B. Scott Gaudi : Microlensing and the Search for Extrasolar Planets
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 12 Views )The PLANET collaboration has monitored nearly 100 microlensing events of which more than 20 have the sensitivity required to detect perturbations due to a planetary companion to the primary lens. No planets have been detected. These null results indicate that Jupiter mass planets with separations from 1-5 AU are not common -- the first such limits for extrasolar planets at these separations by any technique. While interpretation of null results is not trivial, interpretation of future detections will be substantially more difficult, due to degeneracies among the planetary fit parameters and degeneracies with perturbations due to other, non-planetary phenomena. The analysis is further complicated by the unusual situation that observational strategies are altered real-time when perturbations are detected. I discuss these difficulties and present methods to cope with them. Finally, I discuss future prospects for microlensing planet searches.
Almut Burchard : Geometry in Wasserstein Space: Geodesics, Gradients, and Curvature, from an Eulerian Point of View
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 95 Views )The optimal transportation problem defines a notion of distance in the space of probability measures over a manifold, the *Wasserstein space*. In his 1994 Ph.D. thesis, McCann discovered that this space is a length space: the distance between probability measures is given by the length of minimizing geodesics called *displacement interpolants*. A surprising number of important functionals in physics and geometry turned out to be geodesically convex. In contrast with classical function spaces, the Wasserstein space is not a linear space, but rather an infinite-dimensional analogue of a Riemannian manifold. This analogy has motivated new functional inequalities and new methods for studying evolution equations; however, it has rarely been used in rigorous proofs. I will describe recent work with Benjamin Schachter on differentiating functionals (such as the entropy or the Dirichlet integral) along displacement interpolants. Starting from an Eulerian formulation for the underlying optimal transportation problem, we take advantage of the system of transport equations to compute derivatives of arbitrary order, for probability densities that need not be smooth.
Thomas Y. Hou : Singularity Formation in 3-D Vortex Sheets
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 14 Views )One of the classical examples of hydrodynamic instability occurs when two fluids are separated by a free surface across which the tangential velocity has a jump discontinuity. This is called Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability. Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is a fundamental instability of incompressible fluid flow at high Reynolds number. The idealization of a shear layered flow as a vortex sheet separating two regions of potential flow has often been used as a model to study mixing properties, boundary layers and coherent structures of fluids. In a joint work with G. Hu and P. Zhang, we study the singularity of 3-D vortex sheets using a new approach. First, we derive a leading order approximation to the boundary integral equation governing the 3-D vortex sheet. This leading order equation captures the most singular contribution of the integral equation. Moreover, after applying a transformation to the physical variables, we found that this leading order 3-D vortex sheet equation de-generates into a two-dimensional vortex sheet equation in the direction of the tangential velocity jump. This rather surprising result confirms that the tangential velocity jump is the physical driving force of the vortex sheet singularities. It also shows that the singularity type of the three-dimensional problem is similar to that of the two-dimensional problem. Detailed numerical study will be provided to support the analytical results, and to reveal the generic form and the three-dimensional nature of the vortex sheet singularity.
Dana Mendelson : Random data Cauchy theory for some nonlinear dispersive equations
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 96 Views )In this talk, I will discuss several problems on nonlinear wave and dispersive equations with random initial data, including the energy critical nonlinear wave and Schroedinger equations, and derivative nonlinear wave equations. I will present several almost sure well-posedness and scattering results for these equations and contrast the ways in which random data techniques can be exploited in these different contexts.
Edward Belbruno : Low Energy Trajectories in Celestial Mechanics and Stability Transition Regions With Applications to Astronomy and Space Travel
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 12 Views )In the past two decades a new type of chaotic dynamics has been noticed in the three and four body problems which has not been understood. In 1986, using a numerical algorithm, an interesting region supporting chaotic motion was discovered about the moon, under the perturbation of the earth. This region is now termed the weak stability boundary. New types of dynamics were subsequently discovered near this boundary. These dynamics have the property that they give rise to very low energy trajectories with many important applications. In 1991, a new type of low energy trajectory to the moon was discovered which was used to place a Japanese spacecraft, Hiten, in orbit about the moon in October of that year. This was the first application of this type of dynamics to space travel. These low energy trajectories, so called WSB transfers, are now being planned by NASA, Europe and Japan for several new missions to the moon, Europa, Mars. Motion near this boundary also gives rise to an interesting resonance transition dynamics, and work by the speaker with Brian Marsden at Harvard is discussed in its relevance to short period comets, and Kuiper belt objects. An analytic representation for this boundary is also presented and its connections with heteroclinic intersections of hyperbolic invariant manifolds is discussed. If there is time, a new type of periodic motion for Hill's problem is looked at.
