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RAPSODI - 2025

2025‌​‌Activity reportProject-TeamRAPSODI​​

RNSR: 201521771D
  • Research center​​​‌ Inria Centre at the‌ University of Lille
  • In‌​‌ partnership with:Université de​​ Lille
  • Team name: Reliable​​​‌ numerical approximations of dissipative‌ systems
  • In collaboration with:‌​‌Laboratoire Paul Painlevé (LPP)​​​‌

Creation of the Project-Team:​ 2017 November 01

Each​‌ year, Inria research teams​​ publish an Activity Report​​​‌ presenting their work and​ results over the reporting​‌ period. These reports follow​​ a common structure, with​​​‌ some optional sections depending​ on the specific team.​‌ They typically begin by​​ outlining the overall objectives​​​‌ and research programme, including​ the main research themes,​‌ goals, and methodological approaches.​​ They also describe the​​​‌ application domains targeted by​ the team, highlighting the​‌ scientific or societal contexts​​ in which their work​​​‌ is situated.

The reports​ then present the highlights​‌ of the year, covering​​ major scientific achievements, software​​​‌ developments, or teaching contributions.​ When relevant, they include​‌ sections on software, platforms,​​ and open data, detailing​​​‌ the tools developed and​ how they are shared.​‌ A substantial part is​​ dedicated to new results,​​​‌ where scientific contributions are​ described in detail, often​‌ with subsections specifying participants​​ and associated keywords.

Finally,​​​‌ the Activity Report addresses​ funding, contracts, partnerships, and​‌ collaborations at various levels,​​ from industrial agreements to​​​‌ international cooperations. It also​ covers dissemination and teaching​‌ activities, such as participation​​ in scientific events, outreach,​​​‌ and supervision. The document​ concludes with a presentation​‌ of scientific production, including​​ major publications and those​​​‌ produced during the year.​

Keywords

Computer Science and​‌ Digital Science

  • A6. Modeling,​​ simulation and control
  • A6.1.​​​‌ Methods in mathematical modeling​
  • A6.1.1. Continuous Modeling (PDE,​‌ ODE)
  • A6.1.4. Multiscale modeling​​
  • A6.1.5. Multiphysics modeling
  • A6.2.​​​‌ Scientific computing, Numerical Analysis​ & Optimization
  • A6.2.1. Numerical​‌ analysis of PDE and​​ ODE
  • A6.2.6. Optimization
  • A6.5.2.​​​‌ Fluid mechanics
  • A6.5.3. Transport​
  • A6.5.4. Waves
  • A6.5.5. Chemistry​‌

Other Research Topics and​​ Application Domains

  • B1.1.8. Mathematical​​​‌ biology
  • B3. Environment and​ planet
  • B3.3. Geosciences
  • B3.3.1.​‌ Earth and subsoil
  • B3.4.​​ Risks
  • B3.4.2. Industrial risks​​​‌ and waste
  • B4. Energy​
  • B4.2. Nuclear Energy Production​‌
  • B4.2.1. Fission
  • B9.5.2. Mathematics​​
  • B9.5.3. Physics
  • B9.5.4. Chemistry​​​‌

1 Team members, visitors,​ external collaborators

Research Scientists​‌

  • Clément Cances [Team​​ leader, INRIA,​​​‌ Senior Researcher, HDR​]
  • Alain Blaustein [​‌INRIA, Researcher]​​
  • Theophile Chaumont-Frelet [INRIA​​​‌, Researcher]
  • Maxime​ Herda [INRIA,​‌ Researcher]
  • Simon Lemaire​​ [INRIA, Researcher​​​‌]
  • Andrea Natale [​INRIA, Researcher,​‌ until Jun 2025]​​

Faculty Members

  • Caterina Calgaro​​​‌ [UNIV LILLE,​ Associate Professor]
  • Claire​‌ Chainais [UNIV LILLE​​, Professor Delegation,​​​‌ HDR]
  • Cindy Guichard​ [SORBONNE UNIV,​‌ Associate Professor Delegation,​​ until Aug 2025]​​​‌
  • Marien-Lorenzo Hanot [UNIV​ LILLE, Associate Professor​‌]
  • Marc Pegon [​​UNIV LILLE, Associate​​​‌ Professor, from Feb​ 2025]
  • Marc Pegon​‌ [UNIV LILLE,​​ Associate Professor Delegation,​​​‌ until Jan 2025]​

Post-Doctoral Fellows

  • Thomas Crozon​‌ [CNRS, from​​ Mar 2025]
  • Pierre​​​‌ Gervais [CNRS,​ Post-Doctoral Fellow, until​‌ Aug 2025]
  • Sumit​​ Mahajan [INRIA,​​​‌ Post-Doctoral Fellow, from​ Apr 2025]

PhD​‌ Students

  • Mohammed Chaibi [​​INRIA, from Oct​​​‌ 2025]
  • Robin Colombier​ [UNIV VALENCIENNES]​‌
  • Ngoc Do Quyen Dang​​ [IFPEN]
  • Abdoul​​ Aziz Diallo [UNIV​​​‌ LILLE]
  • Julian Doerner‌ [KIT - ALLEMAGNE‌​‌, from Sep 2025​​, Visiting student for​​​‌ 6 months]
  • Amelie‌ Dupouy [INRIA]‌​‌
  • Cyrian Marczewski [UNIV​​ VALENCIENNES, from Sep​​​‌ 2025]

Interns and‌ Apprentices

  • Mohammed Chaibi [‌​‌INRIA, from Jul​​ 2025 until Sep 2025​​​‌]
  • Cyrian Marczewski [‌INRIA, Intern,‌​‌ from Feb 2025 until​​ Jun 2025]
  • Pomme​​​‌ Dit Astel Molendi-Coste [‌ENS RENNES, from‌​‌ May 2025 until Jun​​ 2025]
  • Appa Sonko​​​‌ [INRIA, Intern‌, from May 2025‌​‌ until Jul 2025]​​
  • Mehdi Zellat [UNIV​​​‌ LILLE, Intern,‌ from Jun 2025 until‌​‌ Jul 2025]

Administrative​​ Assistant

  • Aurore Dalle [​​​‌INRIA]

External Collaborators‌

  • Matthieu Alfaro [UNIV‌​‌ ROUEN, HDR]​​
  • Emmanuel Creusé [UNIV​​​‌ VALENCIENNES, HDR]‌
  • Juliette Venel [UNIV‌​‌ VALENCIENNES, HDR]​​

2 Overall objectives

Together​​​‌ with the diffusion of‌ scientific computing, there has‌​‌ been a recent and​​ impressive increase of the​​​‌ demand for numerical methods.‌ The problems to be‌​‌ addressed are everyday more​​ complex and require specific​​​‌ numerical algorithms. The quality‌ of the results has‌​‌ to be accurately assessed,​​ so that in-silico experiments​​​‌ results can be trusted.‌ Nowadays, producing such reliable‌​‌ numerical results goes way​​ beyond the abilities of​​​‌ isolated researchers, and must‌ be carried out by‌​‌ structured teams.

The topics​​ addressed by the RAPSODI​​​‌ project-team belong to the‌ broad theme of numerical‌​‌ methods for the approximation​​ of the solutions to​​​‌ systems of partial differential‌ equations (PDEs). Besides standard‌​‌ convergence properties, a good​​ numerical method for approximating​​​‌ a physical problem has‌ to satisfy at least‌​‌ the following three criteria:​​

  1. preservation at the discrete​​​‌ level of some crucial‌ features of the solution,‌​‌ such as positivity of​​ solutions, conservation of prescribed​​​‌ quantities (e.g., mass), decay‌ of physically motivated entropies,‌​‌ free energies, etc;
  2. provide​​ accurate numerical approximations at​​​‌ a reasonable computational cost‌ (and ultimately maximize the‌​‌ accuracy at a fixed​​ computational effort);
  3. robustness with​​​‌ respect to physical conditions:‌ the computational cost for‌​‌ a given accuracy should​​ be essentially insensitive to​​​‌ a change in physical‌ parameters.

We contribute to‌​‌ the development of methods​​ fulfilling the above quality​​​‌ criteria for physical models‌ which display, in their‌​‌ vast majority, a dissipative​​ behavior, and that are​​​‌ motivated by industrial collaborations‌ or multidisciplinary projects.

Ideally,‌​‌ we should allow ourselves​​ to design entirely new​​​‌ numerical methods. For some‌ applications however (often in‌​‌ the context of industrial​​ collaborations), the members of​​​‌ the team have to‌ work with existing codes.‌​‌ The numerical algorithms have​​ thus to be optimized​​​‌ under this constraint.

Some‌ technological bottlenecks related to‌​‌ points (a)–(c) mentioned above​​ are well identified. In​​​‌ particular, it appears that‌ a good numerical method‌​‌ should handle general meshes,​​ so that dynamic mesh​​​‌ adaptation strategies can be‌ used in order to‌​‌ achieve (b). But it​​ should also be of​​​‌ the highest possible order‌ while remaining stable in‌​‌ the sense of (a),​​​‌ and robust in the​ sense of (c). There​‌ have been numerous research​​ contributions on each point​​​‌ of (a)–(c) in the​ last decades, in particular​‌ for solving each difficulty​​ separately, but combining them​​​‌ still leads to unsolved​ problems of crucial interest.​‌ Yet, before addressing the​​ above points (a)–(c) concerning​​​‌ the design of nice​ numerical methods, one has​‌ to identify the structural​​ properties of (and possibly​​​‌ modify) the continuous model​ to be discretized.

In​‌ a nutshell, our goal​​ is to take advantage​​​‌ of and extend the​ most recent breakthroughs of​‌ the mathematical community to​​ tackle in an efficient​​​‌ way some application-guided problems​ coming either from academics​‌ or from industrial partners.​​ To this end, we​​​‌ focus on the following​ objectives, which are necessary​‌ for the applications we​​ work on and which​​​‌ define the three research​ axes of our project:​‌

  1. Study of the structural​​ properties of continuous PDE​​​‌ models.
  2. Design and​ numerical analysis of structure-preserving​‌ numerical methods.
  3. Computational​​ optimization of the numerical​​​‌ methods.

The originality​ of the RAPSODI research​‌ team is its holistic​​ approach as illustrated on​​​‌ Figure 1.

Figure 1

model​ derivation (PDEs), then identification​‌ of fundamental properties, then​​ mathematical analysis of the​​​‌ model, then design of​ numerical schemes, then numerical​‌ analysis of the schemes,​​ then higher order extensions​​​‌ and finally solver analysis​ of schemes

We consider​‌ the problem resolution in​​ a global manner, starting​​​‌ from the model derivation​ (for instance based on​‌ physical principles) to the​​ practical development of efficient​​​‌ numerical methods.

model derivation​ (PDEs), then identification of​‌ fundamental properties, then mathematical​​ analysis of the model,​​​‌ then design of numerical​ schemes, then numerical analysis​‌ of the schemes, then​​ higher order extensions and​​​‌ finally solver analysis of​ schemes

We consider the​‌ problem resolution in a​​ global manner, starting from​​​‌ the model derivation (for​ instance based on physical​‌ principles) to the practical​​ development of efficient numerical​​​‌ methods.

Figure 1:​ We consider the problem​‌ resolution in a global​​ manner, starting from the​​​‌ model derivation (for instance​ based on physical principles)​‌ to the practical development​​ of efficient numerical methods.​​​‌

The study of the​ structural properties of the​‌ models under consideration helps​​ in designing robust and​​​‌ accurate numerical schemes. It​ also helps in the​‌ design of efficient solvers.​​ Our research program in​​​‌ these three axes, which​ constitute the core of​‌ the RAPSODI research project,​​ is now going to​​​‌ be further detailed.

3​ Research program

3.1 Axis​‌ 1: Study of the​​ structural properties of continuous​​​‌ models

A well-behaved continuous​ (PDE based) model is​‌ a requisite to a​​ reliable numerical approximation. The​​​‌ fine understanding of a​ continuous model is indeed​‌ a prior to the​​ design of a numerical​​​‌ scheme in order to​ identify the structural properties​‌ to be preserved at​​ the discrete level. Further,​​​‌ the mathematical analysis carried​ out on the continuous​‌ model often paves the​​ way for the theoretical​​​‌ foundations of the numerical​ methods, hence our strong​‌ interest in this first​​ research axis. Analyzing time-dependent​​ PDE systems relying on​​​‌ their mathematical (Hamiltonian, gradient‌ flow, ...) structure is‌​‌ very natural and unsurprisingly​​ not new. However, the​​​‌ interest in this domain‌ strongly increased in the‌​‌ last two decades. The​​ focus of the RAPSODI​​​‌ project-team encompasses kinetic models,‌ fluid mechanics, electromagnetism, multicomponent‌​‌ systems and applied calculus​​ of variations. While carrying​​​‌ out theoretical analyses, we‌ bear in mind that‌​‌ our results should be​​ transposed to the discrete​​​‌ setting.

3.1.1 Thermodynamically consistent‌ models for multi-component systems‌​‌

Mathematical tools for the​​ derivation and the mathematical​​​‌ analysis of models which‌ are compatible with the‌​‌ second principle of thermodynamics​​ and more specifically with​​​‌ Onsager's reciprocal principle 146‌ widely developed in the‌​‌ last decade. The general​​ setting proposed in 141​​​‌, 148 offers a‌ powerful and robust framework‌​‌ for obtaining such models​​ in configurations where inertia​​​‌ can be neglected.

This‌ situation is typical of‌​‌ porous media flows in​​ the Darcy regime. When​​​‌ rich physics are considered,‌ like in presence of‌​‌ multiple phases and components​​ within deformable and fractured​​​‌ matrices, the derivation of‌ such thermodynamically consistent models‌​‌ is a timely problem​​ 153, 154,​​​‌ 156. One of‌ the goals of the‌​‌ RAPSODI project-team is to​​ contribute to the mathematical​​​‌ understanding of such models‌ 5.

Inertia is‌​‌ also commonly neglected in​​ models for semi-conductors of​​​‌ van Roosbroeck type, as‌ for instance in models‌​‌ for the corrosion of​​ iron 87. In​​​‌ the latter framework, the‌ geometry of the domain‌​‌ varies along time and​​ is one of the​​​‌ unknowns of the problem.‌ The reference model proposed‌​‌ in 87 is not​​ built from thermodynamical considerations.​​​‌ The design, the simulation‌ and the calibration of‌​‌ a mathematical model which​​ is consistent with the​​​‌ second principle is an‌ ongoing task addressed by‌​‌ our team (see 104​​ for preliminary results).

3.1.2​​​‌ Variational models and optimal‌ transport

Optimal transport has‌​‌ a long history. In​​ Monge's seminal work “Théorie​​​‌ des déblais et des‌ remblais” dating back to‌​‌ 1781 155, the​​ problem was roughly stated​​​‌ the following way: how‌ should one proceed to‌​‌ move piles of sand​​ from one point to​​​‌ another in order to‌ minimize the workload? This‌​‌ problem is now often​​ referred to as “Monge​​​‌ problem”. It has stayed‌ with no solution in‌​‌ the general case until​​ the 1940s, when Kantorovich​​​‌ inserted it into a‌ proper framework 135,‌​‌ which allowed eventually to​​ tackle it and provide​​​‌ solutions. A major breakthrough‌ was obtained by Brenier‌​‌ 96, who showed​​ that under very broad​​​‌ assumptions, the general solution‌ to the optimal transport‌​‌ problem had a very​​ specific form and could​​​‌ be linked with the‌ famous Monge–Ampère equation.

