NA Digest Monday, November 9, 2009 Volume 09 : Issue 45

Today's Editor:
Tamara G. Kolda
Sandia National Labs
tgkolda@sandia.gov

Submissions for NA Digest:

Mail to na.digest@na-net.ornl.gov

Information via email about NA-NET:

Mail to na.help@na-net.ornl.gov

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Sue Thorne <sue.thorne@stfc.ac.uk>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 09:14:01 -0500
Subject: Change of name and email address for Sue Dollar

Following my recent marriage, I have changed my name from Sue Dollar to
Sue Thorne. Consequently, I have a new email address: sue.thorne@stfc.ac.uk
My old email address (sue.dollar@stfc.ac.uk) will only continue to work until
9 December 2009.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Todd Plantenga <tplante@sandia.gov>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 14:57:59 -0500
Subject: New optimization software, HOPSPACK 2.0

Sandia National Laboratories announces the availability of HOPSPACK 2.0,
an official release of the Hybrid Optimization Parallel Search PACKage.
HOPSPACK provides an open source C++ framework for solving derivative-free
optimization problems. The framework enables parallel operation using MPI and
multithreading. Multiple algorithms can be hybridized to run simultaneously,
sharing a cache of computed objective and constraint function evaluations that
eliminates duplicate work. Functions are computed in parallel to be compatible
with both synchronous and asynchronous algorithms. HOPSPACK comes with a
Generating Set Search algorithm that handles linear and nonlinear constraints.
The software is easily extended and is designed for developers to add new
algorithms. HOPSPACK is a successor to Sandia's APPSPACK product.

HOPSPACK precompiled executables for Windows and Linux are now available at
http://csmr.ca.sandia.gov/hopspack

Please direct any questions to tplante@sandia.gov.

Thanks,
Todd Plantenga
Tamara Kolda
Sandia National Laboratories

-------------------------------------------------------

From: John Butcher <butcher@math.auckland.ac.nz>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 00:55:26 +1300
Subject: Distance seminars and lectures

Dear NA-net colleagues

I have developed a taste for giving distance seminars and lectures to people who
might be interested. Anyone who wants to explore this possibility is invited
to go to http://jcbutcher.com and follow the link to the Seminars and Lectures
page.

John Butcher

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Gaston Gonnet <gonnet@inf.ethz.ch>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 18:29:47 +0100
Subject: New book, Scientific Computation

I am glad to announce that our book on Scientific Computation
is finally available from Cambridge University Press.

This book closely follows our 3rd year course in scientific
computation at ETH, a course that comes after two semesters of
classical numerical computation. Its main characteristic is that
it uses a variety of real problems (abstracted a bit, but real
problems in the end) to illustrate various aspects of optimization,
modelling and simulation. The example problems are: computing
the location of an aircraft (very similar in nature to GPS),
optimal time for equipment replacement, prediction of alpha-helices
in proteins (done with least squares, neighbour trees and linear
programming), stock market simulation and phylogenetic tree
construction. Through these examples, previously learned and new
tools are examined and explained. We have found that students are
much more motivated to learn the algorithms and mathematics when
they can relate it directly to real problems. Finally, an associated
web server can guide students over several interactive exercises
suitable for sections of the book.

The Cambridge page is:
http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521849890

Scientific Computation, Gaston Gonnet and Ralf Scholl, ISBN 9780521849890

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Ed Saff <edward.b.saff@vanderbilt.edu>
Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 06:50:16 -0600
Subject: Optimal Configurations Conference, Vanderbilt Univ, USA, May 2010

OPTIMAL CONFIGURATIONS ON THE SPHERE AND OTHER MANIFOLDS
Department of Mathematics, Vanderbilt University, May 17-20, 2010
Registration: http://www.math.vanderbilt.edu/~optimal2010/

The aim of this conference is to bring together mathematicians
and scientists for the purpose of gaining a better understanding of
the structure of particle systems under a variety of physical
constraints. These include, for example, classical ground states for
interacting particle systems, best-packing, random packings, jammed
states, granular and colloidal systems, as well as minimal discrete and
continuous energy problems for general kernels.