Jim Nolen : Asymptotic Spreading of Reaction-Diffusion Fronts in Random Media
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 152 Views )Some reaction-advection-diffusion equations admit traveling wave solutions; these are simple models of a combustion reaction spreading with constant speed. Even in a random medium, solutions to the initial value problem may develop fronts propagating with a well-defined asymptotic speed. First, I will describe this behavior when the nonlinearity is the Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Piskunov (KPP) type nonlinearity and the randomness comes from a prescribed random drift (a simple model of turbulent combustion). Next, I will describe propagation of fronts when the nonlinearity is a random ignition-type nonlinearity. In the latter case, there exist special solutions that generalize the notion of a traveling wave in the random setting.
Graham Wilks : Heated Jet Assimilation into External Streams
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 12 Views )The assimilation of a simultaneous momentum and heat source into aligned uniform and non-uniform streams is considered.The governing boundary layer equations are transformed utilising aggregate properties of the flow field with respect to the excesses of heat and momentum flux at the source relative to the external stream.A non-dimensional downstream coordinate Þ reflecting the local relative importance of jet to external stream characteristics provides a unified framework within which to investigate the entire semi-infinite flow field downstream of the source.The problems examined devolve down to transitional flow in Þ between acknowledged strong jet and weak jet regimes in the immediate vicinity of and downstream of the source respectively.Perturbation solutions are developed in the two regimes.The downstream asymptotic velocity and temperature profiles are shown to be associated with new solutions of the Falkner-Skan equation subject to the boundary condition of symmetry,as opposed to no slip, at the axis of symmetry.A stability analysis of the new solutions and comprehensive numerical solutions over the full flow field confirm that there may be physically realisable flows in which a residual jet identity remains distinguishable within the downstream flow.
Mark Iwen : Fast Phase Retrieval for High-Dimensions
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 99 Views )Phase retrieval problems appear in many imaging applications in which only the magnitude of (e.g., Fourier) transform coefficients of a given signal can be measured. In such settings one desires to learn the original signal (up to a global phase factor) using only such magnitude information. In this talk we discuss methods to rapidly re-learn such lost phase information by using the magnitudes of well-designed combinations of the original transform coefficients. In particular, we develop a fast phase retrieval method which is near-linear time, making it computationally feasible for large dimensional signals. Both theoretical and experimental results demonstrate the method's speed, accuracy, and robustness. We then use this new phase retrieval method to help establish the first known sublinear-time compressive phase retrieval algorithm capable of recovering a given $s$-sparse signal ${\bf x} \in \mathbbm{C}^d$ (up to an unknown phase factor) in just $\mathcal{O}(s \log^5 s \cdot \log d)$-time using only $\mathcal{O}(s \log^4 s \cdot \log d)$ magnitude measurements. This is joint work with Aditya Viswanathan and Yang Wang.
Christel Hohenegger : Small scale stochastic dynamics: Application for near-weall velocimetry measurements
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 148 Views )Fluid velocities and Brownian effects at nanoscales in the near-wall r egion of microchannels can be experimentally measured in an image plane parallel to the wall, using for example, an evanescent wave illumination technique combi ned with particle image velocimetry [R. Sadr et al., J. Fluid Mech. 506, 357-367 (2004)]. Tracers particles are not only carried by the flow, but they undergo r andom fluctuations, the details of which are affected by the proximity of the wa ll. We study such a system under a particle based stochastic approach (Langevin) . We present the modeling assumptions and pay attention to the details of the si mulation of a coupled system of stochastic differential equations through a Mils tein scheme of strong order of convergence 1. Then we demonstrate that a maximum likelihood algorithm can reconstruct the out-of-plane velocity profile, as spec ified velocities at multiple points, given known mobility dependence and perfect mean measurements. We compare this new method with existing cross-correlation t echniques and illustrate its application for noisy data. Physical parameters are chosen to be as close as possible to the experimental parameters.
