer transport in partially penetrating injection wells. Corrections are submitted to Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering. March 5, 2018.
[5] Sandoval M. L., Coronado M., Grande-Sánchez S. Dynamics of vertical dipole tracer tests in a sandy-clay reservoir. Paper in preparation. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:30 - 17:10 |
Michael Neilan: Exact smooth piecewise polynomial sequences on Alfeld splits ↓ We develop exact polynomial sequences
on Alfeld splits in any spatial dimension
and for any polynomial degree.
An Alfeld split of a tetrahedron is obtained by
connecting the vertices of an n-simplex
with its barycenter. We show that, on these
triangulations, the kernel of the exterior derivative
has enhanced smoothness. Byproducts of this theory
include characterizations of discrete divergence-free subspaces
for the Stokes problem, commutative projections, and simple
formulas for the dimensions of smooth polynomial spaces. This is joint work with Guosheng Fu and Johnny Guzmán. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
18:30 - 20:30 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |