CoMFoS19

Mathematical Aspects of Continuum Mechanics

15-16 July 2019

Kanazawa, Japan

MACM International Conference

CoMFoS19: Mathematical Aspects of Continuum Mechanics

Date: 15-16 July 2019

Place: Seminar Room B, 3F, Shiinoki cultural complex , Kanazawa, Japan


Supported and organized by

- Research activity group in JSIAM : 'Mathematical Aspects of Continuum Mechanics (MACM)'

- JSPS KAKENHI

・Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) 17H02857

・Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) 18H01135

・Challenging Research (Exploratory) 17K18733

Co-organized by

- Mathematical Interdisciplinary Research Station (MIRS), Kanazawa University

Organizers

Masato Kimura (Kanazawa University)

Hirofumi Notsu (Kanazawa University)


Aim and Scope

This is a two-day international conference on mathematical aspects of continuum mechanics. It is the sequel of the conference series CoMFoS organized by Research activity group in JSIAM 'Mathematical Aspects of Continuum Mechanics' (`MACM'). Presentations will focus on mathematical theory and numerical simulations related to topics including but not limited to elasticity, plasticity, fracture mechanics, rheology, acoustics/optics, inverse problems, and optimal shape design. These topics have become more important in applications, and a deeper understanding of their mathematical properties is required for further advances. We especially invite distinguished mathematicians, physicists, and engineers from academia and industry.


Expected Outcomes

Each lecture will be followed by discussion time with the objective of (i) determining new mathematical research directions in continuum mechanics that fulfill contemporary engineering and industrial needs and (ii) discovering new pathways for exploiting recently developed mathematical methods in engineering and industry.


History of CoMFoS and MACM

"CoMFoS" was initiated in 1995 under the auspices of the activity group 'Continuum Mechanics Focusing on Singularities' (`CoMFoS') of the Japan Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (JSIAM). From April 2010, the activity group CoMFoS was renamed 'Mathematical Aspects of Continuum Mechanics' (MACM). This is the 19th conference of CoMFoS and will be held at Kanazawa, Japan.

Links

CoMFoS15, CoMFoS16, CoMFoS17, CoMFoS18

Key Words

Continuum mechanics, Fracture mechanics, Mathematical modeling, Rheology, Industrial applications

Invited Speakers

Sayahdin Alfat (Halu Oleo University, Indonesia) An extension of thermal cracking problem using phase field approach

Maciej Buze (University of Warwick, UK) Investigating the extent of nonlinear and discrete effects in the near-crack-tip zone

Shiro Hirano (Ritsumeikan University, Japan) Energy dissipation during dynamic antiplane self-similar crack growth

Hirotada Honda (Toyo University, Japan) Mathematical analysis of molecular communication network

Afifah Maya Iknaningrum (Kanazawa University, Japan)

Niklas Kolbe (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany) Modeling solid tumor growth in tissue

Alifian Mahardhika (Kanazawa University, Japan) Variational approach to crack path selection problems

Kazunori Matsui (Kanazawa University, Japan) A pressure Poisson equation with some boundary conditions for viscous incompressible flow

Débora de Oliveira Medeiros (University of São Paulo, Brasil) Impact of viscoelastic droplets: numerical solutions

Naoshi Nishimura (Kyoto University, Japan) On the stability of time domain BIEMs for elasticity

Yunchang Seol (National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan) Immersed boundary method for modeling permeable interface and incompressible interface

Ryohei Seto (Osaka University, Japan) Emergence of rigidity in suspension fluid mechanics

Takeshi Takaishi (Musashino University, Japan) Crack growth model with Zener-type viscoelasticity

Tomohiro Taniguchi (AIST, Japan) Introduction to spintronics: Highly nonlinear dynamics in nanomagnet and its application

Takumi Washio (UT-Heart Inc., Japan) Analysis of cooperative behavior of molecular motors in three dimensional biological structures using continuum mechanical molecular models with fluctuations

Alexandr Žák (Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic) Free boundary problems in continuum mechanics

Schedule

15 July 2019, 13:30 -- 18:30 (19:00~ party)

16 July 2019, 9:30 -- 15:00

Contact address

Masato Kimura mkimura (at) se.kanazawa-u.ac.jp

Program (PDF)

15 July (Mon)

13:30— Opening Address

13:30—14:00 Takeshi Takaishi (Musashino University, Japan) Crack growth model with Zener-type viscoelasticity

14:00—14:30 Sayahdin Alfat (Halu Oleo University, Indonesia) An extension of thermal cracking problem using phase field approach

14:30—14:50 Alifian Mahardhika (Kanazawa University, Japan) Variational approach to crack path selection problems

14:50—15:10 Break

15:10—15:40 Maciej Buze (University of Warwick, United Kingdom) Investigating the extent of nonlinear and discrete effects in the near-crack-tip zone

15:40—16:10 Shiro Hirano (Ritsumeikan University, Japan) Energy dissipation during dynamic antiplane self-similar crack growth

16:10—16:40 Naoshi Nishimura (Kyoto University, Japan) On the stability of time domain BIEMs for elasticity

16:40—17:00

Break 17:00—17:30

Hirotada Honda (Toyo University, Japan) Mathematical analysis of molecular communication network

17:30—18:00

Tomohiro Taniguchi (AIST, Japan) Introduction to spintronics: Highly nonlinear dynamics in nanomagnet and its application

18:00—18:30 Discussion Time

19:00—21:00 Party

16 July (Tue)

9:30—10:00 Takumi Washio (UT-Heart Inc., Japan) Analysis of cooperative behavior of molecular motors in three dimensional biological structures using continuum mechanical molecular models with fluctuations

10:00—10:30 Niklas Kolbe (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany) Modeling solid tumor growth in tissue

10:30—10:50 Afifah Maya Iknaningrum (Kanazawa University, Japan) Numerical study of swirling Navier-Stokes flows in straight and curved cylindrical domains

10:50—11:10 Break

11:10—11:40 Débora de Oliveira Medeiros (University of São Paulo, Brasil) Impact of viscoelastic droplets: numerical solutions

11:40—12:10 Kazunori Matsui (Kanazawa University, Japan) A pressure Poisson equation with some boundary conditions for viscous incompressible flow

12:10—13:30 Lunch

13:30—14:00 Ryohei Seto (Osaka University, Japan) Emergence of rigidity in suspension fluid mechanics

14:00—14:30 Yunchang Seol (National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan) Immersed boundary method for modeling permeable interface and incompressible interface

14:30—15:00 Alexandr Žák (Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic) Free boundary problems in continuum mechanics

15:00— Closing Address