Wave propagation in complex domains
University College London
Thursday 30 March 2017
Summary:
A one-day workshop on the mathematical analysis and numerical simulation of wave propagation problems in complex
domains, with a special focus on scattering problems involving non-Lipschitz scatterers, including fractals.
Organisers:
(University College
London) - d.hewett@ucl.ac.uk
(University of Reading)
(University of Reading)
Participants:
(Cambridge/INI)
(Manchester)
(Ecole Polytechnique)
(UCL)
(Nottingham)
(EPFL)
(UCL)
James
Cann (UCL)
(Reading)
(Salford)
(Imperial)
(UPMC)
(Rennes)
(Imperial)
(Rennes)
(Reading)
(Reading)
(Durham)
(ETH)
(UCL)
(ETH)
(KU Leuven)
(UCL)
(UCL)
(FZ Jülich)
(Reading)
(Reading)
(Reading)
Mihai Nechita
(UCL)
(Oxford)
(Ecole Polytechnique)
(Bath)
(UCL)
(Manitoba)
(UCL)
(Bath)
(Durham)
(ETH)
(Cambridge)
(Reading)
Booklet:
The workshop booklet here includes
the programme, talk titles and abstracts, and a map showing the location of the
department, hotels and restaurant.
Programme:
1000-1100 | Registration, tea/coffee | |
1100-1105 | David Hewett (UCL) | Welcome and introduction |
1105-1130 | David Hewett (UCL) | Scattering by fractal screens - abstract slides |
1130-1200 | Andrea Moiola (Reading) | Sobolev spaces on non-Lipschitz domains - abstract slides |
1200-1230 | Mikaël Slevinsky (Manitoba) | A numerical method for the solution of wave scattering by fractal screens - abstract |
1230-1300 | Timo Betcke (UCL) | A computational framework for Calderon projectors for Maxwell problems - abstract |
1300-1345 | Lunch | |
1345-1415 | Ralf Hiptmair (ETH) | Boundary integral equations on complex screens - abstract slides |
1415-1445 | Xavier Claeys (UPMC) | Second kind boundary integral equation for multi-subdomain diffusion problems - abstract slides |
1445-1515 | Annalisa Buffa (EPFL) | Electromagnetic scattering with splines - abstract |
1515-1545 | Tea/coffee | |
1545-1615 | Euan Spence (Bath) | Acoustic transmission problems: wavenumber-explicit bounds and resonance-free regions - abstract slides |
1615-1645 | James Christian (Salford) | On Fresnel optics problems with fractal boundaries: apertures, screens, and unstable resonators - abstract slides |
1645-1715 | Chris Westbrook (Reading) | Microwave scattering by atmospheric ice particles - abstract slides |
1715-1800 | Drinks reception | |
1800-1900 | Free time for networking and hotel check-in | |
1900 | Dinner |
Location:
The workshop will take
place in the Department of Mathematics at University College London on 25
Gordon Street (UCL Union Building), London WC1H 0AY.
Extended summary:
Acoustic and electromagnetic wave scattering has applications in
numerous areas of science and engineering, such as noise control, mobile communications,
medical and geophysical imaging, and climate science. A typical scattering
problem involves an incident wave striking a scattering obstacle, generating a
scattered field satisfying an appropriate partial differential equation (e.g.
the time-dependent wave equation, the Helmholtz equation, or Maxwell's
equations) along with suitable boundary conditions. The study of such problems
continues to stimulate research in a number of areas of mathematics including
PDE theory, integral equations, and functional and numerical analysis.
The classical case where the scatterer is smooth (e.g. the boundary of a Lipschitz open set) is now well understood, at least in terms of the PDE, integral equation and functional analytic theory. However, many scattering problems encountered in applications involve complex, non-smooth scatterers for which the existing theory is not valid, due to the emergence of new singularity structure and the breakdown in solution regularity. There have been a number of recent efforts to extend the theory to problems involving non-Lipschitz scatterers, such as screens (i.e. manifolds with boundaries), "multi-screens" (unions of screens intersecting nontrivially), and transmission problems involving piecewise-homogeneous media. But many more exotic problems remain unanalysed mathematically, for example the performance of "fractal antennas", used for wideband transmission in mobile communications, and the scattering of light by fractal snow/ice crystals, which is important for calculating the Earth's radiation balance in climate science.
The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers and research students with relevant interests and expertise to spend a day focusing on the challenges of wave scattering in complex domains, sharing new mathematical ideas, strengthening existing collaborations and identifying possible new ones.
Funding:
This workshop is supported by EPSRC grant EP/P511262/1.