In‌​‌ recent years, optimal transport​​ has become a very​​​‌ active field of research,‌ due to the discovery‌​‌ of new and efficient​​ algorithms 122 and to​​​‌ its wide range of‌ applications, to economy, image‌​‌ processing, analysis of partial​​ differential equations or data​​​‌ sciences (see e.g. references‌ in 149).

One‌​‌ of the focus of​​​‌ our team is the​ use of optimal transport​‌ for understanding the formation​​ of bi-layer cellular membranes​​​‌ thanks to a model​ introduced in 147.​‌ In this model, the​​ global shape of micelles​​​‌ or liposomes should be​ the result of competing​‌ forces: a short-range attractive​​ force given by the​​​‌ area of the boundary,​ and a non-local repulsive​‌ force of Wasserstein-type (that​​ is, an optimal transport​​​‌ cost). Our aim is​ to explore numerically this​‌ problem and obtain theoretically​​ the shape of the​​​‌ solutions in some asymptotic​ regimes.

3.1.3 Kinetic models​‌ of large particle systems​​ and their asymptotic regimes​​​‌

Nearly 150 years after​ Boltzmann paved the way​‌ to the kinetic representation​​ of complex phenomena 95​​​‌, this approach for​ modeling is more than​‌ ever active. This increasing​​ interest is partially due​​​‌ to the development of​ computational facilities that make​‌ the numerical approximation of​​ such models possible, but​​​‌ also to the great​ flexibility of the approach​‌ which can be applied​​ in biology 152,​​​‌ economics 124 or social​ sciences 97, way​‌ beyond its original scope​​ in physics of gases.​​​‌

One focus of our​ team is the asymptotic​‌ analysis of these equations.​​ The large-time limit of​​​‌ kinetic equations has been​ dealt with thanks to​‌ hypocoercivity techniques in 83​​ and new hydrodynamic limits​​​‌ have been derived from​ kinetic models for gases​‌ composed of macroscopic particles​​ interacting via energy dissipative​​​‌ collisions 133, 111​ and plasmas 132.​‌ A future concern will​​ be the study of​​​‌ the long time dynamics​ of a kinetic model​‌ for relativistic electron bunches​​ in storage rings 150​​​‌ (see Section 4.6).​

3.2 Axis 2: Design​‌ and analysis of structure-preserving​​ numerical methods

The more​​​‌ complex is the PDE​ system to be discretized,​‌ the smaller is the​​ chance that a naive​​​‌ discretization preserves at the​ discrete level its mathematical​‌ structure. Since this structure​​ was the cornerstone of​​​‌ the mathematical analysis (typically​ by providing the well-posedness​‌ and the stability of​​ the continuous system under​​​‌ consideration), its preservation at​ the discrete level will​‌ be key to get​​ well-behaved and theoretically certified​​​‌ numerical methods. Our team​ concentrates a large part​‌ of its research effort​​ on the design of​​​‌ provably convergent numerical methods,​ either based on the​‌ popular two-point flux approximation​​ finite volume method, or​​​‌ on more flexible yet​ less natural structure preserving​‌ methods. We also pay​​ attention to the fact​​​‌ that our schemes are​ robust with respect to​‌ the parameters and in​​ the long time limit.​​​‌ The numerical approximation of​ complex (inhomogeneous or with​‌ low compressibility) flows is​​ one of the topics​​​‌ we address.

3.2.1 Structure-preserving​ methods for systems of​‌ dissipative PDEs and variational​​ models

A very important​​​‌ part of the activity​ of our team concerns​‌ the design of structure-preserving​​ numerical methods for dissipative​​​‌ PDEs.

In this regard,​ two-point flux approximation (TPFA)​‌ finite volume schemes are​​ very popular in industrial​​​‌ codes since they enjoy​ remarkable stability properties at​‌ a moderate computational price.​​ Our team has a​​ strong experience in the​​​‌ design of provably convergent‌ entropy stable TPFA finite‌​‌ volume schemes for complex​​ problems 78, 101​​​‌, 107, 130‌, 110, 4‌​‌, 100, 116​​, 105, 108​​​‌, 110. Ongoing‌ 106, 144 and‌​‌ future research directions are​​ based on the discretization​​​‌ of some action functionals‌ and their optimization to‌​‌ obtain so-called variational schemes​​ based on TPFA finite​​​‌ volumes. We also mention‌ the Lagrangian approach 128‌​‌, for which the​​ computation of some optimal​​​‌ tessellation based on semi-discrete‌ optimal transportation shows subtle‌​‌ but deep similarities with​​ Eulerian TPFA based methods.​​​‌

The main drawback of‌ TPFA finite volume schemes‌​‌ is that they (essentially)​​ restrict to isotropic diffusion​​​‌ problems and to regular‌ grids 127, 129‌​‌. The strong constraints​​ on the meshes and​​​‌ on the isotropic nature‌ of the problems under‌​‌ consideration for TPFA schemes​​ motivated in the last​​​‌ decades the development of‌ more robust finite volume‌​‌ schemes, see for instance​​ 125 for a review​​​‌ on this topic. These‌ developments were particularly motivated‌​‌ by applications in geosciences,​​ where anisotropic porous media​​​‌ are common and where‌ (possibly poorly regular) meshes‌​‌ are often prescribed by​​ data. Tuning such advanced​​​‌ methods, which do not‌ enjoy monotonicity properties in‌​‌ general, to make them​​ thermodynamically consistent is a​​​‌ key challenge for our‌ team. An active research‌​‌ topic of our team​​ is to propose new​​​‌ structure-preserving numerical schemes beyond‌ TPFA. Our team has‌​‌ made important preliminary contributions​​ on this topic through​​​‌ the design of structure-preserving‌ control volume finite elements‌​‌ schemes 76, 77​​, vertex centered finite​​​‌ volume schemes 6,‌ discrete duality finite volume‌​‌ schemes 103, finite​​ element schemes 109 and​​​‌ hybrid finite volume schemes‌ 114. The latter‌​‌ numerical method also constitutes​​ a first step towards​​​‌ high-order methods (see Section‌ 3.2.2).

We intend‌​‌ to pursue our contributions​​ in the development of​​​‌ structure-preserving numerical methods, both‌ based on simple TPFA‌​‌ finite volumes and on​​ more advanced robust methods.​​​‌ We will keep working‌ on always more complex‌​‌ porous media flows, more​​ advanced semi-conductor devices, or​​​‌ on non-standard flow models.‌

3.2.2 High-order structure-preserving numerical‌​‌ methods

Taking advantage of​​ our experience in the​​​‌ design of low-order structure-preserving‌ numerical schemes, we intend‌​‌ to improve the accuracy​​ of our numerical methods​​​‌ by going to high-order‌ discretizations in the space‌​‌ and time variables.

There​​ are important contributors in​​​‌ the community in these‌ topics. For instance, the‌​‌ development of high-order in​​ space methods allowing for​​​‌ general grids for diffusion‌ problems was pushed forward‌​‌ in the last decade​​ by several groups, for​​​‌ instance around Lourenço Beirão‌ da Veiga and Franco‌​‌ Brezzi 90 for the​​ Virtual Element Methods (VEM),​​​‌ around Daniele A. Di‌ Pietro and Alexandre Ern‌​‌ 10, 123 for​​ the Hybrid High-Order (HHO)​​​‌ methods, or around Bernardo‌ Cockburn 120 for the‌​‌ Hybridizable Discontinuous Galerkin (HDG)​​ methods.

Our team aims​​​‌ at designing high-order in‌ space and entropy stable‌​‌ schemes based on the​​​‌ HHO technology. We also​ aim at developing high-order​‌ methods on general meshes​​ for electromagnetism in the​​​‌ context of a collaboration​ with EDF (French electricity​‌ supply company), with application​​ to the non-invasive control​​​‌ of nuclear plants (see​ Section 4.4).

Concerning​‌ the time discretization strategies,​​ we take inspiration in​​​‌ the works by Giovanni​ Samaey 137 for projective​‌ integration schemes, and in​​ those by Christophe Besse​​​‌ 92 and Jie Shen​ 99 for relaxation methods.​‌ It appears that (explicit)​​ Strong Stability Preserving high-order​​​‌ time discretizations 131,​ which are very popular​‌ in the community working​​ on hyperbolic systems, are​​​‌ not suitable for solving​ dissipation driven (and typically​‌ parabolic) systems for which​​ implicit methods are commonly​​​‌ used.

At the moment,​ most of our energy​‌ stable methods rely on​​ merely first-order time discretizations,​​​‌ typically Backward Euler or​ minimizing movement schemes 134​‌. The extension to​​ higher order time discretizations​​​‌ is already the purpose​ of ongoing studies in​‌ our team. Two tracks​​ have been identified so​​​‌ far and are already​ studied: (i) the variational​‌ BDF2 scheme 140 which​​ generalizes to second order​​​‌ in time the minimizing​ movement scheme, and (ii)​‌ Runge-Kutta type schemes obtained​​ after having changed of​​​‌ main variables. Both approaches​ have their pros and​‌ their cons: (i) is​​ difficult to implement, whereas​​​‌ (ii) might lead to​ non-conservative methods. Our goal​‌ for the next years​​ on this topic is​​​‌ to be able to​ overpass the difficulties of​‌ (at least one of)​​ these methods and to​​​‌ get efficient implementation strategies​ as well as theoretical​‌ foundations.

3.2.3 Asymptotic-preserving and​​ multiscale numerical methods

It​​​‌ has been understood around​ year 2000 that the​‌ fine quantification of the​​ entropy dissipation allows one​​​‌ to deduce fine properties​ on the asymptotic behavior​‌ of the solutions to​​ dissipative PDEs 81,​​​‌ 112. The extension​ to the discrete setting​‌ of this type of​​ tools is more recent,​​​‌ see for instance 113​, 94, 115​‌. Our team is​​ involved in the study​​​‌ of the long-time behavior​ of numerical schemes for​‌ drift-diffusion models 93,​​ 102, 7,​​​‌ 114 and kinetic equations​ 2, 84.​‌ A future challenge is​​ the study of the​​​‌ long time behavior properties​ for numerical schemes which​‌ can handle general meshes​​ and high order accuracy​​​‌ (see Section 3.2.1 and​ Section 3.2.2).

We​‌ also contribute actively to​​ the design and analysis​​​‌ of multiscale methods for​ highly heterogeneous (or highly​‌ oscillatory) diffusion problems. We​​ have extended in 119​​​‌ within the HHO framework​ the nonconforming multiscale method​‌ of 136 to arbitrary​​ approximation orders (and its​​​‌ analysis also to the​ case of general meshes).​‌ We have also established​​ in 117 an equivalence​​​‌ result between our multiscale​ HHO method and the​‌ MHM method of 80​​, improving in passing​​​‌ on both methods.

In​ the future we will​‌ continue our effort in​​ the design of numerical​​​‌ schemes which enjoy accurate​ asymptotic properties in large​‌ time, extreme regimes of​​ parameters and multiscale settings.​​ This effort, which aims​​​‌ at increasing the robustness‌ of our numerical methods,‌​‌ is strongly correlated with​​ the preservation of energy​​​‌ or entropy dissipation structures‌ at the discrete level‌​‌ (cf. Section 3.2.1),​​ as explained above. A​​​‌ particular effort has begun‌ in the investigation of‌​‌ asymptotic preserving schemes to​​ pass from kinetic models​​​‌ to van Roosbroeck type‌ models for semiconductor devices.‌​‌

3.2.4 Numerical methods for​​ optimal transport

In the​​​‌ last years, optimal transport‌ and its generalisations have‌​‌ proven to be a​​ powerful tool to analyse​​​‌ a large class of‌ models, exposing useful mathematical‌​‌ structures which are responsible​​ of their properties 79​​​‌, and guiding the‌ conception of novel numerical‌​‌ schemes. Due to its​​ geometrical and physical meanings,​​​‌ optimal transport has also‌ emerged as a useful‌​‌ modelling tool in different​​ contexts including economics, biology​​​‌ or social sciences 151‌.

Transportation problems can‌​‌ often be cast as​​ global space-time optimisation problems​​​‌ such as in variational‌ mean field games or‌​‌ optimal planning problems 91​​. Part of the​​​‌ activity of our team‌ in this area is‌​‌ concerned with the analysis​​ of such models in​​​‌ the discrete setting, which‌ poses significant difficulties both‌​‌ in terms of the​​ conception of schemes (which​​​‌ often passes through the‌ definition of discrete variational‌​‌ problems) 144143,​​ and of the devising​​​‌ of efficient optimization algorithms‌ to compute their solutions‌​‌ 12.

As currently​​ many of these problems​​​‌ are still intractable at‌ the numerical level (due‌​‌ to their high dimensionality​​ and lack of smoothness),​​​‌ our aim is to‌ further improve the current‌​‌ approaches, for example by​​ using unstructured meshes in​​​‌ space-time, which would pave‌ the way for the‌​‌ development of adaptive refinement​​ techniques. Importantly, such new​​​‌ schemes could be used‌ as a building block‌​‌ to construct new discretisations​​ for PDEs with a​​​‌ variational structure related to‌ optimal transport (such as‌​‌ Wasserstein gradient flows 145​​13). In particular,​​​‌ this could represent an‌ additional research path to‌​‌ reach our objectives mentioned​​ in Section 3.2.1.​​​‌

3.3 Axis 3: Computational‌ optimization of the numerical‌​‌ methods

Good numerical methods​​ shall enjoy strong theoretical​​​‌ foundations allowing to guarantee‌ their behavior in very‌​‌ general situations. They shall​​ also be highly efficient​​​‌ from a computational point‌ of view, so that‌​‌ they can be used​​ in practice for solving​​​‌ real-world problems.

To increase‌ the efficiency and applicability‌​‌ of our methods, we​​ work on three tracks.​​​‌ First, we aim at‌ building a unified and‌​‌ optimized software platform to​​ implement, test and diffuse​​​‌ our numerical methods. Second,‌ since our methods often‌​‌ yield nonlinear systems, the​​ improvement of the nonlinear​​​‌ solvers is also key‌ to increase the efficiency‌​‌ of our methods. Finally,​​ for high-dimensional models such​​​‌ as kinetic and particle‌ systems, the curse of‌​‌ dimensionality makes numerical computations​​ realistically feasible only if​​​‌ specific computationally efficient numerical‌ strategies are deployed.

3.3.1‌​‌ Development of the platform​​ ParaSkel++

ParaSkel++89 is​​​‌ a C++ platform, conceived‌ by Simon Lemaire and‌​‌ mainly developed since December​​​‌ 2022 by T. Zoto​ (succeeding L. Beaude), which​‌ is freely distributed under​​ LGPL v3.0. The ParaSkel++​​​‌ platform aims at the​ high-performance, arbitrary-order, 2/3D numerical​‌ approximation of PDEs on​​ general polytopal meshes using​​​‌ skeletal Galerkin methods (see​ 139).

