General Information
The international research training group (IGDK 1754)
“Optimization and Numerical Analysis for Partial Differential Equations with Nonsmooth Structures” is funded by German Research Foundation (
DFG) and Austrian Science Fund (
FWF). It started on March 1, 2012.
This is a joint project of the following four universities:
Many application problems coming from physics, chemistry, biology, or engineering sciences are
described by mathematical models involving Partial Differential Equations (PDEs). Often such
problems involve different kinds of nonsmooth structures (singularities, interfaces, inequality
constraints, etc.). The mathematical treatment of the corresponding PDE-based models is crucial for
the efficient solution of practical problems. There is a significant demand for highly qualified
junior scientists with postgraduate education and experience in this area, in academia as well as in
industry and commerce. The international research training group (IGDK)
“Optimization and Numerical Analysis for Partial Differential Equations with Nonsmooth Structures”
intends to meet this demand.
The major goals of the proposed international research training group are:
- transfer of cutting-edge research topics to the education of doctoral students;
- development and investigation of novel methods in numerical treatment and optimization for problems involving PDEs and possessing nonsmooth structures.
The involved institutions in Munich and Graz contribute to the joint research program through their
internationally visible scientific strengths in applied mathematics: the Technische Universität
München has long range experience in the analytical and numerical treatment of nonlinear
phenomena, whereas the institutes in Graz contribute their expertise in optimization, variational
calculus, and numerical analysis.
The combination of these expertises will result in high synergy effects which shall be highlighted
and exploited by this international research training group. Methodological approaches ranging from
adaptivity and nonsmooth optimization to the treatment of interfaces and shapes will enter in the
research and study program of the international research training group.
Our concept for a successful education of doctoral students will be based upon bilateral
supervision, mentoring, and performance control. Simultaneously we shall encourage the doctoral
students to early scientific independence. The study program consisting of lectures, compact
courses, and summer schools will provide the knowledge of state-of-the art methods for numerical
analysis and optimization of problems governed by PDEs.
All doctoral students in the IGDK1754 at the TUM are members of the
International School of Applied Mathematics (ISAM) within its umbrella organization
TUM Graduate School (TUM GS).