*Plenary speakers include:*

*Christine Bachoc*, Université Bordeaux
*Mark Bowick*, Syracuse University
*Henry Cohn*, Microsoft Research
*Noam Elkies*, Harvard University (Shanks Lecturer)
*Charles Radin*, University of Texas
*Ian Sloan*, University of New South Wales
*Neil J. A. Sloane*, AT&T
*Salvatore Torquato*, Princeton University
*Steve Zelditch*, Johns Hopkins University and Northwestern University

-------------------------------------------------------

From: "Kreinovich, Vladik" <vladik@utep.edu>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 10:16:18 -0700
Subject: Computability and Complexity in Analysis (CCA 2010), China, Jun 2010

First Call for Papers
CCA 2010 Proceedings

Seventh International Conference on Computability and Complexity
in Analysis (CCA 2010) will take place in Zhenjiang, China,
June 21 - 25, 2010. (http://cca-net.de/cca2010)

Invited Speakers:
Klaus Ambos-Spies (Heidelberg, Germany)
Ding-Zhu Du (Dallas, USA)
Stefano Galatolo (Pisa, Italy)
Hajime Ishihara (Ishikawa, Japan)
Ker-I Ko (Beijing, China and Stony Brook, USA)
Robert Rettinger (Hagen, Germany)
Klaus Weihrauch (Hagen, Germany)

The CCA 2010 Program Committee cordially invites researchers in the area
of computability and complexity theory to submit papers for presentation
at the conference.

Dates:

Submission deadline: March 8, 2010
Notification of authors: April 12, 2010
Final version: May 10, 2010

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Ivan Slapnicar <Ivan.Slapnicar@fesb.hr>
Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:53:44 -0500
Subject: Accurate Solution of Eigenvalue Problems, Berlin, Jun/Jul 2010

IWASEP VIII -- First Announcement
Intl. Workshop on Accurate Solution of Eigenvalue Problems VIII (IWASEP VIII)
Berlin, June 28-July 1, 2010.
In cooperation with GAMM Activity Group Applied and Numerical Linear Algebra.

Abstract Deadline: April 1, 2010.
Registration Deadline: April 1, 2010.

The purpose of this workshop is to bring together experts on accuracy
issues in the numerical solution of eigenvalue problems for four days of
research presentations and discussions. This is the eight such workshop.
The most recent was held in Dubrovnik, Croatia, June 9-12, 2008.

Invited speakers:
Rafikul Alam, Indian Inst. of Technology Guwahati
Peter Benner, TU Chemnitz
Jim Demmel, Univ. of California at Berkeley
Louis Komzsik, Siemens PLM Software
Wen-Wei Lin, National Chiao Tung Univ. (TBC)
Julio Moro, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Beresford Parlett, Univ. of California at Berkeley
Valeria Simoncini, Universita di Bologna
Pete Stewart, Univ. of Maryland
Eugen Tyrtyshnikov, Russian Academy of Sciences
Nick Trefethen, Oxford Univ.
Marc Van Barel, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

In addition, the organizers welcome submitted presentations and
posters that are consistent with the theme of the meeting. A prize
will be given for the best poster.

For more information: http://www3.math.tu-berlin.de/iwasep8/

-------------------------------------------------------

From: "Dr. Liu" <isnn09@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 06:37:34 -0500
Subject: Symposium on Neural Networks, Shanghai, China, Jun 2010

CALL FOR PAPERS

7th International Symposium on Neural Networks (ISNN2010)
June 6-10, 2010; Shanghai, China

Websites: http://isnn2010.sjtu.edu.cn or http://isnn2010.mae.cuhk.edu.hk
Paper submissions: http://isnn2010.sjtu.edu.cn/login.asp

The Seventh International Symposium on Neural Networks (ISNN 2010) will be
held in Shanghai, following the successes of previous events.
ISNN 2010 aims to provide a high-level international forum for scientists,
engineers, and educators to present the state of the art of neural network
research and applications in related fields. The symposium will feature
plenary speeches given by world renowned scholars, regular sessions with broad
coverage, and special sessions focusing on popular topics.