A first​‌ version (v1, August 2021)​​ of the platform is​​​‌ operational, featuring a sequential​ implementation of all the​‌ main skeletal methods (Lagrange​​ FE, VEM and HHO).​​​‌ The next, already ongoing,​ crucial development steps are​‌ the parallelization on shared​​ and distributed memory, and​​​‌ the implementation of efficient​ quadrature formulas on polytopal​‌ cells. Eventually, the ParaSkel++​​ platform is expected to​​​‌ possess five main assets​ with respect to other​‌ codes of the same​​ nature from the community:​​​‌ (i) a unified 2/3D​ implementation, (ii) the native​‌ support of any type​​ of DOF (vertex-, edge-,​​​‌ face-, and cell-based), (iii)​ an ultra-factorized architecture (with​‌ common-to-all-methods local elimination and​​ global assembly steps), (iv)​​​‌ the use of efficient​ quadrature formulas on general​‌ polytopal cells (without the​​ need for subtessellation), and​​​‌ (v) the embedding of​ parallel computation capabilities.

3.3.2​‌ Design of robust nonlinear​​ solvers

The entropy stable​​​‌ methods we build often​ yield nonlinear systems to​‌ be solved at each​​ time step. It is​​​‌ therefore of paramount importance​ to have fast and​‌ robust nonlinear solvers at​​ hand to address them,​​​‌ hence the increasing interest​ for so-called nonlinear preconditioning​‌ techniques. In 3,​​ we proposed a strategy​​​‌ which consists in expressing​ the problem in terms​‌ of a new primary​​ variable which, if well​​​‌ chosen, allows to remove​ the degeneracies of the​‌ system under consideration. This​​ strategy has then been​​​‌ extended to the case​ of more complex systems​‌ arising in the context​​ of porous media flows​​​‌ 86, 85.​ In the framework of​‌ a collaboration with IFPEN,​​ we develop new solvers​​​‌ for the computation of​ chemical equilibria (see 42​‌), with application to​​ reactive transport. The methodology​​​‌ being developed in this​ framework will then be​‌ transposed to other contexts​​ in an as generic​​​‌ as possible way.

4​ Application domains

4.1 Subsurface​‌ CO2 storage

The capture​​ and storage in the​​​‌ subsurface of carbon dioxide​ is commonly acknowledged as​‌ a promising solution to​​ mitigate the emission of​​​‌ greenhouse gas from localized​ production sites, as for​‌ instance cement plants. The​​ safety assessment of the​​​‌ subsurface sequestration sites requires​ advanced numerical tools building​‌ on theoretically certified numerical​​ models and algorithms which​​​‌ remain valid in the​ long time limit. Among​‌ the numerous difficulties encountered​​ in such a setting,​​​‌ let us mention the​ high level of coupling​‌ between the mechanics of​​ the (solid) porous matrix​​​‌ 121, the multiphase​ and multicomponent character of​‌ the fluid which flows​​ therein 88, and​​​‌ chemical reactions with a​ wide range of characteristic​‌ times 138. Despite​​ important differences (at the​​​‌ level of chemistry especially),​ similar problems occur in​‌ the emerging topic of​​ dihydrogen subsurface storage, or​​​‌ native dihydrogen (generated by​ the corrosion of iron​‌ in an aqueous environment)​​ migration in the context​​ of nuclear waste repository​​​‌ management.

Together with colleagues‌ from applied research institutes‌​‌ and academics, the RAPSODI​​ project-team contributes to the​​​‌ derivation of so-called thermodynamically‌ consistent models, the‌​‌ stability of which in​​ the long-time limit being​​​‌ guaranteed by the second‌ principle. The team also‌​‌ contributes to the design​​ and the analysis of​​​‌ numerical schemes for multiphase‌ and multicomponent flows in‌​‌ complex geometries (possibly allowing​​ for general meshes), and​​​‌ to the design of‌ fast and robust solvers‌​‌ for chemical equilibria.

4.2​​ Material sciences

The team​​​‌ is interested in the‌ theoretical and numerical analysis‌​‌ of mathematical models describing​​ the degradation of materials,​​​‌ as concrete carbonation and‌ corrosion. The study of‌​‌ such models is an​​ important environmental and industrial​​​‌ issue. Atmospheric carbonation degrades‌ reinforced concretes and limits‌​‌ the lifetime of civil​​ engineering structures. Corrosion phenomena​​​‌ issues occur for instance‌ in the reliability of‌​‌ nuclear power plants and​​ the nuclear waste repository.​​​‌ The study of the‌ long time evolution of‌​‌ these phenomena is of​​ course fundamental in order​​​‌ to predict the lifetime‌ of the structures.

4.3‌​‌ Complex fluid flows

The​​ team is interested in​​​‌ numerical methods for the‌ simulation of systems of‌​‌ PDEs describing complex flows,​​ like for instance mixture​​​‌ flows, granular gases, rarefied‌ gases, or quantum fluids.‌​‌

Variable-density, low-Mach flows have​​ been widely studied in​​​‌ the recent literature because‌ of their applicability in‌​‌ various phenomena such as​​ flows in high-temperature gas​​​‌ reactors, meteorological flows, flows‌ with convective and/or conductive‌​‌ heat transfer or combustion​​ processes. In such cases,​​​‌ the resolution of the‌ full compressible Navier–Stokes system‌​‌ is not adapted, because​​ of the sound waves'​​​‌ speed. The Boussinesq incompressible‌ model is not a‌​‌ better alternative for such​​ low-speed phenomena, because the​​​‌ compressibility effects cannot be‌ totally cancelled due to‌​‌ large variations of temperature​​ and density. Consequently, some​​​‌ models have been formally‌ derived, leading to the‌​‌ filtering of the acoustic​​ waves by the use​​​‌ of some formal asymptotic‌ expansions and two families‌​‌ of methods have been​​ developed in the literature​​​‌ in order to compute‌ these flows. We are‌​‌ interested in particular in​​ the so-called pressure-based methods,​​​‌ which are more robust‌ than density-based solvers, although‌​‌ their range of validity​​ is in general more​​​‌ limited.

Quantum models can‌ be used to describe‌​‌ superfluids, quantum semiconductors, weakly​​ interacting Bose gases, or​​​‌ quantum trajectories of Bohmian‌ mechanics. They have attracted‌​‌ considerable attention in the​​ last decades, due in​​​‌ particular to the development‌ of nanotechnology applications. To‌​‌ describe quantum phenomena, there​​ exists a large variety​​​‌ of models. In particular,‌ there exist three different‌​‌ levels of description: microscopic,​​ mesoscopic, and macroscopic. The​​​‌ quantum Navier–Stokes equations deal‌ with a macroscopic description‌​‌ in which the quantum​​ effects are taken into​​​‌ account through a third-order‌ term called the quantum‌​‌ Bohm potential. This Bohm​​ potential arises from the​​​‌ fluid dynamical formulation of‌ the single-state Schrödinger equation.‌​‌ The nonlocality of quantum​​ mechanics is approximated by​​​‌ the fact that the‌ equations of state do‌​‌ not only depend on​​​‌ the particle density but​ also on its gradient.​‌ These equations were employed​​ to model field emissions​​​‌ from metals and steady-state​ tunneling in metal-insulator-metal structures,​‌ and to simulate ultra-small​​ semiconductor devices.

4.4 Electromagnetism​​​‌ for non-invasive control

The​ RAPSODI project-team works on​‌ the development of high-order​​ polyhedral methods for electromagnetism.​​​‌ A well-known specificity in​ electromagnetism is that topology​‌ plays a crucial role​​ in the well-posedness of​​​‌ the models. Dedicated analysis​ tools must then be​‌ deployed for their study​​ 82. We are​​​‌ interested in the devising​ of HHO methods in​‌ the curl/curl setting 118​​. The mathematical analysis​​​‌ of HHO methods in​ this setting is particularly​‌ involved, as most of​​ the needed discrete functional​​​‌ analysis tools are currently​ lacking. The design of​‌ (efficient and robust) multilevel​​ linear solvers for statically​​​‌ condensed HHO approximations of​ electromagnetic models, as well​‌ as of computable (reliable​​ and locally efficient) a​​​‌ posteriori error estimators on​ polyhedral cells are two​‌ other, still largely unexplored,​​ aspects we are interested​​​‌ in. Our main target​ application, in the framework​‌ of a recently initiated​​ collaboration with EDF (see​​​‌ Section 8.2), is​ the simulation of eddy​‌ current testing (ECT). ECT​​ is used by EDF​​​‌ as a non-invasive control​ technique to assess the​‌ integrity of heat exchanger​​ tubes in nuclear plants.​​​‌ The forward problem consists​ in solving the time-harmonic​‌ 3D Maxwell's equations in​​ domains featuring more or​​​‌ less complex flaws. The​ use of high-order polyhedral​‌ methods is expected to​​ yield improvements on two​​​‌ aspects. First, the support​ of polyhedral cells is​‌ expected to ease the​​ full meshing process, and​​​‌ in particular enable to​ account for defects with​‌ complex geometries/topologies. Second, the​​ increase in the approximation​​​‌ order is expected to​ yield a reduction of​‌ the noise on the​​ computed control signal based​​​‌ on which the presence​ of a defect is​‌ inferred.

4.5 Large population​​ models in epidemiology

Developing​​​‌ mathematical models to describe​ how infectious pathogens spread​‌ in animal populations is​​ an essential step to​​​‌ identify the main biological​ mechanisms or environmental factors​‌ which contribute to the​​ emergence of epidemics. When​​​‌ describing a pathogen spread​ at large scales, it​‌ is often relevant to​​ model the distributions of​​​‌ hosts (which may represent​ individuals, animals or herds,​‌ for example) as spatially​​ varying densities, and to​​​‌ model the pathogen dynamics​ via PDEs which describe​‌ the combined effect of​​ neighbourhood interactions, large scale​​​‌ population dynamics, and environmental​ factors.

The team initiated​‌ a collaboration with INRAE​​ (National Research Institute on​​​‌ Agriculture and Environment) on​ the modeling of different​‌ types of pathogen spread​​ mechanisms in such continous​​​‌ models. A first focus​ of this collaboration is​‌ on neighbourhood interactions, which​​ are a dominant factor​​​‌ in the infection dynamics​ of many pathogens (a​‌ specific example is the​​ Bovine Viral Diarrhea Virus,​​​‌ an endemic disease present​ worldwide among industrial cattle​‌ herds, and causing annually​​ large economic losses), and​​​‌ which at large scales​ may be described via​‌ non-local (convolution) terms. The​​ analysis of the resulting​​ model requires the development​​​‌ of dedicated mathematical tools,‌ and will lead to‌​‌ a better understanding of​​ the influence of neighborhood​​​‌ interactions on the spatial‌ features of the epidemic‌​‌ dynamics. A second focus​​ is on arboviruses, which​​​‌ are pathogens transmitted to‌ mammals by the bite‌​‌ of arthropod vectors, mainly​​ mosquitoes, and causing diseases​​​‌ such as the Zika‌ virus, the Rift Valley‌​‌ fever and the West​​ Nile virus. In this​​​‌ case, the aim is‌ to produce a comprehensive‌​‌ description of the viral​​ dynamics both in the​​​‌ vectors and in the‌ hosts as well as‌​‌ to model their interaction​​ in space (via diffusion​​​‌ processes and nonlocal interactions),‌ which will then be‌​‌ used to identify the​​ main mechanisms driving the​​​‌ virus spread.

4.6 Particle‌ accelerators

Relativistic electron bunches‌​‌ are used in storage​​ rings to produce intense​​​‌ radiation in various ranges‌ of frequencies. The dynamics‌​‌ of these bunches is​​ nonlinear because of interactions​​​‌ between electrons in the‌ bunch. Moreover, these interactions‌​‌ occur in an asymmetric​​ fashion because of the​​​‌ relativistic nature of the‌ dynamics. The stability properties‌​‌ of the bunch (and​​ thus the long-time properties​​​‌ of the dynamics) have‌ been shown, both theoretically‌​‌ and experimentally, to be​​ crucial in the understanding​​​‌ of the intensity of‌ the emitted radiation 98‌​‌, 126.

From​​ a mathematical point of​​​‌ view, the dynamics of‌ the electron density in‌​‌ the phase space can​​ be described by a​​​‌ Vlasov–Fokker–Planck type equation 98‌ with a well suited‌​‌ mean-field self-interaction term 142​​. The mathematical understanding​​​‌ of the long time‌ behavior of solutions to‌​‌ this equation and the​​ design of adapted numerical​​​‌ schemes constitutes a challenging‌ and physically important problem.‌​‌

5 Social and environmental​​ responsibility

An important part​​​‌ of the scientific activity‌ of the RAPSODI research‌​‌ group relates to energy​​ transition. For instance, our​​​‌ research on next generation‌ semi-conductor devices aims at‌​‌ better understanding the behavior​​ of perovskite solar cells.​​​‌ The research on complex‌ porous media flows are‌​‌ motivated by CO2​​ subsurface sequestration. The corrosion​​​‌ model we develop should‌ be used by ANDRA‌​‌ for high fidelity simulation​​ of the CIGEO nuclear​​​‌ waste repository (Bure, France).‌

The RAPSODI team members,‌​‌ and more particularly Claire​​ Chainais-Hillairet and Simon Lemaire​​​‌ , are strongly involved‌ in the promotion of‌​‌ science for young (high-school​​ or bachelor) students. Claire​​​‌ Chainais-Hillairet co-organized the one-week‌ (female only) internship Les‌​‌ Fourmis {éclairées}, which​​ was held at Université​​​‌ de Lille in April‌ 2024 and April 2025‌​‌ and that will hold​​ in April 2026. S.​​​‌ Lemaire was also involved‌ in the 2025 edition.‌​‌ Simon Lemaire co-organized in​​ October 2024 and October​​​‌ 2025 the Rendez-vous des‌ Jeunes Mathématiciennes et Informaticiennes‌​‌ (RJMI). This two-day event​​ is specifically geared towards​​​‌ female high school students,‌ and aims at promoting‌​‌ scientific careers amongst them.​​ Simon Lemaire is also​​​‌ in charge of the‌ local implementation of the‌​‌ program 1 scientifique, 1​​ classe / Chiche !​​​‌, for which he‌ has realized a number‌​‌ of interventions in high​​​‌ school classrooms of the​ Hauts-de-France region.