Jacob Bedrossian : Mixing and enhanced dissipation in the inviscid limit of the Navier-Stokes equations near the 2D Couette flow
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 122 Views )In this work we study the long time, inviscid limit of the 2D Navier-Stokes equations near the periodic Couette flow, and in particular, we confirm at the nonlinear level the qualitative behavior predicted by Kelvin's 1887 linear analysis. At high Reynolds number Re, we prove that the solution behaves qualitatively like 2D Euler for times $t << Re^(1/3)$, and in particular exhibits "inviscid damping" (vorticity mixes and weakly approaches a shear flow). For times $t >> Re^(1/3)$, which is sooner than the natural dissipative time scale $O(Re)$, the viscosity becomes dominant and the streamwise dependence of the vorticity is rapidly eliminated by a mixing-enhanced dissipation effect. Afterwards, the remaining shear flow decays on very long time scales $t >> Re$ back to the Couette flow. The class of initial data we study is the sum of a sufficiently smooth function and a small (with respect to $Re^(-1)$) $L^2$ function. Joint with Nader Masmoudi and Vlad Vicol.
Stephen J. Watson : A Priori Bounds in Thermo-Viscoelasticity with Phase Transitions
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 9 Views )The object of our study is the set of equations of thermo-elasticity with viscosity and heat conduction. These equations include, as a special case, the compressible Navier-Stokes equation familiar from gas dynamics, but in addition allow for solid-like materials. We seek to understand the temporal asymptotic fate of large initial data under a variety of boundary conditions. The realm of phase changes, such as occur in Van-der-Waals gases and martensitic transformations, are of especial interest. Now, obtaining point-wise a priori bounds on the density which are time independent is a major analytical obstacle to resolving this question. We present two new results on this issue. First, for specified-stress boundary conditions we give a positive result applicable to a general class of materials. Second, for Dirichlet boundary conditions we derive the estimates for a special class of gaseous materials; p'th power gases. We conclude with a discussion on the relation between asymptotic states and minimization principles of associated free energies. Numerical simulations will highlight some surprising features of the dynamics. In particular, the limiting states are not necessarily strong minimizers, in the sense of the calculus of variations, of the free energy.
Vakhtang Poutkaradze : Lie-Poisson Neural Networks (LPNets): Data-Based Computing of Hamiltonian Systems with Symmetries
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 20 Views )Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) have received much attention recently due to their potential for high-performance computations for complex physical systems, including data-based computing, systems with unknown parameters, and others. The idea of PINNs is to approximate the equations and boundary and initial conditions through a loss function for a neural network. PINNs combine the efficiency of data-based prediction with the accuracy and insights provided by the physical models. However, applications of these methods to predict the long-term evolution of systems with little friction, such as many systems encountered in space exploration, oceanography/climate, and many other fields, need extra care as the errors tend to accumulate, and the results may quickly become unreliable. We provide a solution to the problem of data-based computation of Hamiltonian systems utilizing symmetry methods. Many Hamiltonian systems with symmetry can be written as a Lie-Poisson system, where the underlying symmetry defines the Poisson bracket. For data-based computing of such systems, we design the Lie-Poisson neural networks (LPNets). We consider the Poisson bracket structure primary and require it to be satisfied exactly, whereas the Hamiltonian, only known from physics, can be satisfied approximately. By design, the method preserves all special integrals of the bracket (Casimirs) to machine precision. LPNets yield an efficient and promising computational method for many particular cases, such as rigid body or satellite motion (the case of SO(3) group), Kirchhoff's equations for an underwater vehicle (SE(3) group), and others. Joint work with Chris Eldred (Sandia National Lab), Francois Gay-Balmaz (CNRS and ENS, France), and Sophia Huraka (U Alberta). The work was partially supported by an NSERC Discovery grant.