Prospective authors are invited to contribute high-quality papers to ISNN
2010. In addition, proposals for special sessions within the technical scopes
of the symposium are solicited. Special sessions, to be organized by
internationally recognized experts, aim to bring together researchers in
special focused topics. Papers submitted for special sessions are to be
peer-reviewed with the same criteria used for the contributed papers.
Researchers interested in organizing special sessions are invited to submit
formal proposals to ISNN 2010. A special session proposal should include the
session title, a brief description of the scope and motivation, names, contact
information and brief biographical information on the organizers.

Authors are invited to submit full-length papers (10 pages maximum) by the
submission deadline through the online submission system. Potential
organizers are also invited to enlist five or more papers with cohesive topics
to form special sessions. The submission of a paper implies that the paper is
original and has not been submitted under review or copyright-protected
elsewhere and will be presented by an author if accepted. All submitted
papers will be refereed by experts in the field based on the criteria of
originality, significance, quality, and clarity. The authors of accepted
papers will have an opportunity to revise their papers and take consideration
of the referees' comments and suggestions. The ISNN 2010 proceedings will be
published by Springer in its series of Lecture Notes in Computer Science (EI)
and Advances in Intelligent and Soft Computing (ISTP). Selected good papers
will be included in special issues of several journals such as Neurocomputing,
Neural Computation and Applications, Cognitive Neurodynamics, Cognitive
Computation, and Mathematics and Computers in Simulation. In addition, the
International Neural Network Society (INNS) will offer two best student paper
awards (US$250 each with one-year INNS membership).

IMPORTANT DATES

Full paper submission deadline: December 1, 2009
Notification of acceptance: January 1, 2010
Camera-ready copy and author registration: February 1, 2010

For inquiries, please contact the secretariat at isnn2010@sjtu.edu.cn

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Nicole Erle <erle@siam.org>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 14:40:03 -0500
Subject: SIAM Conference on the Life Sciences, Pittsburgh, USA, Jul 2010

SIAM Conference on the Life Sciences Call for Papers Now Available!
Location:The David L. Lawrence Convention Center, Pittsburgh, PA
Dates:July 12-15, 2010

The Call for Papers for this conference is now available. Please visit
http://www.siam.org/meetings/ls10/ for more information.

Invited Plenary Speakers
Réka Albert, Pennsylvania State University
Alex L. Bangs, Entelos
Michael Bevers, USDA Forest Service
Daniela Calvetti, Case Western Reserve University
Arup Chakraborty, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Carson Chow*, National Institutes of Health
Raymond E. Goldstein, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Philip Holmes, Princeton University
Alex Mogilner, University of California, Davis

SUBMISSION DEADLINES
January 12, 2010: Minisymposium proposals
February 2, 2010: Abstracts for contributed and minisymposium speakers

TRAVEL FUND APPLICATION DEADLINE
December 12, 2009: SIAM Student Travel Award and Post-doc/Early Career
Travel Award Applications

Contact SIAM Conference Department at meetings@siam.org with any questions
about the conference.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: "Corliss, George" <george.corliss@marquette.edu>
Date: Sat, 7 Nov 2009 09:57:55 -0600
Subject: Seeking Dean of Engineering, Marquette University

Marquette University is recruiting applicants/nominees for the OPUS Dean of
the College of Engineering. Please find position description at
www.marquette.edu/opusdean

Also, in addition to the Chronicle of Higher Education (on-line and print),
the American Society for Engineering Education, and the AJCU, the ad/opening
is posted at AcademicKeys.com -- http://www.AcademicKeys.com/r?job=22319 --
where it will remain viewable online for 4 months.