6 Latest​‌ software developments, platforms, open​​ data

Participants: Simon Lemaire​​​‌, Marien-Lorenzo Hanot.​

6.1 Latest software developments​‌

6.1.1 ParaSkel++

  • Keywords:
    PDEs,​​ Polytopal meshes, High-order methods,​​​‌ HPC, C++
  • Functional Description:​

    ParaSkel++ is a C++​‌ toolbox for the arbitrary-order,​​ 2D/3D polytopal approximation of​​​‌ PDEs using skeletal Galerkin​ methods. Skeletal methods form​‌ a vast family of​​ numerical approaches for the​​​‌ approximation of PDE-based models,​ which satisfies the two​‌ following building principles:

    (1)​​ the degrees of freedom​​​‌ (DoFs) of the method​ split into (i) skeletal​‌ DoFs, attached to the​​ geometric entities (vertices, edges,​​​‌ faces) composing the mesh​ skeleton and common to​‌ all cells sharing the​​ geometric entity in question,​​​‌ which prescribe the conformity​ properties of the underlying​‌ discrete functional space, and​​ (ii) bulk DoFs (potentially),​​​‌ attached to the interior​ of the cells, which​‌ play no role in​​ the prescription of the​​​‌ conformity properties of the​ underlying discrete space,

    (2)​‌ the global discrete bilinear​​ form of the problem​​​‌ (possibly after linearization, if​ the problem is nonlinear)​‌ writes as a sum​​ over the mesh cells​​​‌ of local (cell-wise) bilinear​ contributions.

    The very structure​‌ underpinning skeletal methods grants​​ them the property of​​​‌ being amenable to static​ condensation. Locally to each​‌ mesh cell, the bulk​​ DoFs can indeed be​​​‌ eliminated in terms of​ the local skeletal DoFs.​‌ As a consequence, the​​ final global system to​​​‌ be solved only writes​ in terms of the​‌ skeletal DoFs of the​​ method. Examples of skeletal​​​‌ methods include standard FE​ methods, as well as​‌ more recent polytopal methods​​ (VE, HDG, HHO...). Remark​​​‌ that (plain-vanilla) DG methods​ do not enter the​‌ skeletal framework. ParaSkel++ offers​​ a high-performance, factorized C++​​​‌ architecture for the implementation​ of arbitrary-order skeletal methods​‌ on general 2D/3D polytopal​​ partitions.

    A first version​​​‌ (v1) of the platform​ has been released in​‌ August 2021, which features​​ a sequential implementation of​​​‌ all the main skeletal​ methods for toy PDE​‌ problems. Ongoing developments concern,​​ apart from the implementation​​​‌ of skeletal schemes for​ more advanced PDE models​‌ (e.g., in electromagnetism), the​​ parallelization of the code​​​‌ on shared and distributed​ memories, as well as​‌ the implementation of efficient​​ quadrature formulas on polytopal​​​‌ cells.

    Eventually, the ParaSkel++​ platform is expected to​‌ possess five main assets:​​ (i) a unified 2D/3D​​​‌ implementation, (ii) the native​ support of any type​‌ of DoFs (vertex-, edge-,​​ face-, and cell-based), (iii)​​​‌ a factorized architecture (with​ common-to-all-methods local elimination and​‌ global assembly steps), (iv)​​ the use of efficient​​​‌ quadrature formulas on general​ polytopal cells (without the​‌ need for subtessellation), and​​ (v) the embedding of​​​‌ parallel computation capabilities.

    The​ ParaSkel++ toolbox has been​‌ conceived and is maintained​​ by Simon Lemaire. The​​​‌ main other core developers​ have been Laurence Beaude​‌ (from 02/2020 to 08/2021)​​ and Thoma Zoto (from​​​‌ 12/2022 to 06/2024). The​ toolbox is freely distributed​‌ under GNU LGPL v3.0.​​

  • URL:
  • Publication:
  • Contact:
    Simon Lemaire
  • Participants:​
    Emil Hössjer, Laurence Beaude,​‌ Thoma Zoto, Silvano Pitassi,​​ Jeremy Dalphin

6.1.2 DivDivSpline​​

  • Keywords:
    Numerical analysis, Partial​​​‌ differential equation
  • Functional Description:‌
    Library implementing finite element‌​‌ spaces with matrix values​​ constructed using spline tensor​​​‌ products. The spaces considered‌ form a particular differential‌​‌ complex, called the DivDiv​​ complex. This construction is​​​‌ applied to the numerical‌ approximation of a linearization‌​‌ of Einstein's field equations​​ (or more specifically, York's​​​‌ reformulation of the ADM‌ equations).
  • Contact:
    Marien-Lorenzo Hanot‌​‌

7 New results

7.1​​ Modeling, analysis and numerical​​​‌ simulation of multi-component systems‌

Participants: Alain Blaustein,‌​‌ Clément Cancès, Claire​​ Chainais-Hillairet, Amélie Dupouy​​​‌, Maxime Herda,‌ Juliette Venel.

In‌​‌ 16, Maxime Herda​​ , Claire Chainais-Hillairet  et​​​‌ al. present the numerical‌ analysis and simulations of‌​‌ a multi-dimensional memristive device​​ model. Memristive devices and​​​‌ memtransistors based on two-dimensional‌ (2D) materials have demonstrated‌​‌ promising potential for neuromorphic​​ computing and nextgeneration memory​​​‌ technologies. Their charge transport‌ model describes the drift-diffusion‌​‌ of electrons, holes, and​​ ionic defects self-consistently in​​​‌ an electric field. They‌ incorporate two types of‌​‌ boundary models: ohmic and​​ Schottky contacts. The coupled​​​‌ drift-diffusion partial differential equations‌ are discretized using a‌​‌ physics-preserving Voronoi finite volume​​ method. It relies on​​​‌ an implicit time-stepping scheme‌ and the excess chemical‌​‌ potential flux approximation. They​​ demonstrate that the fully​​​‌ discrete nonlinear scheme is‌ unconditionally stable, preserving the‌​‌ free-energy structure of the​​ continuous system and ensuring​​​‌ the nonnegativity of carrier‌ densities. Novel discrete entropy-dissipation‌​‌ inequalities for both boundary​​ condition types in multiple​​​‌ dimensions allow us to‌ prove the existence of‌​‌ discrete solutions. They perform​​ multi-dimensional simulations to understand​​​‌ the impact of electrode‌ configurations and device geometries,‌​‌ focusing on the hysteresis​​ behavior in lateral 2D​​​‌ memristive devices. Three electrode‌ configurations – side, top,‌​‌ and mixed contacts –​​ are compared numerically for​​​‌ different geometries and boundary‌ conditions. These simulations reveal‌​‌ the conditions under which​​ a simplified one-dimensional electrode​​​‌ geometry can well represent‌ the three electrode configurations.‌​‌ This work lays the​​ foundations for developing accurate,​​​‌ efficient simulation tools for‌ 2D memristive devices and‌​‌ memtransistors, offering tools and​​ guidelines for their design​​​‌ and optimization in future‌ applications.

In 41,‌​‌ Maxime Herda  et al.​​ design, analyze and simulate​​​‌ a finite volume scheme‌ for a cross-diffusion system‌​‌ which models chemotaxis with​​ local sensing. This system​​​‌ has the same Lyapunov‌ function (or entropy) as‌​‌ the celebrated minimal Keller-Segel​​ system, but unlike the​​​‌ latter, its solutions are‌ known to exist globally‌​‌ in 2D. The long-time​​ behavior of solutions is​​​‌ only partially understood which‌ motivates numerical exploration with‌​‌ a reliable numerical method.​​ They propose a linearly​​​‌ implicit, two-point flux finite‌ volume approximation of the‌​‌ system. They show that​​ the scheme preserves, at​​​‌ the discrete level, the‌ main features of the‌​‌ continuous system, namely mass​​ conservation, non-negativity of solution,​​​‌ entropy dissipation, and duality‌ estimates. These properties allow‌​‌ them to prove the​​ wellposedness, unconditional stability and​​​‌ convergence of the scheme.‌ They also show rigorously‌​‌ that the scheme possesses​​ an asymptotic preserving (AP)​​​‌ property in the quasi-stationary‌ limit. They complement their‌​‌ analysis with thorough numerical​​​‌ experiments investigating convergence and​ AP properties of the​‌ scheme as well as​​ its reliability with respect​​​‌ to stability properties of​ steady solutions.

In 48​‌Alain Blaustein , Claire​​ Chainais-Hillairet , Maxime Herda​​​‌  et al. consider a​ stationary drift-diffusion system with​‌ ionic charge carriers and​​ external generation of electron​​​‌ and hole charge carriers.​ This system arises, among​‌ other applications, in the​​ context of semiconductor modeling​​​‌ for perovskite solar cells.​ Thanks to truncation techniques​‌ and iterative energy estimates,​​ they show the existence​​​‌ and uniform upper and​ lower bounds on the​‌ solutions. The dependency of​​ the bounds on the​​​‌ various parameters of the​ model is investigated numerically​‌ on physically relevant test​​ cases.

In 64,​​​‌ Juliette Venel  et al.​ initiate a mathematical investigation​‌ of a PDE model​​ for the transport of​​​‌ high voltage direct current​ via overhead lines. They​‌ prove the existence of​​ infinitely many solutions, give​​​‌ necessary conditions for existence,​ explicitly compute the continuum​‌ of all radial solutions,​​ and develop a new​​​‌ numerical algorithm for this​ problem.

In 53,​‌ Clément Cances , Claire​​ Chainais-Hillairet , and Amélie​​​‌ Dupouy study a toy​ model for the evolution​‌ of the oxygen concentration​​ in an oxide layer.​​​‌ It consists in a​ transient convection diffusion equation​‌ in a one-dimensional domain​​ of variable width. The​​​‌ motions of the boundaries​ are governed by the​‌ traces of the concentration.​​ The authors exhibit a​​​‌ necessary and sufficient condition​ on the parameters involved​‌ in the model for​​ the existence of a​​​‌ unique traveling-wave solution. Moreover,​ they show that the​‌ model admits some universal​​ entropy structure, in the​​​‌ sense that any convex​ function of the concentration​‌ yields a dissipated free​​ energy (up to exchanges​​​‌ with the outer environment​ at the boundaries). Then​‌ the authors propose an​​ implicit in time arbitrary​​​‌ Lagrangian-Eulerian finite volume scheme​ based on Scharfetter-Gummel fluxes.​‌ It is shown to​​ be unconditionally convergent, to​​​‌ preserve exactly the travelling​ wave, and to dissipate​‌ all the aforementioned free​​ energies. Numerical experiments show​​​‌ that the scheme is​ first order accurate in​‌ time and second order​​ in space, and that​​​‌ the transient solution converges​ in the long-time limit​‌ towards the traveling-wave solution.​​

The physical processes of​​​‌ heat conduction, liquid water​ percolation, and phase changes​‌ govern the transfer of​​ mass and energy in​​​‌ snow. They are therefore​ at the heart of​‌ any physics-based snowpack model.​​ In the last decade,​​​‌ the use of Richards'​ equation has been proposed​‌ to better represent liquid​​ water percolation in snow.​​​‌ While this approach allows​ the explicit representation of​‌ capillary effects, it can​​ also be problematic as​​​‌ it usually presents a​ large increase in numerical​‌ complexity and cost. This​​ notably arises from the​​​‌ problem of applying a​ water retention curve in​‌ a fully-dry medium such​​ as snow, leading to​​​‌ a divergence and degeneracy​ in Richards' equation. Moreover,​‌ the difficulty of representing​​ both dry and wet​​​‌ snow in a single​ framework hinders the concomitant​‌ solving of heat conduction,​​ phase changes, and liquid​​ percolation. Rather, current models​​​‌ employ a sequential approach,‌ which can be subject‌​‌ to non-physical overshoots. To​​ treat these problems, Clément​​​‌ Cancès  et al. propose‌ in 66 the use‌​‌ of a regularized water​​ retention curve (WRC), that​​​‌ can be applied to‌ dry snow. Combined with‌​‌ a variable switch technique,​​ this opens the possibility​​​‌ of solving the energy‌ and mass budgets in‌​‌ a fully consistent and​​ tightly coupled manner, whether​​​‌ the snowpack contains dry‌ and/or wet regions. To‌​‌ assess the behavior of​​ the proposed scheme, the​​​‌ authors compare it to‌ other implementations based on‌​‌ loose-coupling between processes and​​ on the state-of-the-art strategies​​​‌ in snowpack models. Results‌ show that the use‌​‌ of a regularized WRC​​ with a variable switch​​​‌ greatly improve the robustness‌ of the numerical implementation,‌​‌ consistently allowing for large​​ timesteps, which results in​​​‌ faster and cheaper simulations.‌

Entropy and the second‌​‌ principle of thermodynamics are​​ regularly used as an​​​‌ analysis tool in applied‌ mathematics for physics-based numerical‌​‌ models. In essence, this​​ approach states that the​​​‌ second principle (i.e. the‌ non-destruction of entropy) is‌​‌ closely related to stability.​​ Consequently, numerical models complying​​​‌ with the second principle‌ are expected to be‌​‌ more robust than models​​ that do not. A​​​‌ notable advantage of this‌ method is its straight-forward‌​‌ generalization to nonlinear physics​​ and to systems of​​​‌ coupled equations. The goal‌ of the work 67‌​‌ by Clément Cancès  et​​ al. is to thus​​​‌ investigate the added-value of‌ such an entropybased analysis‌​‌ to the case of​​ snowpack modelling. For that,​​​‌ the authors study the‌ conditions under which the‌​‌ physics describing snowpacks respects​​ the second principle and​​​‌ the numerical schemes that‌ preserve this compliance after‌​‌ temporal and spatial discretization.​​ Specifically, we consider three​​​‌ cases of increasing complexity:‌ (i) a dry snowpack‌​‌ governed by heat conduction​​ only (meant to be​​​‌ an example of the‌ method for unfamiliar readers),‌​‌ (ii) a system composed​​ of a canopy and​​​‌ a snowpack exchanging heat,‌ and (iii) a dry‌​‌ snowpack with heat conduction,​​ vapor diffusion, and ice-vapor​​​‌ phase changes.

Multiphase chemical‌ equilibrium problems lead to‌​‌ nonlinear systems with complementarity​​ constraints, which become particularly​​​‌ challenging when phases may‌ vanish. In 72,‌​‌ Clément Cancès  et al.​​ introduce a new algebraic​​​‌ formulation of the equilibrium‌ problem based on extended‌​‌ mole fractions, derived from​​ the subdifferential of the​​​‌ Gibbs free energy, and‌ establish its equivalence with‌​‌ the classical minimization problem.​​ Their analysis provides new​​​‌ conditions ensuring the uniqueness‌ of solutions, even when‌​‌ some phases disappear. Building​​ on this formulation, the​​​‌ authors propose two parametrized‌ Newton-based strategies: one reformulates‌​‌ the relation between species​​ quantities and chemical potentials,​​​‌ while the other parametrizes‌ the complementarity conditions directly.‌​‌ Numerical experiments on a​​ system with 72 species​​​‌ and 22 phases confirm‌ the robustness and efficiency‌​‌ of the proposed methods.​​ In tests with randomized​​​‌ inputs, both strategies achieve‌ success rates above 90%‌​‌ with moderate iteration counts,​​ outperforming established approaches such​​​‌ as the Newton-min and‌ Fischer-Burmeister complementarity functions, and‌​‌ interior-point methods.

7.2 Analysis​​​‌ and numerical simulation in​ electromagnetism and related fields​‌

Participants: Théophile Chaumont-Frelet,​​ Marien-Lorenzo Hanot, Simon​​​‌ Lemaire.