Rong Ge : Learning Two-Layer Neural Networks with Symmetric Inputs
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 110 Views )Deep learning has been extremely successful in practice. However, existing guarantees for learning neural networks are limited even when the network has only two layers - they require strong assumptions either on the input distribution or on the norm of the weight vectors. In this talk we give a new algorithm that is guaranteed to learn a two-layer neural network under much milder assumptions on the input distribution. Our algorithms works whenever the input distribution is symmetric - which means two inputs $x$ and $-x$ have the same probability.
Based on joint work with Rohith Kuditipudi, Zhize Li and Xiang Wang
E. Bruce Pitman : Tubuloglomerular Feedback-Mediated Dynamics in Two Coupled Nephrons
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 11 Views )Previously, we developed a ``minimal'' dynamic model for the tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) system in a single, short-looped nephron of the mammalian kidney. In that model, a semilinear hyperbolic partial differential equation was used to represent two fundamental processes of mass transport in the nephron's thick ascending limb (TAL): chloride advection by fluid flow through the TAL lumen and transepithelial chloride transport from the lumen to the interstitium. An empirical function and a time delay were used to relate nephron glomerular filtration rate to the chloride concentration at the macula densa of the TAL. Analysis of the model equations indicated that limit-cycle oscillations (LCO) in nephron fluid flow and chloride concentration can emerge for suffficiently large feedback gain and time delay. In this study, the single-nephron model has been extended to two nephrons, which are coupled through their filtration rates. Explicit analytical conditions were obtained for bifurcation loci corresponding to two special cases: (1) identical time-delays, but differing gains, and (2) identical feedback gain magnitudes, but differing time delays. Similar to the case of a single nephron, the analysis indicates that LCO can emerge in coupled nephrons for sufficiently large gains and delays. However, these LCO may emerge at lower values of the feedback gain, relative to a single (i.e., uncoupled) nephron, or at shorter delays, provided the delays are sufficiently close. These results suggest that, in vivo, if two nephrons are sufficiently similar, then coupling will tend to increase the likelihood of LCO. (In collaboration with Roman M. Zaritski, Leon C. Moore and H. E. Layton)
Cole Graham : Fisher–KPP traveling waves in the half-space
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 69 Views )Reaction-diffusion equations are widely used to model spatial propagation, and constant-speed "traveling waves" play a central role in their dynamics. These waves are well understood in "essentially 1D" domains like cylinders, but much less is known about waves with noncompact transverse structure. In this direction, we will consider traveling waves of the Fisher–KPP reaction-diffusion equation in the Dirichlet half-space. We will see that minimal-speed waves are unique (unlike faster waves) and exhibit curious asymptotics. The arguments rest on the theory of conformal maps and a powerful connection with the probabilistic system known as branching Brownian motion.
This is joint work with Julien Berestycki, Yujin H. Kim, and Bastien Mallein.
Valery A. Kholodnyi : Foreign Exchange Option Symmetry and a Coordinate-Free Description of a Foreign Exchange Option Market
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 11 Views )In spite of the fact that symmetries play one of the major roles in physics, the ir usage in finance is relatively new and, to the best of our knowledge, can be traced to 1995 when Kholodnyi introduced the beliefs-preferences gauge symmetry. In this talk we present another symmetry, foreign exchange option symmetry, int roduced by Kholodnyi and Price in 1996. Foreign exchange option symmetry associa tes financially equivalent options on opposite sides of the foreign exchange mar ket. In a two-currency market, the foreign exchange option symmetry is formalized in terms of the one-dimensional Kelvin transform. In a multiple-currency market the foreign exchange option symmetry is formalized in terms of differential geometr y on graphs, that is, in terms of vector lattice bundles on graphs and connectio ns on these bundles. Foreign exchange option symmetry requires no assumptions on the nature of a prob ability distribution for exchange rates. In fact, it does not even require the a ssumptions of the existence of such a distribution. Furthermore, the symmetry is applicable not only to a foreign exchange market but to any financial market as well. The practical applications of the foreign exchange option symmetry range from th e detection of a new type of true arbitrage to the detection of inconsistent mod els of foreign exchange option markets and the development of algorithms and sof tware to value and analyze portfolios of foreign exchange options.