If you are interested, or if you know anyone you think would be a good
candidate (not your old one you want to get rid of), follow the links above.
If there is any interest, I'd be happy to provide more information or to
talk informally.

Dr. George F. Corliss
Electrical & Computer Engineering
Haggerty Engineering #296
Marquette University
P.O. Box 1881
1515 W. Wisconsin Ave.
Milwaukee WI 53201-1881
George.Corliss@Marquette.edu
414-288-6599; -288-4400 (GasDay); -288-5579 (Fax)
Www.eng.mu.edu/corlissg

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Sue Shogren <LS-Shogren@wiu.edu>
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 08:53:21 -0500
Subject: Tenure-track position in Mathematical Sciences, Western Illinois Univ

ONE TENURE-TRACK POSITION, Assistant Professor, August 2010. 9-11 hours
teaching, research, service expected. QUALIFICATIONS: Ph.D. in mathematical
sciences area; demonstrated or potential for excellence in teaching; a
record of or potential for research; a record of or commitment to service.

SCREENING BEGINS December 1, 2009; continues until positions filled.
Preliminary interviews: Either at San Francisco Joint Meetings or through
Skype.

Send letter, vita, teaching philosophy, research description, three
reference letters, transcripts (photocopies): Iraj Kalantari, Chair,
Mathematics Department, Western Illinois University, Macomb, IL 61455-1390

See http://www.wiu.edu/employment/emp.sphp?id=806

WIU has a non-discrimination policy that includes sex, race, color, sexual
orientation, gender identity and gender expression, religion, age, marital
status, national origin, disability, or veteran status.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Grady Wright <gradywright@boisestate.edu>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 11:27:42 -0500
Subject: Tenure-track Position in Computational Math at Boise State University

The Department of Mathematics at Boise State University invites applications
for a tenure-track position beginning Fall 2010. We seek an individual whose
research focuses on applied and computational math, and can interact other
departments in Science and Engineering at Boise State. Current faculty in the
Department of Mathematics work with Boise State faculty in Geophysics,
Hydrology, Biology, Computer Science, Civil and Mechanical Engineering and
Materials Science. Candidates must have a Ph.D. in the mathematical sciences,
a record of successful postdoctoral experience in interdisciplinary research,
and a commitment to effective teaching at the graduate and undergraduate levels.

Boise State University is a fast growing, dynamic metropolitan research
institution and the largest university in Idaho with nearly 20,000 students.
The university offers a new workload policy for professors aimed to give them
more flexibility. Read more about at:
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v54/i45/45b02401.htm.

Applications should be submitted directly to
http://www.mathjobs.org/jobs/BSU/1823. Please include a cover letter,
curriculum vitae, brief descriptions of research and teaching interests and
goals, and at least three letters of recommendation. Review of applications
will begin December 16 and all applications received prior to that date will
receive full consideration.

Boise State University is strongly committed to achieving excellence through
cultural diversity. The University actively encourages application and
nominations of women, persons of color, and members of other underrepresented
groups. EEO/AA Institution, Veterans preference.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Simon Neil Chandler-Wilde <S.N.Chandler-Wilde@reading.ac.uk>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 12:47:26 -0500
Subject: Lectureship in Applicable/Numerical Analysis at University of Reading

Lecturer in Applicable or Numerical Analysis
Department of Mathematics
University of Reading, UK

This appointment is full-time, permanent.
Grade 7 – £33,432 to £44,930 per annum.
Closing date 7 December 2009.

Following the appointment of Michael Levitin to a Chair at Reading, we are
seeking an outstanding candidate at Lecturer level to strengthen our
research activities in applicable and/or numerical analysis. The successful
candidate will join thriving research groups in these areas. He/she will be
expected to produce excellent research outputs, to initiate research grant
applications, to supervise PhDs and postdocs, and to undertake teaching and
administrative duties.

