Do you believe in second chances? Did you forget to submit your abstract for a talk or a poster at the preCICE Workshop this September? Well, well: you can still do this till June 14.
In other news: The talk recordings we manage to salvage from last year’s workshop are now on YouTube:
This list includes:
- Tackling the complexity of Greenland’s Ice Sheet with coupled models (keynote)
Angelika Humbert, Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Germany - A new adapter of the weather numeric prediction software Weather Research and Forecast (WRF) model
Zhen Wu, Sun Yat-sen University, China - Isogeometric Analysis Suitable Coupling Methods for Fluid-Structure Interactions with Solid-solver G+Smo Coupled via preCICE
Jingya Li, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands - Application of preCICE for fire-structure interaction predicting the damage of concrete walls under fire load
Arulnambi Palani, Helmut Schmidt University - University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, Germany - Standardization of Adapters and Application Cases: The preECO Project
Benjamin Uekermann (@uekerman), University of Stuttgart, Germany
The following talks are missing, but we have recordings that need some intensive video editing care (including fixing very choppy audio and occasionally fixing audio-video synchronization issues):
- Overview on preCICE v3
Frédéric Simonis (@fsimonis), University of Stuttgart, Germany - News on the preCICE ecosystem: Distribution v2404
Gerasimos Chourdakis (@MakisH), University of Stuttgart, Germany - Simulation of coupled particle transport and FSI with application in the drilling industry
Patrick Höhn (@hoehnp), Institute for Computer Science, University of Göttingen, Germany - How to use time interpolation in the preCICE tutorials
Benjamin Rodenberg (@BenjaminRodenberg), Technical University of Munich, Germany - Quasi-Newton methods for time adaptive waveform iterations
Niklas Kotarsky (@NiklasKotarsky), Lund University, Sweden - Multirate Magnetothermal Coupling with Time Adaptive Waveform Relaxation
Michael Wieshau, Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany
Let us know if you would like to help us salvage these videos as well.
Of course, as you already know, our workshop has many more components than just talks, which are not recorded anyway.
Looking forward to this year’s workshop!