List of plenary speakers (with preliminary titles):
Eberhard Bänsch (WIAS, Berlin, Germany)
Finite element methods for surface diffusion
Anne Bourlioux (Department of Mathematics, University of Montreal, Canada)
Large scale simulations of turbulent flames with asymptotic subgrid models
Frederic Cao (INRIA Rennes, France)
Application of Gestalt principles to the detection of good continuations, corners and terminators in image level lines
Robert Eymard (Department of Mathematics, University of Marne-la-Vallee, France)
Finite volume schemes for multiphasic flows in porous media: mathematical and engineering features
Maurizio Falcone (Rome, Italy)
Semi-Lagrangian schemes for hyperbolic problems and applications
Peter Frolkovic (IWR, University of Heidelberg, Germany / Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia)
Flux-based method of characteristics for complex transport problems
Juergen Fuhrmann (WIAS, Berlin, Germany)
Implicit finite volume methods in complex applications
Martin Gander (McGill University, Montreal, Canada)
AILU: A New Incomplete LU Preconditioner
Roger van Keer (Department of Mathematics, University of Ghent, Belgium)
Numerical approximation methods of convection diffusion problems in heat and mass transfer
Norio Kikuchi (University of Yokohama, Japan)
On a construction of Morse flows
Maria Lukacova-Medvidova (Institute of Mathematics, Technical University, Brno, Czech Republic)
Multi-dimensional bicharacteristic finite volume schemes for hyperbolic conservation laws
Hans Werner Meuer (University of Mannheim and Prometeus GmbH, Germany)
Supercomputing: What have we learned from the TOP500 Project ?
Mario Ohlberger ( Institute of Applied Mathematics, University of Freiburg, Germany)
A-posteriori error estimates and adaptive methods for finite volume approximations of convection dominated porous media flow problems
Martin Rumpf (Department of Mathematics, University of Duisburg, Germany)
Geometric methods in image and surface processing
Alfred Schmidt (Zentrum fur TechnoMathematik, University of Bremen, Germany)
Adaptive methods for coupled systems
James A. Sethian (Department of Mathematics and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, USA)
Ordered Upwind Methods: Computing Viscosity Solutions to Optimal Control and Non-Viscosity Solutions to Wave Propagation
John R. Whiteman ( The Brunel Institute of Computational Mathematics, Brunel University, London, United Kingdom)
Computational Modelling of Problems of Viscoelasticity
Gabriel Wittum (Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing, University of Heidelberg, Germany)
Parallel Adaptive Computations of Processes from Science and Engineering