For further details see
https://www.reading.ac.uk/about/jobs/docs/LE09031.pdf

For informal enquiries contact Professor Michael Levitin on +44(0)29 2087
5529 or email Levitin@cardiff.ac.uk . Alternatively, contact the Head of
Department, Professor Simon Chandler-Wilde on +44(0)118 378 5017 or email
s.n.chandler-wilde@reading.ac.uk.

To formally apply please visit www.reading.ac.uk/jobs, and click on Search
Current Vacancies, search by entering the job reference LE09031 as a key
word, and follow the online instructions.

It is planned to hold the interviews on 25-26 January 2010.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Tomasz Nowicki <tnowicki@us.ibm.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2009 09:08:49 -0500
Subject: Goldstine Fellowship at IBM Research

2010-2011 IBM Herman Goldstine Postdoctoral Fellowship in Mathematical
Sciences

The Business Analytics and Mathematical Sciences Department of the IBM
Thomas J. Watson Research Center invites applications for its 2010-2011
Herman Goldstine Memorial Postdoctoral Fellowship for research in
mathematical and computer sciences. The fellowship provides scientists of
outstanding ability an opportunity to advance their scholarship as
resident department members at the Research Center. The Research Center is
located in Westchester County, less than an hour north of New York City.
together with the link

http://www.research.ibm.com/math/goldstine.html

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Karen Willcox <kwillcox@mit.edu>
Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 16:05:53 -0500
Subject: MIT Computation for Design and Optimization Program

The Computation for Design and Optimization (CDO) Program at MIT is
currently accepting applications for admission in the fall term 2010.
The CDO master's degree offers a unified treatment of the
computational aspects of complex engineered systems. Through hands-on
projects and a master's thesis, students develop and apply advanced
computational methods to a diverse range of applications, from
aerospace to nanotechnology, from Internet protocols to
telecommunications system design. The application deadline for fall
term admission to the CDO SM Program is January 10, 2010.

For more information, please see
http://web.mit.edu/cdo-program/admission/nonmit.html
or email cdo_info@mit.edu

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Oleg Burdakov <Oleg.Burdakov@liu.se>
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2009 10:15:48 -0500
Subject: Contents, Optimization Methods and Software: 25(1), Feb 2010

Table of Contents
Optimization Methods and Software (OMS), Volume 25, Number 1 (February, 2010)
Special issue dedicated to Professor Vladimir F. Demyanov on the occasion of
his 70th birthday
Guest Editors: Masao Fukushima, Manlio Gaudioso, Franco Giannessi and Diethard
Pallaschke

Adil M. Bagirov and Asef Nazari Ganjehlou
A quasisecant method for minimizing nonsmooth functions
3–18

G. Bigi, A. Frangioni and Q. Zhang
Approximate optimality conditions and stopping criteria in
canonical DC programmings
19–27

Giancarlo Bigi and Barbara Panicucci
A successive linear programming algorithm for nonsmooth monotone
variational inequalities
29–35

Radu Ioan Bot and Sorin-Mihai Grad
Lower semicontinuous type regularity conditions for
subdifferential calculus
37–48

Marco Castellani, Massimo Pappalardo and Mauro Passacantando
Existence results for nonconvex equilibrium problems
49–58

Manlio Gaudioso and Enrico Gorgone
Gradient set splitting in nonconvex nonsmooth numerical optimization
59–74

I. Ginchev, A. Guerraggio and M. Rocca
Second-order Dini set-valued directional derivative in C1,1
vector optimization
75–87

J. Grzybowski, D. Pallaschke and R. Urbanski
On the amount of minimal pairs of convex sets
89–96

E.A. Nurminski
Envelope stepsize control for iterative algorithms based on Fejer
processes with attractants
97–108

