My Account Log in

3 options

The FEniCS Project the FEniCS 2024 Conference Jørgen S. Dokken [and four others] editors

Springer Nature - Springer Mathematics and Statistics (R0) eBooks 2026 English International Available online

View online

Springer Nature - Springer Nature Link Journals and eBooks - Fully Open Access Available online

View online

SpringerLink Open Access eBooks Available online

View online
Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Contributor:
Dokken, Jørgen S., 1992- editor.
Conference Name:
FEniCS Conference (2024 : Oslo, Norway)
Series:
Simula SpringerBriefs on computing ; v. 19.
Simula SpringerBriefs on computing 2512-1685 volume 19
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Finite element method--Computer programs.
Numerical analysis--Data processing.
Genre:
Conference papers and proceedings
Physical Description:
1 online resource
Place of Publication:
Cham, Switzerland Springer [2026]
Summary:
"This open access book provides the reader with a snapshot of the cutting-edge research being undertaken by the members of the FEniCS community, as presented at the FEniCS Conference at Simula Research Laboratory, Oslo, Norway, in June 2024. The conference—and this book—features contributions from both the developers and users of the library, and includes applications of the software to a wide range of application areas spread throughout engineering, physics and biology. This book highlights topics in all these areas, many of which could not be simulated as efficiently—or even simulated at all—until recently. The FEniCS Project is an open-source finite element library developed by an international network of researchers. FEniCS gives its users easy access to powerful and scalable numerical tools for solving a great number of problems based on partial differential equations. Its contributions from academia and cutting-edge research mean that many recent algorithmic advances in the area are available in the library. Its open-source nature allows users to freely build their own developments into and on top of the core library, leading to some truly remarkable research. The topics presented in this book are backed up by openly available code examples, to enhance the reproducibility of the results presented within and further development. The target audience of this book is the researcher with an interest in numerical methods, their implementation and application, and the latest up-and-coming areas in which they are being applied"-- Springer Nature Link
Contents:
Adaptive finite element methods based on flux equilibration using FEniCSx / Maximilian Brodbeck, Fleurianne Bertrand and Tim Ricken
The FEniCS Project on AWS Graviton3 / Michal Habera and Jack S. Hale
cuDOLFINx: a CUDA extension for FEniCSx / Benjamin A. Pachev, James D. Trotter and Igor A. Baratta
Implementation of the Lam–Bremhorst k-ε turbulence model in FEniCS / Juraj Marcibál and Hans Joachim Schroll
Growth and remodelling package in FEniCSx / Karl Munthe, Henrik N.T. Finsberg, Samuel T. Wall and Joakim Sundnes
Blood flow in the beating heart: coupling fluid dynamics to reduced wall and circulation models for data-driven cardiac FSI / Marc Hirschvogel, Mia Bonini, Maximilian Balmus and David Nordsletten
Estimation of optimal inlet boundary conditions for blood flow assessment in abdominal aortic aneurysm using variational data assimilation / Sara Paratico, Riccardo Munafò, Chiara Trenti, Petter Dyverfeldt, Simone Saitta and Emiliano Votta
Thermal analysis of brake discs in rail vehicles / Yanjun Zhang, Sebastian Stichel and William Liu
Function scaling and adaptive boundary condition throttling for convergence control in highly nonlinear Poisson–Boltzmann electrolyte models / Drew F. Parsons, Matteo Farci, Alin Grigoras and Dagmawi Tadesse
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references
Online resource; title from PDF title page (Springer Nature Link, viewed March 6, 2026)
Other Format:
Print version FEniCS Project
ISBN:
9783032173966
3032173965
OCLC:
1575313108
Access Restriction:
Some versions Open access versions available from some providers open access

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

Find

Home Release notes

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Find catalog Using Articles+ Using your account