The general theory of homogenization : a personalized introduction
By: Tartar, Luc.
Series: Lecture notes of the unione matematica italiana (UMILN7). Publisher: Berlin Springer 2009Description: xxii, 470p.ISBN: 9783642051944.Subject(s): Homogenization (Differential equations)DDC classification: 515.35 | T178g Summary: Homogenization is not about periodicity, or Gamma-convergence, but about understanding which effective equations to use at macroscopic level, knowing which partial differential equations govern mesoscopic levels, without using probabilities (which destroy physical reality); instead, one uses various topologies of weak type, the G-convergence of Sergio Spagnolo, the H-convergence of François Murat and the author, and some responsible for the appearance of nonlocal effects, which many theories in continuum mechanics or physics guessed wrongly. For a better understanding of 20th century science, new mathematical tools must be introduced, like the author’s H-measures, variants by Patrick Gérard, and others yet to be discovered.Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur | General Stacks | 515.35 T178g (Browse shelf) | Available | A185203 |
Browsing PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur Shelves , Collection code: General Stacks Close shelf browser
515.35 Sy68 NUMERICAL SOLUTIONS OF BOUNDARY VALUE PROBLEMS FOR ORDINARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS | 515.35 Sy68n NONLINEAR EVOLUTION EQUATIONS | 515.35 T171I INVERSE PROBLEM THEORY | 515.35 T178g The general theory of homogenization | 515.35 T212p2 Partial differential equations [3 vol.] | 515.35 T343 THEORY AND APPLICATIONS OF INVERSE PROBLEMS | 515.35 T449dE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS |
Homogenization is not about periodicity, or Gamma-convergence, but about understanding which effective equations to use at macroscopic level, knowing which partial differential equations govern mesoscopic levels, without using probabilities (which destroy physical reality); instead, one uses various topologies of weak type, the G-convergence of Sergio Spagnolo, the H-convergence of François Murat and the author, and some responsible for the appearance of nonlocal effects, which many theories in continuum mechanics or physics guessed wrongly.
For a better understanding of 20th century science, new mathematical tools must be introduced, like the author’s H-measures, variants by Patrick Gérard, and others yet to be discovered.
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