Click here for extended abstract
Mark Hoefer : Eulerian Dispersive Shock Waves and Instabilities
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 116 Views )Recent experimental and theoretical research in Bose-Einstein condensation and nonlinear optics have demonstrated novel supersonic, fluid-like phenomena. Shock waves in these and other systems are modeled by a dispersive regularization of Euler's equations, implemented by use of the Whitham averaging technique. Normal and oblique dispersive shock waves (DSWs) connecting two constant states are constructed. Numerical computations of supersonic, dispersive flow over a corner in the special case of systems modeled by the Nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLS) exhibit stable pattern formation (oblique DSWs) or instability (turbulent-like behavior) depending on the flow parameters. A combination of analytical and computational approaches are used to demonstrate that this change in behavior can be identified with the transition from convective to absolute instability of dark solitons. The linearized NLS behavior about the dark soliton DSW trailing edge is studied in detail to identify the separatrix between convective and absolute instabilities.
Michael Shearer : Continuum Models of Granular Flow
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 12 Views )Continuum models of the flow of granular materials in a hopper admit so-called radial solutions. These describe steady flows that appear realistic, and have been used extensively to design commercial hoppers. However, numerical results demonstrate that these solutions may not be robust to perturbation. Moreover, the time dependent equations are (notoriously) ill-posed. In this talk, I describe preliminary research designed to investigate the extent to which steady solutions may be used to represent granular flow. Using a combination of analysis and numerical experiments, we have explored simple models that are linearly ill posed. While there may be a stable steady state, it is a solution of a discretized continuum model, rather than the original equations. Moreover, the survival time of transients is inversely related to the mesh width, suggesting that the continuum limit is meaningless. While these results are not intended to invalidate the radial solutions, they do raise serious concerns about continuum modeling, and the possibility of designing a robust code that can be used to simulate a variety of granular flows.
Raanan Schul : Traveling Salesman type Results in quantitative rectifiability
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 147 Views )We will discuss several results concerning quantitative rectifiability in metric spaces, which generalize Euclidean results. We will spend some time explaining both the metric space results as well as their Euclidean counterparts. An example of such a result is a structure theorem, which characterizes subsets of rectifiable curves (the Analyst's Traveling Salesman theorem). This theory is presented in terms of multi-scale analysis and multi-scale constructions, and uses a language which is analogous to that of wavelets. Some of the results we will present will be dimension free.
Massimo Fornasier : Sparse Stabilization and Optimal Control in Consensus Emergence
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 95 Views )From a mathematical point of view self-organization can be described as the formation of patterns, where certain dynamical systems modeling social dynamics tend autonomously to converge. The fascinating mechanism to be revealed by such a modeling is how to connect the microscopical and usually binary rules or social forces of interaction between individuals with the eventual global behavior or group pattern, forming as a superposition in time of the different microscopical effects. In this talk we explore mechanisms to go beyond self-organization, in particular how to externally control such dynamical systems in order to eventually enforce pattern formation also in those situations where this wished phenomenon does not result from spontaneous and autonomous convergence. Our focus is on dynamical systems of Cucker-Smale type, modeling consensus emergence, and we question the existence of stabilization and optimal control strategies which require the minimal amount of external intervention for nevertheless inducing consensus in a group of interacting agents. On the one hand and formally, our main result realizes the connection between certain variational problems involving L1-norm terms and optimal sparse controls. On the other hand, our findings can be informally stated in terms of the general principle for which "A policy maker should always consider more favorable to intervene with stronger actions on the fewest possible instantaneous optimal leaders than trying to control more agents, with minor strength".
Jade Vinson : The Holyhedron Problem
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 11 Views )Several years ago John Conway asked whether there could exist a polyhedron that "had a hole in every face," and coined the name "holyhedron" for them, if they should exist. We answer this question by constructing a holyhedron with 78,585,627 faces and genus 60,380,421. This is a polyhedron so that the interior of every face is connected but not simply connected.
