Random Perturbation Of Pdes And Fluid Dynamic Models


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Random Perturbation of PDEs and Fluid Dynamic Models


Random Perturbation of PDEs and Fluid Dynamic Models

Author: Franco Flandoli

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2011-03-02


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The book deals with the random perturbation of PDEs which lack well-posedness, mainly because of their non-uniqueness, in some cases because of blow-up. The aim is to show that noise may restore uniqueness or prevent blow-up. This is not a general or easy-to-apply rule, and the theory presented in the book is in fact a series of examples with a few unifying ideas. The role of additive and bilinear multiplicative noise is described and a variety of examples are included, from abstract parabolic evolution equations with non-Lipschitz nonlinearities to particular fluid dynamic models, like the dyadic model, linear transport equations and motion of point vortices.

Random Perturbation of PDEs and Fluid Dynamic Models


Random Perturbation of PDEs and Fluid Dynamic Models

Author: Franco Flandoli

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2011-03-11


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This volume explores the random perturbation of PDEs and fluid dynamic models. The text describes the role of additive and bilinear multiplicative noise, and includes examples of abstract parabolic evolution equations.

Mathematical Paradigms of Climate Science


Mathematical Paradigms of Climate Science

Author: Fabio Ancona

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2016-11-07


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This book, featuring a truly interdisciplinary approach, provides an overview of cutting-edge mathematical theories and techniques that promise to play a central role in climate science. It brings together some of the most interesting overview lectures given by the invited speakers at an important workshop held in Rome in 2013 as a part of MPE2013 (“Mathematics of Planet Earth 2013”). The aim of the workshop was to foster the interaction between climate scientists and mathematicians active in various fields linked to climate sciences, such as dynamical systems, partial differential equations, control theory, stochastic systems, and numerical analysis. Mathematics and statistics already play a central role in this area. Likewise, computer science must have a say in the efforts to simulate the Earth’s environment on the unprecedented scale of petabytes. In the context of such complexity, new mathematical tools are needed to organize and simplify the approach. The growing importance of data assimilation techniques for climate modeling is amply illustrated in this volume, which also identifies important future challenges.