In 25​Théophile Chaumont-Frelet proposes a​‌ novel a posteriori error​​ estimator for the Nédélec​​​‌ finite element discretization of​ time-harmonic Maxwell's equations. After​‌ the approximation of the​​ electric field is computed,​​​‌ he proposes a fully​ localized algorithm to reconstruct​‌ approximations to the electric​​ displacement and the magnetic​​​‌ field, with such approximations​ respectively fulfilling suitable divergence​‌ and curl constraints. These​​ reconstructed fields are in​​​‌ turn used to construct​ an a posteriori error​‌ estimator which is shown​​ to be reliable and​​​‌ efficient. Specifically, the estimator​ controls the error from​‌ above up to a​​ constant that tends to​​​‌ one as the mesh​ is refined and/or the​‌ polynomial degree is increased,​​ and from below up​​​‌ to constant independent of​ p. Both bounds​‌ are also fully-robust in​​ the low-frequency regime. The​​​‌ properties of the proposed​ estimator are illustrated on​‌ a set of numerical​​ examples.

In 56,​​​‌ Théophile Chaumont-Frelet , Jérôme​ Droniou and Simon Lemaire​‌ establish Maxwell compactness results​​ for the Discrete De​​​‌ Rham (DDR) polytopal complex:​ sequences in this polytopal​‌ complex with bounded discrete​​ H(cu​​​‌rl) (resp.​ discrete H(c​‌url)​​) norm and orthogonal​​​‌ to discrete gradients (resp.​ discrete curls) have L​‌2-relatively compact potential​​ reconstructions. The proof of​​​‌ these results hinges on​ the design of novel​‌ quasi-interpolators, that map the​​ minimal-regularity de Rham spaces​​​‌ onto the discrete DDR​ spaces and form a​‌ commuting diagram. A full​​ set of (primal and​​​‌ adjoint) consistency properties is​ established for these quasi-interpolators,​‌ which paves the way​​ to convergence proofs, under​​​‌ minimal-regularity assumptions, of DDR​ schemes for partial differential​‌ equations based on the​​ de Rham complex. The​​​‌ analysis is performed with​ generic mixed boundary conditions,​‌ also covering the cases​​ of no boundary conditions​​​‌ or fully homogeneous boundary​ conditions, and leverages recently​‌ introduced liftings from the​​ DDR complex to the​​​‌ continuous de Rham complex.​

The CHDG method is​‌ a hybridizable discontinuous Galerkin​​ (HDG) finite element method​​​‌ suitable for the iterative​ solution of time-harmonic wave​‌ propagation problems. Hybrid unknowns​​ corresponding to transmission variables​​​‌ are introduced at the​ element interfaces and the​‌ physical unknowns inside the​​ elements are eliminated, resulting​​​‌ in a hybridized system​ with favorable properties for​‌ fast iterative solution. In​​ 75, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​​‌  et al. extend the​ CHDG method, initially studied​‌ for the Helmholtz equation,​​ to the time-harmonic Maxwell​​​‌ equations. They prove that​ the local problems stemming​‌ from hybridization are well-posed​​ and that the fixed-point​​​‌ iteration naturally associated to​ the hybridized system is​‌ contractive. They propose a​​ 3D implementation with a​​​‌ discrete scheme based on​ nodal basis functions. The​‌ resulting solver and different​​ iterative strategies are studied​​​‌ with several numerical examples​ using a high-performance parallel​‌ C++ code.

In 44​​, Simon Lemaire and​​​‌ Silvano Pitassi prove discrete​ versions of the first​‌ and second Weber inequalities​​ on H(c​​url)​​​‌H(d‌iv)-like‌​‌ hybrid spaces spanned by​​ polynomials attached to the​​​‌ faces and to the‌ cells of a polyhedral‌​‌ mesh. The proven hybrid​​ Weber inequalities are optimal​​​‌ in the sense that‌ (i) they are formulated‌​‌ in terms of H​​(cur​​​‌l)- and‌ H(di‌​‌v)-like hybrid​​ semi-norms designed so as​​​‌ to embed optimally (polynomially)‌ consistent face penalty terms,‌​‌ and (ii) they are​​ valid for face polynomials​​​‌ in the smallest possible‌ stability-compatible spaces. The results‌​‌ are valid on domains​​ with general, possibly non-trivial​​​‌ topology. In a second‌ part, related discrete Maxwell‌​‌ compactness results are also​​ proved, still within a​​​‌ general topological setting.

In‌ 35, Simon Lemaire‌​‌ , Silvano Pitassi et​​ al. devise and analyze​​​‌ hybrid polyhedral methods of‌ arbitrary order for the‌​‌ approximation of div-curl systems​​ on three-dimensional domains with​​​‌ non-trivial topology. The div-curl‌ systems under consideration stem‌​‌ from magnetostatics, and can​​ either be first-order (for​​​‌ field formulations) or second-order‌ (for vector potential formulations).‌​‌ The mathematical analysis crucially​​ leverages the discrete Weber​​​‌ inequalities established in 44‌. An in-depth numerical‌​‌ assessment of the approach​​ is also performed, covering,​​​‌ in particular, the tricky‌ case of non-simply-connected domains.‌​‌

In  65, Marien-Lorenzo​​ Hanot  et al. prove​​​‌ discrete Poincaré inequalities that‌ are uniform in mesh‌​‌ size for the discrete​​ de Rham complex of​​​‌ differential forms, extending known‌ inequalities for gradient, curl,‌​‌ and divergence operators to​​ polytopal domains of arbitrary​​​‌ dimension and topology. A‌ crucial part of the‌​‌ proof involves deriving Poincaré​​ inequalities for the cochain​​​‌ complex supported on the‌ polytopal mesh. These inequalities‌​‌ have independent significance, aiding​​ in the existence and​​​‌ stability analysis of solutions‌ to numerical schemes such‌​‌ as Mimetic Finite Differences,​​ Compatible Discrete Operators, and​​​‌ Discrete Geometric Approaches.

In‌  70, Marien-Lorenzo Hanot‌​‌  et al. provide a​​ reformulation of the linearized​​​‌ Arnowitt–Deser–Misner equations as a‌ Hodge–Dirac wave system built‌​‌ upon the divdiv complex,​​ a structure that naturally​​​‌ handles issues of gauge‌ fixing, constraint propagation, and‌​‌ tensor symmetries in numerical​​ relativity. The well-posedness of​​​‌ the resulting system is‌ established, and a discretization‌​‌ strategy with error estimates​​ under minimal assumptions is​​​‌ proposed.

7.3 Analysis of‌ dissipative models and their‌​‌ discretization

Participants: Matthieu Alfaro​​, Alain Blaustein,​​​‌ Maxime Herda, Andrea‌ Natale, Marc Pegon‌​‌, Juliette Venel.​​

In 71, Maxime​​​‌ Herda , Marc Pegon‌  et al. provide a‌​‌ result of exponential stability​​ for several dissipative linear​​​‌ kinetic equations with heavy-tailed‌ equilibria. The approach, inspired‌​‌ by the so-called L​​2-hypocoercivity method, is​​​‌ robust enough to provide‌ estimates that are uniform‌​‌ in the anomalous diffusion​​ limit. Moreover, it is​​​‌ able to deal with‌ bounded domains with periodic‌​‌ boundary condition or general​​ Maxwell boundary condition (from​​​‌ the pure specular to‌ the pure diffusive case).‌​‌ In addition, this framework​​ accommodates linear collisional operators​​​‌ that act simultaneously on‌ the velocity and spatial‌​‌ variables.

In 18,​​​‌ Matthieu Alfaro , Maxime​ Herda , and Andrea​‌ Natale consider an epidemic​​ model with distributed-contacts. When​​​‌ the contact kernel concentrates,​ one formally reaches a​‌ very degenerate Fisher-KPP equation​​ with a diffusion term​​​‌ that is not in​ divergence form. They make​‌ an exhaustive study of​​ its travelling waves. For​​​‌ every admissible speed, there​ exist not only a​‌ unique non-saturated (smooth) wave​​ but also infinitely many​​​‌ saturated (sharp) ones. Furthermore​ their tails may differ​‌ from what is usually​​ expected. These results are​​​‌ thus in sharp contrast​ with their counterparts on​‌ related models.

In 50​​, Alain Blaustein  et​​​‌ al. design an asymptotic​ preserving scheme for the​‌ Vlasov-Poisson system in the​​ quasineutral regime. They first​​​‌ establish a convergence result​ for the continuous solution​‌ with optimal error estimates.​​ Following this path, they​​​‌ propose a fully discrete​ numerical method and rigorously​‌ prove that it is​​ uniformly consistent. Finally, they​​​‌ perform several numerical simulations​ to illustrate the behavior​‌ of the proposed scheme​​ which confirm the theoretical​​​‌ findings: stability and asymptotic​ preservation.

In  74,​‌ Juliette Venel  et al.​​ study the the long-term​​​‌ safety of the geological​ repository of nuclear wastes.​‌ A diffusion equation with​​ a moving free boundary​​​‌ in one dimension is​ introduced and studied. The​‌ model describes some mechanisms​​ involved in corrosion processes​​​‌ at the surface of​ carbon steel canisters in​‌ contact with a claystone​​ formation. The main objective​​​‌ of the paper is​ to prove the existence​‌ of weak solutions to​​ the problem which are​​​‌ maximal in time. For​ this, a time semidiscrete​‌ minimizing movements scheme based​​ on a Wasserstein-like distance​​​‌ is introduced. The existence​ of solutions to the​‌ scheme is proved. Then,​​ using a priori estimates,​​​‌ it is shown that​ as the time step​‌ goes to zero these​​ solutions converge up to​​​‌ extraction towards a maximal​ weak solution to the​‌ free boundary model.

7.4​​ A posteriori error analysis​​​‌

Participants: Théophile Chaumont-Frelet.​

In 24Théophile Chaumont-frelet​‌ proposes new a posteriori​​ error estimators for non-conforming​​​‌ finite element discretizations of​ second-order elliptic PDE problems.​‌ These estimators are based​​ on novel reformulations of​​​‌ the standard Prager-Synge identity,​ and enable to prove​‌ efficiency estimates without extra​​ stabilization terms in the​​​‌ error measure for a​ large class of discretization​‌ schemes. He proposes a​​ residual-based estimator for which​​​‌ the efficiency constant scales​ optimally in polynomial degree,​‌ as well as two​​ equilibrated estimators that are​​​‌ polynomial-degree-robust. One of the​ two estimators further leads​‌ to guaranteed error bounds.​​

In 55, Théophile​​​‌ Chaumont-Frelet considers second-order PDE​ problems set in unbounded​‌ domains and discretized by​​ Lagrange finite elements on​​​‌ a finite mesh, thus​ introducing an artificial boundary​‌ in the discretization. Specifically,​​ he considers the reaction​​​‌ diffusion equation as well​ as Helmholtz problems in​‌ waveguides with perfectly matched​​ layers. The usual procedure​​​‌ to deal with such​ problems is to first​‌ consider a modeling error​​ due to the introduction​​​‌ of the artificial boundary,​ and estimate the remaining​‌ discretization error with a​​ standard a posteriori technique.​​ A shortcoming of this​​​‌ method, however, is that‌ it is typically hard‌​‌ to obtain sharp bounds​​ on the modeling error.​​​‌ In this work, he‌ proposes a new technique‌​‌ that allows to control​​ the whole error by​​​‌ an a posteriori error‌ estimator. Specifically, he proposes‌​‌ a flux-equilibrated estimator that​​ is slightly modified to​​​‌ handle the truncation boundary.‌ For the reaction diffusion‌​‌ equation, we obtain fully-computable​​ guaranteed error bounds, and​​​‌ the estimator is locally‌ efficient and polynomial-degree-robust provided‌​‌ that the elements touching​​ the truncation boundary are​​​‌ not too refined. This‌ last condition may be‌​‌ seen as an extension​​ of the notion of​​​‌ shape-regularity of the mesh,‌ and does not prevent‌​‌ the design of efficient​​ adaptive algorithms. For the​​​‌ Helmholtz problem, as usual,‌ these statements remain valid‌​‌ if the mesh is​​ sufficiently refined. The theoretical​​​‌ findings are completed with‌ numerical examples which indicate‌​‌ that the estimator is​​ suited to drive optimal​​​‌ adaptive mesh refinements.

In‌ 57, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌​‌  et al. analyse adaptive​​ combined field integral equations​​​‌ for Helmholtz problems. While‌ the exterior Helmholtz problem‌​‌ with Dirichlet boundary conditions​​ is always well-posed, the​​​‌ associated standard boundary integral‌ equations are not if‌​‌ the squared wavenumber agrees​​ with an eigenvalue of​​​‌ the interior Dirichlet problem.‌ Combined field integral equations‌​‌ are not affected by​​ this spurious resonances but​​​‌ are essentially restricted to‌ sufficiently smooth boundaries. For‌​‌ general Lipschitz domains, the​​ latter integral equations are​​​‌ applicable through suitable regularization.‌ Under fairly general assumptions‌​‌ on the regularizing operator,​​ they propose a posterirori​​​‌ computable error estimators for‌ corresponding Galerkin boundary element‌​‌ methods of arbitrary polynomial​​ degree. We show that​​​‌ adaptive mesh-refining algorithms steered‌ by these local estimators‌​‌ converge at optimal algebraic​​ rate with respect to​​​‌ the number of underlying‌ boundary mesh elements. In‌​‌ particular, they consider mixed​​ formulations involving the inverse​​​‌ Laplace-Beltrami as regularizing operator.‌ Numerical examples highlight that‌​‌ in the vicinity of​​ spurious resonances the proposed​​​‌ adaptive algorithm is significantly‌ more performant when applied‌​‌ to the regularized combined​​ field equation rather than​​​‌ the standard one.

In‌ 58, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌​‌  et al. consider linear​​ reaction-diffusion equations posed on​​​‌ unbounded domains, and discretized‌ by adaptive Lagrange finite‌​‌ elements. To obtain finite-dimensional​​ spaces, it is necessary​​​‌ to introduce a truncation‌ boundary, whereby only a‌​‌ bounded computational subdomain is​​ meshed, leading to an​​​‌ approximation of the solution‌ by zero in the‌​‌ remainder of the domain.​​ They propose a residual-based​​​‌ error estimator that accounts‌ for both the standard‌​‌ discretization error as well​​ as the effect of​​​‌ the truncation boundary. This‌ estimator is shown to‌​‌ be reliable and efficient​​ under appropriate assumptions on​​​‌ the triangulation. Based on‌ this estimator, they devise‌​‌ an adaptive algorithm that​​ automatically refines the mesh​​​‌ and pushes the truncation‌ boundary towards infinity. They‌​‌ prove that this algorithm​​ converges and even achieves​​​‌ optimal rates in terms‌ of the number of‌​‌ degrees of freedom. They​​ finally provide numerical examples​​​‌ illustrating the key theoretical‌ findings.

