Tuesday, September 26 |
07:30 - 09:00 |
Breakfast (Restaurant at your assigned hotel) |
09:00 - 09:45 |
Fehmi Cirak: Immersed B-Spline Finite Elements ↓ Advances in manufacturing, most prominently in additive manufacturing or 3d printing, are enabling the production of high-performance products with ever increasing functional and geometric complexity. Typically, the geometry features that can be designed reach from the product-scale in the order of tens of centimetres down to submillimetre scale. Novel interactive computational tools are indispensable to representing and exploring the corresponding vast design space. Against this backdrop, for the last several years we have been developing robust and scalable immersed/embedded boundary finite elements, which have clear advantages when applied to highly optimised geometrically complex parts. In contrast to conventional finite elements there is no need to generate and painstakingly maintain a boundary-fitted mesh. It is sufficient to have a non-boundary-fitted hexahedral voxel grid that is combined with auxiliary techniques for enforcing boundary conditions. Moreover, the voxel grid makes it possible to employ a host of multiresolution surface and volume representation techniques already available in computer graphics and computer-aided design. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
09:45 - 10:30 |
Pierre Alliez: The CGAL C++ library: survey and review of recent advances for geometric modeling. ↓ I will first give a short presentation of the objectives and scope of the CGAL open source project. I will the recently added algorithms that are relevant for geometric modeling and simulation: point set processing, polygon mesh processing and mesh generation.
For each software component I will discuss the underlying design principles, show a live demo and explain how users can adapt and extend it to their specific needs. Finally, I will briefly review the existing projects for extending the mesh generation toolbox of CGAL. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
11:00 - 12:00 |
Florian Martin: WEB-Collocation for Singular and Time-Dependent Problems ↓ The collocation method with weighted extended B-splines (WEB-splines) represents a recently published approach for the spline approximation of the solution of
stationary partial differential equations. In contrast to standard finite element methods, WEB-collocation requires no mesh generation and numerical integration, which
leads to considerably faster computation times and an easier implementation.
In this talk, the basics of WEB-collocation for general boundary value problems with mixed boundary conditions are described and the advantages over finite element methods are illustrated for Poisson's equation as typical model problem. On this basis, current research results from the application to singular and time-dependent problems are presented. The utilization of uniform spline spaces permits a straightforward generalization of the basic concept to hierarchical bases and the development of intuitive refinement strategies. The benefits of these adaptive WEB-collocation algorithms are shown in case of the model problem with a singular solution. Furthermore, considering the problem of simulating a tsunami, the combination of the WEB-collocation concept and a time-step iteration is presented to demonstrate a novel approximation scheme for time-dependent equations. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:00 - 12:40 |
Mahsa Mirzargar: Smoothness-Increasing Accuracy-Conserving (SIAC) Filtering and Its Application ↓ Since the introduction of Smoothness-Increasing Accuracy-Conserving (SIAC) Filtering for DG approximation of univariate hyperbolic equations by Cockburn et al., many generalizations of SIAC filtering have been proposed. Recently, new advancements in connecting the spline theory and SIAC filtering have paved the way for a more geometric view of this filtering technique. Based on which, various generalizations of the SIAC kernel have been proposed to make the filtering viable for more realistic applications. Examples include the introduction of SIAC line integral with applications for streamlining and flow visualization, hexagonal SIAC using nonseparable splines, and position dependent SIAC with nonuniform knot sequences. In this talk, I will introduce the basic concept of the SIAC filtering, its connection with well-established concepts from approximation theory, and discuss the recent advances in SIAC filtering. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
12:45 - 13:15 |
Jose Luis Licon Salaiz: Computational topology for pattern analysis in turbulent flow ↓ Use of computational topology for pattern analysis in turbulent flows
Atmospheric science presents us with the problem of complex turbulent flows.
We will present some techniques from computational topology which can be
used in quantifying this spatio-temporal complexity, and for detecting
minimal flow structures in direct numerical simulations. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
13:20 - 13:30 |
Group Photo (Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
13:30 - 15:00 |
Lunch (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |
15:00 - 16:00 |
Greet & Tell 2 (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Coffee Break (Conference Room San Felipe) |
16:55 - 17:45 |
Hugo Talbot: SOFA, an open-source framework for physics simulation : a tool for research, collaboration and innovation ↓ OFA is an open-source framework for multi-physics simulation. SOFA aims at interactive and real-time applications, with an emphasis on medical simulation. SOFA benefits today from large, active and international community, including international universities, startups and companies. For more flexibility, SOFA is made up of a stable open-source core and many optional plugins (>100 plugins), providing innovative numerical methods and state-of-the-art algorithms. The SOFA core has a LGPL license (permissive and non-contaminating) fostering development of prototypes and products under any commercial license. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
17:45 - 18:05 |
Jorg Peters: Blender2SOFA software ↓ Blender2SOFA is a software bridge that semi-automates the scene-generation cycle, a key bottleneck in authoring, modeling and developing VR units for surgery simulation. (Conference Room San Felipe) |
19:00 - 21:00 |
Dinner (Restaurant Hotel Hacienda Los Laureles) |