Benjamin Dodson : Concentration compactness for the L^2 critical nonlinear Schrodinger equation
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 122 Views )The nonlinear Schrodinger equation
i ut + D u = m |u|(4/d)u | (1) |
As time permits the talk will also discuss the energy - critical problem in Rd \ W,
i ut + D u = |u|4/(d - 2) u | , u|Bdry(W) = 0, (2) |
Scott McKinley : Fluctuating Hydrodynamics of Polymers in Dilute Solution
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 139 Views )In 1953, the physicist P.E. Rouse proposed to model polymers in dilute solution by taking the polymer to be a series of beads connected by Gaussian springs. Neglecting inertia, the dynamics are set by a balance between the thermal fluctuations in the fluid and the elastic restoring force of the springs. One year later, B. Zimm noted that a polymer will interact with itself through the fluid in a qualitatively meaningful way. In this talk, we consider a more recent Langevin equation approach to dealing with hydrodynamic self-interaction. This involves coupling the continuum scaling limit of the Rouse model with stochastically forced time-dependent Stokes equations. The resulting pair of parabolic SPDE, with non-linear coupled forcing, presents a number of mathematical challenges. On the way to providing an existence and uniqueness result, we shall take time to develop relevant stochastic tools, and consider the modeling implications of certain technical results.
Michael Catanzaro : Stochastic dynamics of cellular cycles
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 96 Views )In this talk, we will explore stochastic motion of cellular cycles inside CW complexes. This serves as a generalization of random walks on graphs, and a discretization of stochastic flows on smooth manifolds. We will define a notion of stochastic current, connect it to classical electric current, and show it satisfies a quantization result. Along the way, we will define the main combinatorial objects of study, namely spanning trees and spanning co-trees in higher dimensions. We will relate these to stochastic current, as well as discrete Hodge theory.
Anna Georgieva : Resonances in Nonlinear Discrete Periodic Medium
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 11 Views )We derive traveling wave solutions in a nonlinear diatomic particle chain near the 1:2 resonance (k*, omega*), where omega*=D(k*), 2omega*=D(2k*) and omega=D(k) is the linear dispersion relation. To leading order, the waves have form +/- epsilon sin(k n-omega t) + delta sin(2 k n-2 omega t), where the near-resonant acoustic frequency omega and the amplitude epsilon of the first harmonic are given to first order in terms of the wavenumber difference k-k* and the amplitude delta of the second harmonic. These traveling wave solutions are unique within a certain set of symmetries.
We find that there is a continuous line in parameter space, that transfers energy from the first to the second harmonic, even in cases where initially almost all energy is in the first harmonic, connecting these waves to pure optical waves that have no first harmonic content. The analysis is extended to higher resonances.
Shahed Sharif : Who wants to be a millionaire?
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 93 Views )The Mordell-Weil theorem shows that the rational points on an elliptic curve defined over the field of rational numbers is a finitely generated abelian group. The Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture relates the rank of this group to a number of analytic and algebraic invariants of the curve. (More generally it considers an elliptic curve defined over a number field.) The conjecture is one of the Millennium Prize problems and the Clay Institute is offering a reward of 1 million dollars for a solution. This talk will be an introduction to the conjecture. In following weeks we will have lectures explaining each of the terms in the formula.
Xiuyuan Cheng : Limiting Spectrum of Random Kernel Matrices
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 110 Views )We consider n-by-n matrices whose (i, j)-th entry is f(X_i^T X_j), where X_1, ...,X_n are i.i.d. standard Gaussian random vectors in R^p, and f is a real-valued function. The eigenvalue distribution of these kernel random matrices is studied in the "large p, large n" regime. It is shown that with suitable normalization the spectral density converges weakly, and we identify the limit. Our analysis applies as long as the rescaled kernel function is generic, and particularly, this includes non-smooth functions, e.g. Heaviside step function. The limiting densities "interpolate" between the Marcenko-Pastur density and the semi-circle density.
Karl Glasner : Dissipative fluid systems and gradient flows
- Applied Math and Analysis ( 15 Views )This talk describes the the gradient flow nature of dissipative fluid interface problems. Intuitively, the gradient of a functional is given by the direction of ``steepest descent''. This notion, however, depends on the geometry assigned to the underlying function space. The task is therefore to find a metric appropriate for the given dynamics.
For the problem of surface tension driven Hele-shaw flow, the correct metric turns out to have a remarkable connection to an optimal transport problem. This connection points the way to a diffuse interface description of Hele-Shaw flow, given by a degenerate Cahn-Hilliard equation. Some computational examples of this model will be given. The problem of viscous sintering, the Stokes flow counterpart to the Hele-Shaw problem, will also be discussed.