In 59,‌​‌ Théophile Chaumont-Frelet  et al.​​​‌ consider a two dimensional​ biharmonic problem and its​‌ discretization by means of​​ a symmetric interior penalty​​​‌ discontinuous Galerkin method. Based​ on the "div-div" complex,​‌ a novel split of​​ an error measure based​​​‌ on a generalized Hessian​ into two terms measuring​‌ the conformity and nonconformity​​ of the scheme is​​​‌ proven. This splitting is​ the departing point for​‌ the design of a​​ new reliable and efficient​​​‌ error estimator, which does​ not involve any stabilization.​‌ Such an error estimator​​ can be bounded from​​​‌ above by the standard​ residual error estimator. Numerical​‌ results assess the theoretical​​ predictions, including the efficiency​​​‌ of the proposed estimator.​

In 60, Théophile​‌ Chaumont-Frelet  et al. study​​ a posteriori error estimates​​​‌ and their use for​ time-dependent acoustic scattering problems,​‌ formulated as a time-dependent​​ boundary integral equation based​​​‌ on a single-layer ansatz.​ The integral equation is​‌ discretized by the convolution​​ quadrature method in time​​​‌ and by boundary elements​ in space. They prove​‌ the reliability of an​​ error estimator of residual​​​‌ type and study the​ resulting space-adaptive mesh refinements.​‌ Moreover, they present a​​ simple modification of the​​​‌ convolution quadrature method based​ on temporal shifts, which​‌ recovers, for the boundary​​ densities, the full classical​​​‌ temporal convergence order 2​m-1 of​‌ the temporal convolution quadrature​​ method based on the​​​‌ m-stage convolution quadrature​ semi-discretization. They numerically observe​‌ that the adaptive scheme​​ yields asymptotically optimal meshes​​​‌ for an acoustic scattering​ problem in two dimensions.​‌

7.5 Analysis and numerical​​ simulation of variational models​​​‌

Participants: Marc Pegon.​

In 52, Marc​‌ Pegon  et al. investigate​​ generalized liquid drop models​​​‌ with screened Riesz-type interactions,​ focusing in particular on​‌ truncated Coulomb and Yukawa​​ potentials in three dimensions.​​​‌ They establish the existence​ of non spherical minimizers​‌ for some values of​​ the screening parameter. This​​​‌ gives the first evidence​ of such minimizers in​‌ the class of repulsive,​​ radial, and radially nonincreasing​​​‌ kernels in three dimensions.​ They further show that​‌ in the classical Riesz​​ case, the widely-believed conjecture​​​‌ that minimizers are either​ balls or do not​‌ exist remains consistent with​​ their results, but only​​​‌ just. Indeed they observe​ that the energy-per-mass ratios​‌ of the best balls​​ and of the best​​​‌ cylinders are surprisingly close.​

7.6 Complementary topics in​‌ numerical and PDE analysis​​

Participants: Matthieu Alfaro,​​​‌ Claire Chainais-Hillairet, Cindy​ Guichard, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​‌, Emmanuel Creusé,​​ Andrea Natale, Juliette​​​‌ Venel.

In 49​, Matthieu Alfaro ,​‌ Claire Chainais-Hillairetet. al​​ consider the so-called field-road​​​‌ diffusion model in a​ bounded domain, consisting of​‌ two parabolic PDEs posed​​ on sets of different​​​‌ dimensions and coupled through​ (symmetric) nonlinear exchange terms.​‌ They propose a new​​ and rather direct functional​​​‌ inequalities approach to prove​ the exponential decay of​‌ a relative entropy, and​​ thus the convergence of​​​‌ the solution towards the​ stationary state selected by​‌ the total mass of​​ the initial datum.

In​​​‌ 30, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​et al. investigate the​‌ approximation properties of solutions​​ to the Ginzburg-Landau equation​​ (GLE) in finite element​​​‌ spaces. Special attention is‌ given to how the‌​‌ errors are influenced by​​ coupling the mesh​​​‌ size h and the‌ polynomial degree p of‌​‌ the finite element space​​ to the size of​​​‌ the so-called Ginzburg-Landau material‌ parameter κ. As‌​‌ observed in previous works,​​ the finite element approximations​​​‌ to the GLE are‌ suffering from a numerical‌​‌ pollution effect, that is,​​ the best-approximation error in​​​‌ the finite element space‌ converges under mild coupling‌​‌ conditions between h and​​ κ, whereas the​​​‌ actual finite element solutions‌ possess poor accuracy in‌​‌ a large pre-asymptotic regime​​ which depends on κ​​​‌. In this paper,‌ they provide a new‌​‌ error analysis that allows​​ them to quantify the​​​‌ preasymptotic regime and the‌ corresponding pollution effect in‌​‌ terms of explicit resolution​​ conditions. In particular, they​​​‌ are able to prove‌ that higher polynomial degrees‌​‌ reduce the pollution effect,​​ i.e., the accuracy of​​​‌ the best-approximation is achieved‌ under relaxed conditions for‌​‌ the mesh size. They​​ provide both error estimates​​​‌ in the H1‌- and the L‌​‌2-norm and illustrate​​ their findings with numerical​​​‌ examples.

In 32,‌ Théophile Chaumont-Frelet  et al.‌​‌ design a quasi-interpolation operator​​ from the Sobolev space​​​‌ H01 to‌ its finite-dimensional finite element‌​‌ subspace formed by piecewise​​ polynomials on a simplicial​​​‌ mesh with a computable‌ approximation constant. The operator‌​‌ 1) is defined on​​ the entire H0​​​‌1, no additional‌ regularity is needed; 2)‌​‌ allows for an arbitrary​​ polynomial degree; 3) works​​​‌ in any space dimension;‌ 4) is defined locally,‌​‌ in vertex patches of​​ mesh elements; 5) yields​​​‌ optimal estimates for both‌ the H1 seminorm‌​‌ and the L2​​ norm error; 6) gives​​​‌ a computable constant for‌ both the H1‌​‌ seminorm and the L​​2 norm error; 7)​​​‌ leads to the equivalence‌ of global-best and local-best‌​‌ errors; 8) possesses the​​ projection property. Its construction​​​‌ follows the so-called potential‌ reconstruction from a posteriori‌​‌ error analysis. Numerical experiments​​ illustrate that our quasi-interpolation​​​‌ operator systematically gives the‌ correct convergence rates in‌​‌ both the H1​​ seminorm and the L​​​‌2 norm and its‌ certified overestimation factor is‌​‌ rather sharp and stable​​ in all tested situations.​​​‌

In 54, Théophile‌ Chaumont-Frelet analysis the well-posedness‌​‌ (or lack thereof) of​​ three-dimensional time-harmonic wave propagation​​​‌ problems modeled by the‌ Helmholtz equation. It is‌​‌ well-known that if the​​ problem is set in​​​‌ bounded domain with Dirichlet‌ boundary conditions, then the‌​‌ Helmholtz problem is well-posed​​ for all (real-valued) frequencies​​​‌ except for a sequence‌ of countably many resonant‌​‌ frequencies that accumulate at​​ infinity. In fact, if​​​‌ the domain is sufficiently‌ smooth, this can be‌​‌ quantified further and Weyl's​​ law states that the​​​‌ number of resonant frequencies‌ less than a given‌​‌ k>0 scales​​ as k3.​​​‌ On the other hand,‌ scattering problems set in‌​‌ 3 with a​​ radiation condition at infinity​​​‌ and a bounded obstacle‌ modeled by variations in‌​‌ the PDE coefficients are​​​‌ well-posed for all frequencies​ under mild regularity assumption​‌ on such coefficients. In​​ 2001, Filinov provided a​​​‌ counter example of a​ rough coefficient such that​‌ the scattering problem is​​ not well-posed for (at​​​‌ least) a single frequency​ k. In this​‌ contribution, he uses this​​ result to show that​​​‌ for all ε>​0 one can design​‌ a rough coefficient corresponding​​ to a compactly supported​​​‌ obstacle such that the​ scattering problem is ill-posed​‌ for a countable sequence​​ of frequencies accumulating at​​​‌ infinity, and such that​ the number of such​‌ frequencies less than any​​ given k>0​​​‌ scales as k3​-ε.

In​‌ 62, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​et. al. construct potentials​​​‌ for the exterior derivative,​ in particular, for the​‌ gradient, the curl, and​​ the divergence operators, over​​​‌ domains with shellable triangulations.​ Notably, the class of​‌ shellable triangulations includes local​​ patches (stars) in two​​​‌ or three dimensions. The​ operator norms of the​‌ potentials satisfy explicitly computable​​ bounds that depend only​​​‌ on the geometry. They​ thus compute upper bounds​‌ for constants in Poincaré-Friedrichs​​ inequalities and lower bounds​​​‌ for the eigenvalues of​ vector Laplacians. As an​‌ additional result with independent​​ standing, they establish Poincaré-Friedrichs​​​‌ inequalities with computable constants​ for the Lp​‌ de Rham complex over​​ bounded convex domains, derived​​​‌ as explicit operator norms​ of regularized Poincaré and​‌ Bogovskii potential operators. They​​ express all our main​​​‌ results in the calculus​ of differential forms and​‌ treat the gradient, curl,​​ and divergence operators as​​​‌ instances of the exterior​ derivative. Computational examples illustrate​‌ the theoretical findings.

In​​ 63, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​​‌  et al. introduce a​ quasi-interpolation operator that maps​‌ the infinite-dimensional Sobolev space​​ H1 into its​​​‌ finite-dimensional Lagrange finite element​ subspace formed by piecewise​‌ polynomials on a tetrahedral​​ mesh. This operator enjoys​​​‌ the following key properties:​ 1) it is defined​‌ over the entire H​​1 and includes essentially​​​‌ boundary conditions imposed on​ a part of the​‌ boundary; 2) it is​​ defined locally in a​​​‌ neighborhood of each tetrahedron​ of the mesh; 3)​‌ it is based on​​ simple piecewise polynomial projections;​​​‌ 4) it is stable​ in the H1​‌-seminorm; 5) it has​​ optimal (local-best) approximation properties;​​​‌ 6) it commutes with​ its sibling operator on​‌ H(cu​​rl);​​​‌ 7) it is a​ projector.

In 61Théophile​‌ Chaumont-Frelet propose an algorithm​​ to numerically determined whether​​​‌ a second-order linear PDE​ problem satisfying a Gårding​‌ inequality is well-posed. This​​ algorithm further provides a​​​‌ lower bound to the​ inf-sup constant of the​‌ weak formulation, which may​​ in turn be used​​​‌ for a posteriori error​ estimation purposes. The numerical​‌ lower bound is based​​ on two discrete singular​​​‌ value problems involving a​ Lagrange finite element discretization​‌ coupled with an a​​ posteriori error estimator based​​​‌ on flux reconstruction techniques.​ He shows that if​‌ the finite element discretization​​ is sufficiently rich, the​​​‌ lower bound underestimates the​ optimal constant only by​‌ a factor roughly equal​​ to two.

In 33​​, Emmanuel Creusé ,​​​‌ Juliette Venel  et al.‌ consider the propagation of‌​‌ shock waves on nonuniform​​ grids. This phenomenon appears,​​​‌ for example, in some‌ impact problems of the‌​‌ fast-dynamics type, where a​​ finer mesh can typically​​​‌ be employed in regions‌ of interest, leading to‌​‌ mesh ratios that can​​ range from 10 to​​​‌ 20 or even more.‌ Unfortunately, unwanted spurious reflections‌​‌ occur for this type​​ of problem using (standard)​​​‌ explicit finite element software.‌ An optimized explicit Runge-Kutta-Nyström‌​‌ time-integration scheme is therefore​​ built to minimize spurious​​​‌ wave reflections for shock‌ wave propagation on these‌​‌ nonuniform grids.

In 51​​Andrea Natale  et al.​​​‌ study the problem of‌ reconstructing a Laguerre tessellation‌​‌ from the volumes and​​ the barycenters of its​​​‌ cells. They show that‌ any vector of barycenters‌​‌ arising from a Laguerre​​ tessellation with prescribed cell​​​‌ volumes can be understood‌ as an exposed point‌​‌ of a convex set​​ defined by convex order​​​‌ relations. Leveraging this characterization,‌ they formulate a projection‌​‌ problem that can be​​ solved efficiently and yields​​​‌ an approximation of the‌ desired reconstruction. Importantly, the‌​‌ same method can also​​ construct a Laguerre tessellation​​​‌ that fits prescribed volumes‌ and barycenters in cases‌​‌ where these are not,​​ a priori, related to​​​‌ any Laguerre tessellation. This‌ strategy may find application‌​‌ in the analysis of​​ experimental data from polycrystalline​​​‌ samples.

In 73Andrea‌ Natale  et al. provide‌​‌ a precise characterization of​​ the link between backward/forward​​​‌ Wasserstein projections in convex‌ order and the recently‌​‌ introduced metric extrapolation problem.​​ They use such a​​​‌ link to derive new‌ quantitative stability estimates for‌​‌ both problems.

In 69​​Cindy Guichard provides a​​​‌ general framework for second-order‌ elliptic problems, which includes‌​‌ a variety of boundary​​ conditions. She shows how​​​‌ one can apply mass-lumped‌ mixed finite element to‌​‌ this problem, and she​​ provides sufficient conditions for​​​‌ the convergence of such‌ a method. In particular,‌​‌ she exhibits convergence results​​ assuming two different type​​​‌ of assumptions: on one‌ hand, she shows convergence‌​‌ properties following the standard​​ analysis of mixed finite​​​‌ elements. On the other‌ hand, she provides conditions‌​‌ on one of the​​ approximation space, which also​​​‌ lead to some convergence‌ properties. She then formulates‌​‌ Abstract Gradient Discretization method​​ (AGDM) based on these​​​‌ mass-lumped mixed finite elements,‌ enabling her to apply‌​‌ this type of discretization​​ to a variety of​​​‌ nonlinear problems. Finally, she‌ illustrates her results by‌​‌ two examples. The first​​ one is a second-order​​​‌ elliptic problem with homogeneous‌ Neumann boundary conditions, discretized‌​‌ by Raviart-Thomas finite elements.​​ She shows on this​​​‌ example that mass-lumping leads‌ to classical finite volume‌​‌ schemes. The second one​​ is inspired by the​​​‌ elliptic part of a‌ model of shallow water‌​‌ flows with dispersive terms.​​ She applies on this​​​‌ example generalized operators, and‌ she proves the convergence‌​‌ of the method used​​ in the literature.

7.7​​​‌ Habilitation (HDR) theses

Participants:‌ Juliette Venel.

On‌​‌ December 16, Juliette Venel​​ defended her Habilitation à​​​‌ Diriger des Recherches (HDR),‌ entitled "Theoretical and Numerical‌​‌ Contributions to the Study​​​‌ of Differential Inclusions and​ Partial Differential Equations" at​‌ the Polytechnic University of​​ Hauts-de-France.

8 Bilateral contracts​​​‌ and grants with industry​

8.1 Bilateral contracts with​‌ industry

Participant: Clément Cances​​.

