Abstract
The GAMM student chapters from Hannover, Bochum and Hamburg are organising a pretty special event: a joint Science Slam in Hannover! The idea behind the event is to gather young researchers (PhD/ MSc) working in the areas of maths and mechanics for a more informal exchange of research ideas and experiences.
π 30 June 2023 π 11:45 AM π Leibniz University Hannover, Welfergarten 1, 30167 Hannover
Short Info
Least squares FEM is a special discretization technique with certain advantages and disadvantages. In this talk Prof. SchrΓΆder will cover those aspects with examples from fluid-structure interaction (FSI) problems. Stability and convergence properties as well as incorporation of the symmetry of the stress tensor will be discussed.
π 23 May 2023 π 11:00 AM π Seminar Room of the Chair of Continuum Mechanics
Short Info
Optimization and Machine Learning are closely intertwined fields. Machine learning is a rapidly growing field with excellent visibility due to many recent successes. Its underlying technology layer, optimization methods, does not enjoy the same public attention. Interestingly, in both fields, there exist nature-inspired methods: neural networks and evolutionary algorithms. In this talk, I will present current research going on in both fields within the research group Optimization of Adaptive Systems at the Institute for Neural Computation. Topics span a wide range from applied mathematical research all the way to real-world applications.
π 24 March 2023 π 02:00 PM π Seminar Room of the Chair of Continuum Mechanics
Short Info
In this talk I will review major convexity notions in nonlinear elasticity and its connection to various domains of applications. Topics include occurrence of microstructures, Morreyβs Problem, Quasiconvex relaxation but also generalized continuum models and plate and shells.
π 20 December 2022 π 02:00 PM π Seminar Room of the Chair of Continuum Mechanics
Short Info
Architected materials (or mechanical metamaterials) with well designed macroscale properties and performance based on a careful design of the microscale architecture have gained popularity for applications ranging from wave guides and cloaks to patient-specific implants to mechanical logic and ultralow-weight structural materials. While the forward homogenization challenge (i.e., the computation of effective material properties for a given microscale architecture) is well established with numerous modeling techniques available, the inverse homogenization challenge (i.e., the identification of microscale architectures that yield specific target properties on the macroscale) is still an open challenge for many properties and metamaterial designs. We here discuss new strategies based on machine learning to tackle this inverse problem, which can be applied equally to periodic truss architectures and non-periodic spinodoid designs, for which we highlight opportunities and applications.
π 25 October 2022 π 01:00 PM π Zoom
Short Info
Prof. Philipp Junker will talk, who used to work here, at our very own RUB, though now he holds a professorship at the Leibniz UniversitΓ€t in Hannover. His talk carries the very catchy title An extended Hamilton principle as unifying theory for coupled problems and dissipative microstructure evolution. Prof. Junker is going to cover aspects about extended hamiltion principle for deriving the evolution laws of material models.
π 15 March 2022 π 05:00 PM π Zoom
Short Info
Automatic Differentation is a powerful technique that solves a variety of problems of symbolic and numerical differentiation. In our day to day scientific work automatic differentiation can be helpful by providing exact derivatives of generic functions with minimal implementational cost.
π 11 January 2022 π 04:00 PM π Zoom