N. Ovcharova
Second-order analysis of the Moreau-Yosida and the Lasry-Lions
regularizations
109–116

F. Rinaldi and M. Sciandrone
Feature selection combining linear support vector machines
and concave optimization
117–128

Vera Roshchina
Mordukhovich subdifferential of pointwise minimum of
approximate convex functions
129–141

A. Uderzo
On a perturbation approach to open mapping theorems
143–167

Forthcoming papers and complete table of contents for the journal OMS:
http://www.mai.liu.se/~olbur/contents

Instructions for Authors and Online sample copy:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/10556788.html

Discounted individual subscription:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/offer/goms-so.asp

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Endre Suli <endre.suli@maths.ox.ac.uk>
Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 03:51:38 -0500
Subject: Contents, IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis: 29(4), October 2009

IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis
Volume 29, Number 4, October 2009
http://imajna.oxfordjournals.org/

Annalisa Buffa and Christoph Ortner
Compact embeddings of broken Sobolev spaces and applications.
pp. 827-855.

Hermann Brunner, Penny J. Davies, and Dugald B. Duncan
Discontinuous Galerkin approximations for Volterra
integral equations of the first kind.
pp. 856-881.

Arieh Iserles and Syvert P. Norsett
From high oscillation to rapid approximation III:
multivariate expansions.
pp. 882-916.

Fernando D. Gaspoz and Pedro Morin
Convergence rates for adaptive finite elements.
pp. 917-936.

John W. Barrett and Endre Suli
Numerical approximation of corotational dumbbell models
for dilute polymers.
pp. 937-959.

W. Hackbusch
Convolution of hp-functions on locally refined grids.
pp. 960-985.

Fang Liu, Niall Madden, Martin Stynes, and Aihui Zhou
A two-scale sparse grid method for a singularly
perturbed reaction-diffusion problem in two dimensions.
pp. 986-1007.

Haijun Wu and Zhimin Zhang
Enhancing eigenvalue approximation by gradient
recovery on adaptive meshes.
pp. 1008-1022.

Erwan Faou and Vasile Gradinaru
Gauss.Hermite wave packet dynamics: convergence of
the spectral and pseudo-spectral approximation.
pp. 1023-1045.

Giuseppe Mastroianni and Gradimir V. Milovanovic
Some numerical methods for second-kind Fredholm
integral equations on the real semiaxis.
pp. 1046-1066.

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Lothar Reichel <reichel@math.kent.edu>
Date: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 14:13:35 -0500
Subject: Contents, Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis (ETNA): 31 (2008)

Table of Contents, Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis (ETNA),
vol. 31, 2008. This is a special volume with selected papers from the
conference Computational Methods with Applications held in Harrachov,
Check Republic, in August of 2007. Special volume editors: O. Ernst,
A. Greenbaum, M. H. Gutknecht, R. Nabben, and Z. Strakos.

ETNA is available at http://etna.math.kent.edu and at several mirror
sites. ETNA is in the extended Science Citation Index and the CompuMath
Citation Index.

i-xi Table of contents and abstracts

xii-xiii Preface

1-11 C. C. Paige and I. Panayotov
Majorization bounds for Ritz values of Hermitian matrices

12-24 J. Lampe and H. Voss
A fast algorithm for solving regularized total least squares problems

25-29 Z. Dostal
On the decrease of a quadratic function along the projected-gradient
path

30-39 M. Graf and S. Kunis
Stability results for scattered data interpolation on the rotation
group

40-48 K. R. Rajagopal
On the modeling of entropy producing processes

49-67 C. Kravvaritis and M. Mitrouli
A technique for computing minors of binary Hadamard matrices and
application to the growth problem

68-85 V. Hernandez, J. E. Roman, and A. Tomas
A robust and efficient parallel SVD solver based on restarted Lanczos
bidiagonalization

86-109 J. V. Lambers
Enhancement of Krylov subspace spectral methods by block Lanczos
iteration

