Synopses & Reviews
This volume contains the proceedings of an international symposium on applied and computational mathematics held in Munich in July 1999 and organized by the Collaborative Research Centre "Mathematical Modelling, Simulation, and Verification in Material-Orientated Processes and Intelligent Systems" (SFB 438) on the occasion of Karl-Heinz Hoffmann's 60th birthday.The 19 contributions from both members of the SFB and invited experts in mathematical modelling and numerical simulation cover various topics from scientific computing, ranging from numerical linear algebra to fields of applications such as turbulent flows, free boundaries, phase transitions, shape memory alloys, and others.
Synopsis
When the DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) launched its collabora- tive research centre or SFB (Sonderforschungsbereich) 438 "Mathematical Modelling, Simulation, and Verification in Material-Oriented Processes and Intelligent Systems" in July 1997 at the Technische Vniversitat Munchen and at the Vniversitat Augsburg, southern Bavaria got its second nucleus of the still young discipline scientific computing. Whereas the first and older one, FORTWIHR, the Bavarian Consortium for High Performance Scientific Com- puting, had put its main emphasis on the supercomputing aspect, this new initiative was now expected to focus on the mathematical part. Consequently, throughout all of the five main research topics (A) adaptive materials and thin layers, (B) adaptive materials in medicine, (C) robotics, aeronautics, and automobile technology, (D) microstructured devices and systems, and (E) transport processes in flows, mathematical aspects play a predominant role. The formation of the SFB 438 and its scientific program are inextricably linked with the name of Karl-Heinz Hoffmann. As full professor for applied mathematics in Augsburg (1981-1991) and in Munchen (since 1992) and as dean of the faculty of mathematics at the TV Munchen, he was the driv- ing force of this fascinating, but not always easy-to-realize idea of bringing together scientists from mathematics, physics, engineering, informatics, and medicine for joint efforts in modern applied mathematics. However, scarcely work had begun when the successful captain was called to take command on a bigger boat.