Clément Cances heads​​​‌ the MATHSOUT project (1M​ euros, 2024–2029) together with​‌ I. Faille (IFPEN). This​​ project involves academic partners​​​‌ (Inria, UniCA, CNRS) as​ well as IFPEN and​‌ the French Geological survey​​ (BRGM). Ngoc Do Quyen​​​‌ Dang started her PhD​ at IFPEN in November​‌ 2024 in the framework​​ of the MATHSOUT project.​​​‌ The contract follows the​ lines of the bilateral​‌ agreement between Inria and​​ IFPEN.

8.2 Bilateral grants​​​‌ with industry

Participant: Simon​ Lemaire.

In 2023,​‌ the PRCE project HIPOTHEC​​ (HIgh-order PO​​​‌lyhedral meTHods​ for Eddy C​‌urrent testing simulations) has​​ been funded in the​​​‌ generic ANR call. This​ 6-year project, which started​‌ in January 2024, is​​ coordinated by Simon Lemaire​​​‌ and is a collaboration​ between Inria, EDF, and​‌ 3 additional academic partners.​​ The aim of the​​​‌ project is to pursue,​ within an enlarged academic​‌ consortium, the research efforts​​ initiated in the framework​​​‌ of the France Relance​ collaboration between the team​‌ and EDF R&D. More​​ details about the HIPOTHEC​​​‌ project can be found​ in Section 9.3.2.​‌

9 Partnerships and cooperations​​

9.1 International initiatives

9.1.1​​​‌ Associate Teams

Participants: Alain​ Blaustein, Clément Cancès​‌, Claire Chainais-Hillairet,​​ Théophile Chaumont-Frelet, Maxime​​​‌ Herda, Andrea Natale​.

Since 2025, Maxime​‌ Herda is the principal​​ investigator of Inria ARISE​​​‌ associate research team. Alain​ Blaustein , Clément Cances​‌ , Claire Chainais ,​​ Thomas Crozon and Amelie​​​‌ Dupouy are also members​ of the associated team.​‌ The ARISE project (Analysis​​ of Robust Numerical Solvers​​​‌ for Innovative Semiconductors in​ View of Energy Transition)​‌ focuses on the development​​ of advanced mathematical and​​​‌ numerical models for innovative​ semiconductor devices, such as​‌ perovskite solar cells and​​ memristors, to support the​​​‌ global energy transition. This​ collaboration between the RAPSODI​‌ team at the Inria​​ Centre at the University​​​‌ of Lille and the​ NUMSEMIC team at WIAS​‌ Berlin builds upon several​​ years of joint research​​​‌ on drift-diffusion systems for​ charge transport. The project​‌ aims to address key​​ challenges in modeling these​​​‌ devices, particularly involving nonlinear​ diffusion, boundary conditions, and​‌ multi-scale phenomena. By combining​​ rigorous mathematical analysis, robust​​​‌ numerical methods, and practical​ applications, ARISE aims at​‌ enhancing the understanding and​​ simulation of cutting-edge semiconductor​​​‌ technologies. Budget:  8k€/year for​ research visits.

9.2 International​‌ research visitors

9.2.1 Visits​​ of international scientists

Participants:​​​‌ Alain Blaustein, Clément​ Cancès, Claire Chainais-Hillairet​‌, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet,​​ Marien-Lorenzo Hanot, Maxime​​​‌ Herda, Simon Lemaire​, Andrea Natale.​‌

Other international visits to​​ the team
M. Ingremeau​​​‌
  • Status
    Full prof.
  • Institution​ of origin:
    Institut Fourier​‌
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    29-31​​ Feb.
  • Context of the​​​‌ visit:
    Work with Théophile​ Chaumont-Frelet in the context​‌ of the AEx POPEG.​​
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​​‌
    research stay
A. Bespalov​
  • Status
    Associate prof.
  • Institution​‌ of origin:
    Univ. Birmingham​​
  • Country:
    United-Kingdom
  • Dates:
    10-13​​ March
  • Context of the​​​‌ visit:
    Work with Théophile‌ Chaumont-Frelet in the context‌​‌ of the ANR APOWA.​​
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​​‌
    research stay
G. Gantner‌
  • Status
    Associate prof.
  • Institution‌​‌ of origin:
    Univ. Bonn​​
  • Country:
    Germany
  • Dates:
    10-13​​​‌ March
  • Context of the‌ visit:
    Work with Théophile‌​‌ Chaumont-Frelet in the context​​ of the ANR APOWA.​​​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:‌
    research stay
Z. Dong‌​‌
  • Status
    Junior researcher
  • Institution​​ of origin:
    Inria Paris​​​‌
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    3-4‌ July
  • Context of the‌​‌ visit:
    Work with Théophile​​ Chaumont-Frelet on quad-curl equations.​​​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:‌
    research stay funded by‌​‌ Inria Paris
M. Melenk​​
  • Status
    Full prof.
  • Institution​​​‌ of origin:
    TU Wein‌
  • Country:
    Austria
  • Dates:
    8‌​‌ Sept. - 3 Oct.​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    Work with Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌ on time-harmonic elastodynamic equations.‌​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​
    research stay as “Professeur​​​‌ invité”
J. Dörner
  • Status‌
    PhD student
  • Institution of‌​‌ origin:
    KIT
  • Country:
    Germany​​
  • Dates:
    1 Sept. 2025​​​‌ - 28. Feb 2026‌
  • Context of the visit:‌​‌
    Work with Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​ on interface conditions for​​​‌ Maxwell equations.
  • Mobility program/type‌ of mobility:
    6 month‌​‌ research stay during PhD​​ thesis
G. Gantner
  • Status​​​‌
    Assistant prof.
  • Institution of‌ origin:
    Univ. Bonn
  • Country:‌​‌
    Germany
  • Dates:
    10-14 Nov.​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    Work with Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌ on a posteriori estimation‌​‌ in unbounded domains.
  • Mobility​​ program/type of mobility:
    research​​​‌ stay funded by Univ.‌ Bonn
Z. Dong
  • Status‌​‌
    Junior researcher
  • Institution of​​ origin:
    Inria Paris
  • Country:​​​‌
    France
  • Dates:
    24-27 Nov.‌
  • Context of the visit:‌​‌
    Work with Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​ on quad-curl equations.
  • Mobility​​​‌ program/type of mobility:
    research‌ stay funded by Inria‌​‌ Paris
L. Mascotto
  • Status​​
    Assistant Prof.
  • Institution of​​​‌ origin:
    Univ. Milano Bicocca‌
  • Country:
    Italy
  • Dates:
    1-3‌​‌ Dec.
  • Context of the​​ visit:
    Work with Théophile​​​‌ Chaumont-Frelet on biharmonic equations‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:‌​‌
    research stay funded by​​ Univ. Milano Bicocca
L.​​​‌ Bronsard
  • Status
    Full Prof.‌
  • Institution of origin:
    McMaster‌​‌ University
  • Country:
    Canada
  • Dates:​​
    12 May - 9​​​‌ June
  • Context of the‌ visit:
    Work with Marc‌​‌ Pegon on Ginzurg–Landau type​​ models with heavily penalized​​​‌ divergence.
  • Mobility program/type of‌ mobility:
    research stay as‌​‌ an invited professor funded​​ by the CDP C2EMPI.​​​‌
A. Zurek
  • Status
    Assistant‌ Prof.
  • Institution of origin:‌​‌
    UTC
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:​​
    19-20 May
  • Context of​​​‌ the visit:
    Work with‌ Maxime Herda on structure-preserving‌​‌ scheme for local sensing​​ chemotaxis equations.
  • Mobility program/type​​​‌ of mobility:
    research stay‌ funded by PEPS JCJC‌​‌ 2025 (FR2037FMHF).
D. Abdel​​
  • Status
    Postdoc
  • Institution of​​​‌ origin:
    WIAS Berlin
  • Country:‌
    Germany
  • Dates:
    19-20 May‌​‌
  • Context of the visit:​​
    Work with Maxime Herda​​​‌ Analysis of perovskite semiconductor‌ models.
  • Mobility program/type of‌​‌ mobility:
    research stay funded​​ by Inria ARISE and​​​‌ LabEx CEMPI (ANR-11-LABX-0007).
H.‌ Hivert
  • Status
    Junior researcher‌​‌
  • Institution of origin:
    Inria​​ Rennes
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:​​​‌
    23-36 June
  • Context of‌ the visit:
    Work with‌​‌ Maxime Herda Asymptotic-preserving schemes​​ in the anomalous diffusion​​​‌ limit.
  • Mobility program/type of‌ mobility:
    research stay funded‌​‌ by Univ. Rennes.
A.​​ Zurek
  • Status
    Assistant Prof.​​​‌
  • Institution of origin:
    UTC‌
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    1-5‌​‌ Sept.
  • Context of the​​​‌ visit:
    Work with Maxime​ Herda Discrete functional inequalities.​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​
    research stay funded by​​​‌ PEPS JCJC 2025 (FR2037FMHF).​
A. Trescases
  • Status
    CNRS​‌ researcher
  • Institution of origin:​​
    Univ. Toulouse
  • Country:
    France​​​‌
  • Dates:
    1-5 Sept.
  • Context​ of the visit:
    Work​‌ with Maxime Herda Discrete​​ functional inequalities.
  • Mobility program/type​​​‌ of mobility:
    research stay​ funded by PEPS JCJC​‌ 2025 (FR2037FMHF).
K. Fourteau​​
  • Status
    Postdoc
  • Institution of​​​‌ origin:
    Météo-France & CNRS​
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    22-26​‌ Sept.
  • Context of the​​ visit:
    Work with Clément​​​‌ Cancès on the mathematical​ modeling of snowpacks thanks​‌ to thermodynamics.
  • Mobility program/type​​ of mobility:
    research stay​​​‌ funded by the S-NOW​ project supported by the​‌ Mathematical Institute for Planet​​ Earth (IMPT).​​​‌
S. Cardenas
  • Status
    PhD​ student
  • Institution of origin:​‌
    Univ. Montpellier
  • Country:
    France​​
  • Dates:
    8-10 Dec.
  • Context​​​‌ of the visit:
    Work​ with Marien-Lorenzo Hanot on​‌ high-order finite volumes on​​ manifolds.
  • Mobility program/type of​​​‌ mobility:
    research stay funded​ by Rapsodi.

9.2.2 Visits​‌ to international teams

Research​​ stays abroad
Matthieu Alfaro​​​‌
  • Visited institution:
    Univ. Bologna​
  • Country:
    Italy
  • Dates:
    20-30​‌ June
  • Mobility program/type of​​ mobility:
    research stay.
Alain​​​‌ Blaustein
  • Visited institution:
    WIAS​ Berlin
  • Country:
    Germany
  • Dates:​‌
    3-7 Nov.
  • Context of​​ the visit:
    Annual team​​​‌ meeting of the Inria​ ARISE associate team.
  • Mobility​‌ program/type of mobility:
    research​​ stay funded by Inria​​​‌ ARISE associate team.
Clément​ Cancès
  • Visited institution:
    Météo-France​‌ & CNRS, Grenoble
  • Country:​​
    France
  • Dates:
    20-22 Jan.​​​‌
  • Context of the visit:​
    work with K. Fourteau​‌ on snow models.
  • Mobility​​ program/type of mobility:
    research​​​‌ stay.
Clément Cancès
  • Visited​ institution:
    WIAS Berlin
  • Country:​‌
    Germany
  • Dates:
    3-7 Nov.​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    Annual team meeting of​ the Inria ARISE associate​‌ team.
  • Mobility program/type of​​ mobility:
    research stay funded​​​‌ by Inria ARISE associate​ team.
Clément Cancès
  • Visited​‌ institution:
    TU Munich
  • Country:​​
    Germany
  • Dates:
    8-12 Dec.​​​‌
  • Context of the visit:​
    work with D. Matthes​‌ on dissipation driven free​​ boundary problems.
  • Mobility program/type​​​‌ of mobility:
    research stay.​
Claire Chainais-Hillairet
  • Visited institution:​‌
    WIAS Berlin
  • Country:
    Germany​​
  • Dates:
    3-7 Nov.
  • Context​​​‌ of the visit:
    Annual​ team meeting of the​‌ Inria ARISE associate team.​​
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​​‌
    research stay funded by​ Inria ARISE associate team.​‌
Théophile Chaumont-Frelet
  • Visited institution:​​
    Univ. Bonn
  • Country:
    Germany​​​‌
  • Dates:
    3-5 June
  • Context​ of the visit:
    work​‌ with G. Gantner on​​ a posteriori error estimation​​​‌ in unbounded domains.
  • Mobility​ program/type of mobility:
    research​‌ stay founded by Univ.​​ Bonn.
Thomas Crozon
  • Visited​​​‌ institution:
    WIAS Berlin
  • Country:​
    Germany
  • Dates:
    3-7 Nov.​‌
  • Context of the visit:​​
    Annual team meeting of​​​‌ the Inria ARISE associate​ team.
  • Mobility program/type of​‌ mobility:
    research stay funded​​ by Inria ARISE associate​​​‌ team.
Andrea Natale
  • Visited​ institution:
    Univ. Edimbourg
  • Country:​‌
    United-Kingdom
  • Dates:
    1-15 Aug.​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    work with K. Hu​ on finite element methods​‌ for numerical relativity.
  • Mobility​​ program/type of mobility:
    Research​​​‌ stay funded by ERC​ GeoFEM.
Maxime Herda
  • Visited​‌ institution:
    International research lab​​ CRM-CNRS, Montréal
  • Country:
    Canada​​​‌
  • Dates:
    10-28 Jan.
  • Context​ of the visit:
    work​‌ with A. Zurek on​​ structure-preserving scheme for McKean-Vlasov​​ equations.
  • Mobility program/type of​​​‌ mobility:
    research stay funded‌ by ANR CAPPS (ANR-23-CE40-0004)‌​‌ and IRL CRM-CNRS.
Maxime​​ Herda
  • Visited institution:
    Laboratoire​​​‌ Jean Dieudonné (Univ. Côte‌ d'Azur)
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:‌​‌
    30 June - 4​​ July
  • Context of the​​​‌ visit:
    work with I.‌ Tristani on fractional hypocoercivity‌​‌ and anomalous diffusion limit.​​
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​​‌
    research stay funded by‌ CNRS.
Maxime Herda
  • Visited‌​‌ institution:
    IMT (Univ. Toulouse)​​
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    13-17​​​‌ Oct.
  • Context of the‌ visit:
    work with A.‌​‌ Trescases on discrete functional​​ inequalities.
  • Mobility program/type of​​​‌ mobility:
    research stay funded‌ by PEPS JCJC 2025‌​‌ (FR2037FMHF).
Maxime Herda
  • Visited​​ institution:
    WIAS Berlin
  • Country:​​​‌
    Germany
  • Dates:
    3-7 Nov.‌
  • Context of the visit:‌​‌
    Annual team meeting of​​ the Inria ARISE associate​​​‌ team.
  • Mobility program/type of‌ mobility:
    research stay funded‌​‌ by Inria ARISE associate​​ team.
Maxime Herda
  • Visited​​​‌ institution:
    IMT (Univ. Toulouse)‌
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    24-28‌​‌ Nov.
  • Context of the​​ visit:
    work with T.​​​‌ Crin-Barat on hypocoercivity for‌ hyperbolic and kinetic equations.‌​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:​​
    research stay funded by​​​‌ ANR HEAD (ANR-24-CE40-3260).
Andrea‌ Natale
  • Visited institution:
    University‌​‌ of British Columbia
  • Country:​​
    Canada
  • Dates:
    4-23 April​​​‌
  • Context of the visit:‌
    work with Young-Heon Kim‌​‌ to work on Wasserstein​​ projections in convex order.​​​‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:‌
    Research stay funded by‌​‌ the joint Inria team​​ KarMA (Kantorovich Initiative and​​​‌ ParMA).
Andrea Natale
  • Visited‌ institution:
    Herriot-Watt University
  • Country:‌​‌
    United-Kingdom
  • Dates:
    6-12 July​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    work with David Bourne‌ to work on Laguerre‌​‌ tessellation fitting problems.
  • Mobility​​ program/type of mobility:
    Research​​​‌ stay funded by the‌ Herriot-Watt University.
Marc Pegon‌​‌
  • Visited institution:
    McMaster University​​
  • Country:
    Canada
  • Dates:
    5​​​‌ Feb. - 11 March‌
  • Context of the visit:‌​‌
    work with L. Bronsard​​ on Ginzurg–Landau type models​​​‌ with heavily penalized divergence.‌
  • Mobility program/type of mobility:‌​‌
    research stay.
Marc Pegon​​
  • Visited institution:
    Laboratoire Jean​​​‌ Dieudonné (Univ. Côte d'Azur)‌
  • Country:
    France
  • Dates:
    30‌​‌ June - 4 July​​
  • Context of the visit:​​​‌
    work with I. Tristani‌ on fractional hypocoercivity and‌​‌ anomalous diffusion limit.
  • Mobility​​ program/type of mobility:
    research​​​‌ stay funded by CNRS.‌

9.3 National initiatives

Participants:‌​‌ Alain Blaustein, Clément​​ Cancès, Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​​​‌, Cindy Guichard,‌ Simon Lemaire, Andrea‌​‌ Natale, Marc Pegon​​.