110-125 J. Malek
Mathematical properties of flows of incompressible power-law-like
fluids that are described by implicit constitutive relations

126-140 T. Sogabe, T. Hoshi, S.-L. Zhang, and T. Fujiwara
On a weighted quasi-residual minimization strategy for solving complex
symmetric shifted linear systems

141-155 J. R. Winkler and J. D. Allan
Structured low rank approximations of the Sylvester resultant matrix
for approximate GCDs of Bernstein basis polynomials

156-177 J. H. Jung, D. P. O'Leary, and A. L. Tits
Adaptive constraint reduction for training support vector machines

178-203 G. H. Golub, M. Stoll, and A. Wathen
Approximation of the scattering amplitude and linear systems

204-220 P. C. Hansen and T. K. Jensen
Noise propagation in regularizing iterations for image deblurring

221-227 Jan Zitko
Some remarks on the restarted and augmented GMRES method

228-255 M. J. Gander
Schwarz methods over the course of time

256-270 U. Baur and P. Benner
Cross-Gramian based model reduction for data-sparse systems

271-294 Y. Bao, I. N. Bozkurt, T. Dayar, X. Sun, and K. S. Trivedi
Decompositional analysis of Kronecker structured Markov chains

295-305 H. Schwetlick and K. Schreiber
A counterexample for characterizing an invariant subspace of a matrix

306-330 H. Fassbender, D. S. Mackey, N. Mackey, and C. Schroder
Structured polynomial eigenproblems related to time-delay systems

331-357 J. J. Hench and Z. Strakos
The RCWA method - A case study with open questions and perspectives of
algebraic computations

358-383 B. Laszkiewicz and K. Zietak
Algorithms for the matrix sector function

384-402 B. Sousedik and J. Mandel
On the equivalence of primal and dual substructuring preconditioners

403-424 Y. A. Erlangga and R. Nabben
On a multilevel Krylov method for the Helmholtz equation
preconditioned by shifted Laplacian

ETNA papers are presently published in:

ETNA volume 33, A special volume on Matrix Analysis and Applications, dedicated
to Gerard Meurant
ETNA volume 34, A special volume dedicated to Victor Pereyra on the occasion of
his 70th birthday
ETNA volume 35, the regular volume for 2009
ETNA volume 36, A special volume dedicated to Richard S. Varga on the occasion
of his 80th birthday

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Raimondas Ciegis <Raimondas.Ciegis@fm.vgtu.lt>
Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2009 10:34:50 +0200 (EET)
Subject: Contents, Mathematical Modeling and Analysis: 14(4)

MATHEMATICAL MODELLING AND ANALYSIS

The Baltic Journal on Mathematical Applications, Numerical Analysis
and Differential Equations
ISSN 1392-6292, ISSN 1648-3510 online, Electronical edition: 
http://www.vgtu.lt/mma/

Raimondas {\v C}iegis (Editor) Volume 14, Number 4, 2009 (423--527)

CONTENTS

R.Arora. Asymptotical Solutions for a Vibrationally Relaxing Gas.
423-434

J.Chamberlain, L.Kong and Q.Kong. Nodal Solutions of Nonlocal
Boundary Value Problems. 435-447

T.Hein. A Unified Approach for Regularizing Discretized Linear
Ill-Posed Problems. 449-464

U.Lepik. Haar Wavelet Method for Solving Stiff Differential
Equations. 465-479

G. Magombedze, Z. Mukandavire, C. Chiyaka and G. Musuka. Optimal
Control of a Sex-Structured HIV/AIDS Model with Condom Use. 481-492

B.F.Nteumagne and R.J.Moitsheki. Optimal Systems and Group Invariant
Solutions for a Model Arising in Financial Mathematics. 493-500

F.Sadyrbaev. Multiplicity in Parameter-Dependent Problems for
Ordinary Differential Equations. 501-512

