11-15 July 2011
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
SCI
ENTIFIC COMPUTATION AND DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS

SciCADE 2011

hosted by the Fields Institute,
held at the University of Toronto




New Talent Award








Contact Us gensci(PUT_AT_SIGN_HERE)fields.utoronto.ca
MINISYMPOSIA

Jan Verwer Memorial Minisymposium, I

Organized by Christopher Budd

SPEAKERS  
Jason Frank, CMU & University of Amsterdam  

 

Martin Berzins, University of Utah

Rethinking Scientific Computing Software for Post-Petascale.
The raw compute power used in the largest machines inceases by a factor of a thousand every decade and translates into similar increases at local level. The likely evolution of computer architectures poses considerable challanges for scientific computing software, both in the scale of parallelism and its heterogenous nature. In this talk we consider how adaptive mesh refinement algorithms and software has has to evolve to run of some of the largest machines available today and how the software will continue to evolve to meet future challenges.

John Butcher, University of Auckland Sixty years of stiff solvers
The seminal paper of Curtiss and Hirschfelder was communicated to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 1951 and published in the following year. The use of the backward Euler method, which can be regarded as the first stiff solver, was advocated as a stable alternative to the forward Euler method. Techniques for obtaining stable, accurate and efficient solutions to stiff problems have become an important field of research in many institutions and laboratories throughout the world, not least being in the work of Jan Verwer and his colleagues at the CWI. This talk will not attempt to survey the enormous history of this subject but will give an account of some items from this history of interest to the author.
Jim Verner, Simon Fraser University A Retrospective on the Derivation of Explicit Runge-Kutta Pairs (slides of talk)
To improve the efficiency of estimating solutions to initial value problems in ordinary differential equations C. Runge and W. Kutta designed a recursive evaluation approach to obtaining estimates within a {\it step} that led to a high-order polynomial approximation (1895-1905). As Kutta had difficulty with obtaining correct coefficients of a method of order 5, a mathematical approach to tabulating and solving the polynomial order conditions evolved, primarily after 1957. Although Butcher's proposal of 'simplifying conditions' led to new families of methods, solution of the order conditions remained a challenge. The proposal to provide a pair of RK approximations to control the step-by-step error increased this complexity. Yet, Butcher's "Algebraic Theory of Integration Methods" and new pairs up to orders 8,9 found by Fehlberg motivated new approaches, and derivation of better Runge-Kutta pairs. This talk will survey some of the strategies used since 1970 to find new formulas, and will suggest how these tools may be applied to finding algorithms of different structures or for different problems.