Just a note in case you're interested; Peter Vincent and colleagues have just released their PyFR package:
http://www.pyfr.org/
They have many interests in common with us and it wouldbe niceto take a look.
Paul
Hi Rod,
That might be tricky. I had anticipated standing at a whiteboard and
winging it, and I am not aware of us having a room with the right gear to
webcast that, although if someone wants to prove me wrong I'm all ears.
David
On 29 October 2013 18:36, M R Tohid <mraste2(a)tigers.lsu.edu> wrote:
> Hi,
> I am also interested and would like to participate if it is not too much
> of a hassle to webcast the lectures.
>
> Cheers,
> Rod
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 10:52 AM, David Ham <David.Ham(a)imperial.ac.uk>wrote:
>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> Having been extensively lobbied over many months, and also being aware
>> that I am explaining basic finite element repeatedly to different people, I
>> have decided to cave in to the pressure and actually do something a bit
>> more organised.
>>
>> Following very loosely the model of Colin's FEEC course, I think the
>> plan would be to do a session of 90 minutes or so perhaps once a week for a
>> few weeks until we have got far enough. The target market is anyone who
>> doesn't yet know how to derive the finite element method for systems like
>> Poisson, the wave equation, advection diffusion etc. We would cover the
>> basic theory of finite element, and matters such as quadrature, boundary
>> conditions, Galerkin orthogonality and so on.
>>
>> At this stage I am just gauging interest, so please reply (to list)
>> indicating if you would be interested. This will enable me to work out
>> whether its worth doing and where I should do it.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> David
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Dr David Ham
>> Departments of Mathematics and Computing
>> Imperial College London
>>
>> http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> firedrake mailing list
>> firedrake(a)imperial.ac.uk
>> https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/firedrake
>>
>>
>
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Hi All,
Today we're going to look at chapter 1 of Brenner and Scott, and
particularly up to page 36, so you may choose to bring along a printout if
you wish to follow along.
Regards,
David
On 2 December 2013 14:58, David Ham <David.Ham(a)imperial.ac.uk> wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> The lectures from last week are now up on Panopto and YouTube:
> http://wp.doc.ic.ac.uk/spo/finite-element/
>
> This week's lecture will be Thursday lunchtime 1230-1400 in the usual
> room. I apologise for the inconvenient timing, the room was not available
> in the usual timeslots.
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
> --
> Dr David Ham
> Departments of Mathematics and Computing
> Imperial College London
>
> http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
>
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Hello,
Some people asked for my slides from this morning's talk, so here they are.
David
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Hi All,
The lectures from last week are now up on Panopto and YouTube:
http://wp.doc.ic.ac.uk/spo/finite-element/
This week's lecture will be Thursday lunchtime 1230-1400 in the usual room.
I apologise for the inconvenient timing, the room was not available in the
usual timeslots.
Regards,
David
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Hi all,
I have just accepted an invitation to give a keynote at PDESoft 2014 in
Heidelberg. http://pdesoft.uni-hd.de/index.html
This looks like a really interesting conference for us: the PC includes
people from FEniCS, Dune and ClawPack and previous keynotes include people
like Tim Warburton and Anders Logg. I think we should seriously consider
submitting more abstracts to this once the call for papers comes out, as it
looks like many of the people we would like to see as our peers will be
involved.
Regards,
David
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
First, thanks to all who turned up for the first lecture yesterday.
The recording of the first lecture is now up. The Silverlight Panopto
version is at:
http://bit.ly/1ifxZxD while the mp4 podcast version is at:
http://bit.ly/1j955g5
The podcast version has higher video quality and works on Linux, but has
some audio sync issues about which I have filed a bug.
The textbook I plan to use in future weeks is: The Mathematical Theory of
Finite Element Methods by Brenner and Scott. Imperial has bought the PDF
rights to this book so you can access it at:
http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-0-387-75934-0
I recommend you print chapter 0 and bring it to the next lecture.
The notes I used yesterday are attached, for the benefit of anyone who
didn't get a copy. The version below has a couple of very minor errors
fixed, but not enough to really concern anyone.
Finally, WPL is almost solidly booked next week, however it is free on
Friday morning. PLEASE TELL ME NOW IF FRIDAY MORNING IS NOT A GOOD TIME.
Regards,
David
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Dear All,
This week's finite element lecture is now scheduled for 1030-1200 on Friday
in WPL 3.01.
Regards,
David
On 15 November 2013 12:12, Ham, David A <david.ham(a)imperial.ac.uk> wrote:
> First, thanks to all who turned up for the first lecture yesterday.
>
> The recording of the first lecture is now up. The Silverlight Panopto
> version is at:
> http://bit.ly/1ifxZxD while the mp4 podcast version is at:
> http://bit.ly/1j955g5
>
> The podcast version has higher video quality and works on Linux, but
> has some audio sync issues about which I have filed a bug.
>
> The textbook I plan to use in future weeks is: The Mathematical Theory
> of Finite Element Methods by Brenner and Scott. Imperial has bought the PDF
> rights to this book so you can access it at:
> http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-0-387-75934-0
>
> I recommend you print chapter 0 and bring it to the next lecture.
>
> The notes I used yesterday are attached, for the benefit of anyone who
> didn't get a copy. The version below has a couple of very minor errors
> fixed, but not enough to really concern anyone.
>
> Finally, WPL is almost solidly booked next week, however it is free on
> Friday morning. PLEASE TELL ME NOW IF FRIDAY MORNING IS NOT A GOOD TIME.
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
> --
> Dr David Ham
> Departments of Mathematics and Computing
> Imperial College London
>
> http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
>
--
Dr David Ham
Departments of Mathematics and Computing
Imperial College London
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
Thanks for all this, David. It's OK for me next Friday morning.
-- Fabio
2013/11/15 Ham, David A <david.ham(a)imperial.ac.uk>
> First, thanks to all who turned up for the first lecture yesterday.
>
> The recording of the first lecture is now up. The Silverlight Panopto
> version is at:
> http://bit.ly/1ifxZxD while the mp4 podcast version is at:
> http://bit.ly/1j955g5
>
> The podcast version has higher video quality and works on Linux, but
> has some audio sync issues about which I have filed a bug.
>
> The textbook I plan to use in future weeks is: The Mathematical Theory
> of Finite Element Methods by Brenner and Scott. Imperial has bought the PDF
> rights to this book so you can access it at:
> http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-0-387-75934-0
>
> I recommend you print chapter 0 and bring it to the next lecture.
>
> The notes I used yesterday are attached, for the benefit of anyone who
> didn't get a copy. The version below has a couple of very minor errors
> fixed, but not enough to really concern anyone.
>
> Finally, WPL is almost solidly booked next week, however it is free on
> Friday morning. PLEASE TELL ME NOW IF FRIDAY MORNING IS NOT A GOOD TIME.
>
> Regards,
>
> David
>
> --
> Dr David Ham
> Departments of Mathematics and Computing
> Imperial College London
>
> http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham
>