Speaker: Oleksandr Misiats, Virginia Commonwealth University
Title:
Patterns around us: a calculus of variations prospective
Abstract:
Crumples in a sheet of paper, wrinkles on curtains, cracks in metallic alloys, and defects in superconductors
are examples of patterns in materials. A thorough understanding of
the underlying phenomenon behind the
pattern formation provides a different prospective on the properties
of the existing materials and contributes
to the development of new ones. In my talk I will address the issue of
modelling pattern
formation via nonconvex energy minimization problems, regularized by higher order
terms. Two particular examples of such models will be described in
greater details:
formation of vortices in Ginzburg-Landau model of superconductors,
as well as emergence of patterns in phase transitions in shape-memory
alloys.
I will discuss the issue of well-posedness of such modelling,
which reduces to the question of the existence of minimizers in
certain functional classes. I will also provide some examples qualitative properties of minimizers via sharp energy bounds.
Time: Friday, February 28, 2020, 1:30-2:30pm
Place: Exploratory Hall, Room 4106
Department of Mathematical Sciences
George Mason University
4400 University Drive, MS 3F2
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
http://math.gmu.edu/
Tel. 703-993-1460, Fax. 703-993-1491