Feb 11 Colloquium 1 p.m., Feb. 11, 2022 <p><span><span><span><strong>Differentiable Physics Simulations for Deep Learning</strong><br /> Nils Thuerey, Department of Informatics, Technical University of Munich</span></span></span></p>
Apr 08 Colloquium 2 p.m., April 8, 2022 <p><span><strong>New DG methods for electromagnetism</strong></span><br /> <span>Bernardo Cockburn, Department of Mathematics, University of Minnesota</span></p>
Feb 25 Colloquium 2 p.m., Feb. 25, 2022 <p><strong><span><span><span>First-Passage Resetting and its Application to Optimization and to Wealth Sharing</span></span></span></strong><br /> Sidney Redner, Santa Fe Institute, New Mexico</p>
Feb 18 Colloquium 2 p.m., Feb. 18, 2022 <p><strong><span><span><span><span>How to break Ohm’s law</span></span></span></span></strong><br /> Gregory Falkovich, Department of Physics, Weizmann Institute</p>
Feb 04 Colloquium 2 p.m., Feb. 4, 2022 <p><strong>Anomalous thermal relaxation in physical systems and the Mpemba effect</strong><br /> Marija Vucelja, Department of Physics, University of Virginia</p>
Jan 28 Colloquium 2 p.m., Jan. 28, 2022 <p><strong>Materials informatics of structural metals and alloys</strong><br /> Marat Latypov, Materials Science & Engineering, University of Arizona</p>
Dec 03 Colloquium 2 p.m., Dec. 3, 2021 <p><strong><span>Understanding Neural Networks as Splines</span></strong><br /> Ankit Patel, Department of Neuroscience, Rice University</p>
Sep 28 Analysis, Dynamics and Applications Seminar 12:30 p.m., Sept. 28, 2021 <p><strong>On the Splitting Distances of Time Periodic Equations (II)</strong><br /> Don Wang, Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona</p>
Sep 24 Colloquium (as part of NREL day) 2 p.m., Sept. 24, 2021 <p><strong><span>Adversarial Super Resolution of Renewable Energy Resources in Future Climates</span></strong><br /> Ryan King, Complex Systems Simulation & Optimization, National Renewable Energy Laboratory</p>
Nov 19 Colloquium 2 p.m., Nov. 19, 2021 <p><strong>Energy Landscapes, Metastability, and Transition Paths</strong><br /> Katie Newall, Center for Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics, University North Carolina, Chapel Hill</p>