A.M.Siddiqui, A.R.Ansari, A.Ahmad and N.Ahmad. On Taylor's Scraping
Problem and Flow of a Sisko Fluid. 513-527

-------------------------------------------------------

From: Emma Avery <Emma.Avery@iop.org>
Date: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 09:58:47 +0000
Subject: Contents, Inverse Problems: 25(11), November 2009

INVERSE PROBLEMS

Volume 25, Issue 11, November 2009

Article numbers: 115001--115023

Individual articles are free for 30 days following their publication on the
web. This issue is available at: http://www.iop.org/EJ/toc/0266-5611/25/11

PAPERS
115001
A self-adaptive projection method for solving the multiple-sets split
feasibility problem
Wenxing Zhang, Deren Han and Zhibao Li

115002
Uniqueness in an inverse problem for a one-dimensional fractional diffusion
equation
Jin Cheng, Junichi Nakagawa, Masahiro Yamamoto and Tomohiro Yamazaki

115003
Surface impedance modeling of PEC targets: application to shape
reconstruction
Mehmet {\c{C}}ay\"oren, \.Ibrahim Akduman, Ali Yapar and Lorenzo Crocco

115004
Improved solution for ill-posed linear systems using a constrained
optimization ruled by a penalty: evaluation in nuclear medicine tomography
Stephan Walrand, Fran{\c{c}}ois Jamar and Stanislas Pauwels

115005
Acoustic source identification using multiple frequency information
Matthias Eller and Nicolas P Valdivia

115006
An integrable generalization of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation on the
half-line and solitons
J Lenells and A S Fokas

115007
Inverse scattering for Schr\"odinger operators with Miura potentials: I.
Unique Riccati representatives and ZS-AKNS systems
C Frayer, R O Hryniv, Ya V Mykytyuk and P A Perry

115008
Bayesian inverse problems for functions and applications to fluid mechanics
S L Cotter, M Dashti, J C Robinson and A M Stuart

115009
Identification of a time-varying point source in a system of two coupled
linear diffusion-advection- reaction equations: application to surface
water pollution
Adel Hamdi

115010
On iterative reconstruction in the nonlinearized polarization tomography
R G Novikov

115011
Properties of a class of block-iterative methods
Tommy Elfving and Touraj Nikazad

115012
On the non-uniqueness of the inverse problem associated with
electroencephalography
G Dassios and D Hadjiloizi

115013
Regularization in Hilbert space under unbounded operators and general
source conditions
Bernd Hofmann, Peter Math\'e and Heinrich von Weizs\"acker

115014
Nonlinear regularization methods for ill-posed problems with piecewise
constant or strongly varying solutions
H Egger and A Leit\~ao

115015
Identification of an unknown source term in a vibrating cantilevered beam
from final overdetermination
Alemdar Hasanov

115016
A robust probabilistic approach for variational inversion in shallow water
acoustic tomography
M Berrada, F Badran, M Cr\'epon, J-P Hermand and S Thiria

115017
Greedy solution of ill-posed problems: error bounds and exact inversion
L Denis, D A Lorenz and D Trede

115018
On weakly bounded noise in ill-posed problems
P P B Eggermont, V N LaRiccia and M Z Nashed

115019
A simple algorithm for the inverse field of values problem
Russell Carden

115020
The multicomponent 2D Toda hierarchy: dispersionless limit
Manuel Ma\~nas and Luis Mart\'{\i}nez Alonso

115021
Fine scale uncertainty in parameter estimation for elliptic equations
James Nolen and George Papanicolaou

115022
Elastic-net regularization: error estimates and active set methods
Bangti Jin, Dirk A Lorenz and Stefan Schiffler

115023
Retrieval of ultraviolet spectral irradiance from filtered photodiode
measurements
Mar\'{\i}a-Paz Zorzano, Luis V\'azquez and Salvador Jimenez

------------------------------
End of NA Digest

**************************
-------