9.3.1 France 2030​​​‌ program

Clément Cances is‌ the co-PI, together with‌​‌ I. Faille (IFPEN), of​​ the MATHSOUT project of​​​‌ the PEPR Mathematics in‌ Interaction (Maths-VivES) funded by‌​‌ the ANR in the​​ framework of the France​​​‌ 2030 program. The project‌ essentially aims at lifting,‌​‌ thanks to mathematical studies,​​ scientific locks identified by​​​‌ practitioners in Numerical Geosciences.‌ The project involves 4‌​‌ institutional partners (INRIA Univ.​​ Lille, IFPEN, UniCA, and​​​‌ BRGM) as well as‌ colleagues from CNRS—UGA and‌​‌ from Sorbonne Université.

  • Title:​​ MATHématiques SOUTerraines​​​‌
  • Type: PEPR
  • ANR reference:‌ ANR-23-EXMA-0010
  • Duration: 2024–2029 (5‌​‌ years)
  • Budget: 1​​ 000 000 euros
  • Coordinators:​​​‌ Clément Cances and I.‌ Faille (IFPEN)

9.3.2 ANR‌​‌ projects

ANR COOKIE.

Alain​​ Blaustein is a member​​​‌ of the ANR project‌ Cookie. The project‌​‌ runs from 2025 to​​​‌ 2030 and it has​ been granted 435 717​‌ euros. The project focuses​​ on the numerical simulation​​​‌ and analysis of kinetic​ equations and related models.​‌ It addresses both Lagrangian​​ and Eulerian numerical methods​​​‌ and aims to establish​ new connections between the​‌ analysis of partial differential​​ equations, numerical analysis, and​​​‌ computational aspects in kinetic​ theory and related models.​‌

  • Title: Calcul & Approximation​​ d'équations cinétiques
  • Type: PRC​​​‌
  • ANR committee: Mathématiques (CE40)​ - 2025
  • Coordinator: F.​‌ Filbet (IMT, Univ. Toulouse)​​
ANR APOWA.

Theophile Chaumont-Frelet​​​‌ is the PI of​ the ANR JCJC project​‌ APOWA, funded in​​ the 2023 generic call.​​​‌ The APOWA project aims​ at the development, analysis​‌ and implementation of a​​ posteriori error estimators and​​​‌ adaptive finite element schemes​ for time-dependent wave propagation​‌ problems.

  • Title: APO​​steriori error estimates for​​​‌ WAve equations
  • Type:​ JCJC
  • ANR committee: Mathématiques​‌ (CE40) - 2023
  • ANR​​ reference: ANR-23-CE40-0019
  • Duration: 2024–2027​​​‌ (48 months)
  • Budget: 266​ 725 euros
  • Coordinator: Theophile​‌ Chaumont-Frelet
ANR HIPOTHEC.

Simon​​ Lemaire is the PI​​​‌ of the ANR PRCE​ project HIPOTHEC, funded​‌ in the 2023 generic​​ call. This project aims​​​‌ at developing accurate and​ flexible numerical solvers for​‌ eddy current testing simulations,​​ based on high-order polyhedral​​​‌ methods. The target application,​ of industrial interest, is​‌ the non-invasive detection of​​ flaws within steam generators​​​‌ in nuclear plants.

  • Title:​ HIgh-order POlyhedral​‌ meTHods for​​ Eddy Current​​​‌ testing simulations
  • Type: PRCE,​ in partnership with EDF​‌
  • ANR committee: Modèles numériques,​​ simulation, applications (CE46) -​​​‌ 2023
  • ANR reference: ANR-23-CE46-0013​
  • Duration: 2024–2028 (60 months)​‌
  • Budget: 604 193 euros​​ (in total), with 143​​​‌ 464 euros for INRIA​ Lille
  • Coordinator: Simon Lemaire​‌
  • Consortium: INRIA (Lille), UPHF​​ (Valenciennes) - EDF (Palaiseau)​​​‌ - Université de Montpellier,​ Université Côte d'Azur (Nice)​‌

In the framework of​​ the HIPOTHEC project, it​​​‌ has been agreed that​ all the software developments​‌ will be implemented within​​ the prototyping platform ParaSkel++​​​‌ developed by RAPSODI.

ANR​ NUHEMIBA.

Theophile Chaumont-Frelet is​‌ a member of the​​ ANR JCJC project NuHeMiBa​​​‌, whose goal is​ to develop discretization methods​‌ for high-frequency wave propagation​​ problems using semiclassical wavelets.​​​‌ This project is a​ follow up on the​‌ AEx POPEG previously granted​​ to Théophile Chaumont-Frelet .​​​‌

  • Title: Numerics for​ Helmholtz equation with​‌ Microlocal Base​​
  • Type: JCJC
  • ANR committee:​​​‌ Mathématiques (CE40) - 2024​
  • ANR reference: ANR-24-CE40-3760
  • Duration:​‌ 2024–2028 (48 months)
  • Budget:​​ 266 725 euros
  • Coordinator:​​​‌ M. Ingremeau
ANR BARYFLOW.​

Andrea Natale is the​‌ PI of the ANR​​ JCJC project BARYFLOW,​​​‌ funded in the 2025​ generic call. This project​‌ aims at developing a​​ new framework to compute​​​‌ interpolation and extrapolation of​ measures using Optimal Transport.​‌ We will use this​​ to tackle data analysis​​​‌ applications involving measure-valued data​ (e.g., statistical regression), but​‌ also to develop accurate​​ particle schemes to simulate​​​‌ gradient flow systems, focusing​ in particular on the​‌ development of fast methods​​ for variational sampling.

  • Title:​​​‌ Generalizing Wasserstein BARYcenters to​ discretize gradient FLOWs
  • Type:​‌ JCJC
  • ANR commitee: Mathématiques​​ (CE40) - 2025
  • ANR​​ reference: ANR-25-CE40-3242-01
  • Budget: 237​​​‌ 215 euros
  • Coordinator: Andrea‌ Natale
ANR STOIQUES.

Marc‌​‌ Pegon is a member​​ of the ANR project​​​‌ STOIQUES (ANR-24-CE40-2216).‌ The STOIQUES project led‌​‌ by Y. Privat is​​ dedicated to the investigation​​​‌ of modern problems in‌ shape optimizations. It addresses‌​‌ nonlinear PDE models with​​ topological constraints, quantitative geometric​​​‌ inequalities, uncertainty in shape‌ inverse problems, and numerical‌​‌ approaches that avoid the​​ use of costly meshes.​​​‌

  • Title: Shape and‌ Topology Optimization:‌​‌ Impactful QUestions​​ and Emerging S​​​‌ubjects
  • Type: PRC
  • ANR‌ commitee: Mathématiques (CE40) -‌​‌ 2024
  • ANR reference: ANR-24-CE40-2216​​
  • Budget: 463 080 euros​​​‌
  • Coordinator: Y. Privat (Univ.‌ Lorraine)
ANR ESSTOS.

Marc‌​‌ Pegon is a member​​ of the ANR project​​​‌ ESSTOS. The ESSTOS project‌ led by A. Monteil‌​‌ studies the links between​​ nonlinear elliptic PDEs and​​​‌ geometric objects arising from‌ energy concentration phenomena. At‌​‌ the interface of analysis,​​ geometry, with applications to​​​‌ micromagnetics, liquid crystals, and‌ urban planning, it focuses‌​‌ on characterizing singular sets​​ and optimal profiles near​​​‌ singularities, with particular emphasis‌ on transport networks and‌​‌ symmetry-driven structures.

  • Title: Systèmes​​ elliptiques à transitions abruptes​​​‌ sur des ensembles optimaux‌
  • Type: JCJC
  • ANR commitee:‌​‌ Mathématiques (CE40) - 2025​​
  • Coordinator: A. Monteil (Univ.​​​‌ Paris-Est)

9.3.3 LabEx CEMPI‌

Through their affiliation to‌​‌ the Laboratoire Paul Painlevé​​ of University of Lille,​​​‌ RAPSODI team members benefit‌ from the support of‌​‌ the LabEx CEMPI.​​

  • Title: Centre E​​​‌uropéen pour les M‌athématiques, la Physique‌​‌ et leurs Interactions​​
  • Partners: Laboratoire Paul Painlevé​​​‌ (LPP) and Laser Physics‌ department (PhLAM), Université de‌​‌ Lille
  • ANR reference: 11-LABX-0007​​
  • Duration: February 2012 -​​​‌ December 2024 (the project‌ has been renewed in‌​‌ 2019)
  • Budget: 6 960​​ 395 euros
  • Coordinator: E.​​​‌ Fricain (LPP, Université de‌ Lille)

The "Laboratoire d'Excellence"‌​‌ CEMPI (Centre​​ Européen pour les​​​‌ Mathématiques, la P‌hysique et leurs I‌​‌nteractions), a project of​​ the Laboratoire de mathématiques​​​‌ Paul Painlevé (LPP) and‌ the laboratoire de Physique‌​‌ des Lasers, Atomes et​​ Molécules (PhLAM), was created​​​‌ in the context of‌ the "Programme d'Investissements d'Avenir"‌​‌ in February 2012. The​​ association Painlevé-PhLAM creates in​​​‌ Lille a research unit‌ for fundamental and applied‌​‌ research and for training​​ and technological development that​​​‌ covers a wide spectrum‌ of knowledge stretching from‌​‌ pure and applied mathematics​​ to experimental and applied​​​‌ physics. The CEMPI research‌ is at the interface‌​‌ between mathematics and physics.​​ It is concerned with​​​‌ key problems coming from‌ the study of complex‌​‌ behaviors in cold atoms​​ physics and nonlinear optics,​​​‌ in particular fiber optics.‌ It deals with fields‌​‌ of mathematics such as​​ algebraic geometry, modular forms,​​​‌ operator algebras, harmonic analysis,‌ and quantum groups, that‌​‌ have promising interactions with​​ several branches of theoretical​​​‌ physics.

The PhD thesis‌ of A.-A. Diallo, which‌​‌ started in November 2024​​ in collaboration with the​​​‌ PhLAM laboratory, and which‌ is co-supervised by M.‌​‌ Herda, is funded by​​ the LabEx CEMPI.​​​‌

9.3.4 HQI: France Hybrid‌ HPC Quantum Initiative

Cindy‌​‌ Guichard is a member​​​‌ of the WP4 of​ the HQI initiative.​‌ The HQI initiative aims​​ at serving academic and​​​‌ industrial research scientists, who​ want to evaluate the​‌ potential of quantum and/or​​ hybrid computing for their​​​‌ applications.

  • Title: HQI: France​ Hybrid HPC Quantum Initiative​‌
  • Type: Programme d'Investissements d'Avenir​​ (PIA4)
  • Duration: January 2022​​​‌ - December 2026
  • Budget:​ 72 300 000 euros​‌
  • Coordinator of WP4: P.​​ Tremblin (Maison de la​​​‌ Simulation & CEA)

9.3.5​ Mathematical Institute for Planet​‌ Earth (IMPT)

Clément Cances​​ is the co-PI, together​​​‌ with K. Fourteau (Météo​ France Grenoble), of the​‌ S-NOW project (2023-2024) funded​​ (15k€) by the Mathematical​​​‌ Institute for Planet Earth​ (IMPT). The​‌ goal of the S-NOW​​ project is to assess​​​‌ the compatibility of the​ models used to describe​‌ snow with thermodynamics, and​​ introduce as minor as​​​‌ possible corrections if needed.​

Andrea Natale is leading​‌ with G. Beaunée (INRAE)​​ the project “Calibration of​​​‌ epidemic models on graphs​ with Optimal Transport and​‌ derivative-free optimization" (2023-2024) financed​​ (55k€) by the Mathematical​​​‌ Institute for Planet Earth​ (IMPT). The project deals​‌ with the design of​​ inference methods for epidemiological​​​‌ models on graphs. State-of-the-art​ inference methods to determine​‌ unknown parameters in this​​ context often rely on​​​‌ extensive manipulations of the​ model outputs to match​‌ simulated results with measurements,​​ which limits their robustness​​​‌ and reliability. This project​ aims at developing optimal​‌ transport metrics to compare​​ epidemic scenarios, and use​​​‌ these to construct more​ robust calibration techniques via​‌ minimum discrepancy estimators. The​​ post-doc position of C.​​​‌ Sarrazin was funded in​ the framework of this​‌ project.

9.3.6 Exploratory Actions​​ (AEx)

Theophile Chaumont-Frelet is​​​‌ the PI of the​ "Action exploratoire" AEx POPEG​‌ funded by INRIA. The​​ aim of the POPEG​​​‌ project is to develop​ innovative Galerkin methods for​‌ high-frequency wave propagation problems.​​ Specifically, the objective is​​​‌ to use Gaussian coherent​ state basis functions in​‌ order to drastically reduce​​ the number of degrees​​​‌ of freedom compared to​ finite element basis functions​‌ for the same accuracy​​ when the frequency is​​​‌ high. The PhD position​ of F. Proust (UniCA)​‌ is supported by this​​ project.

9.3.7 Action de​​​‌ développement technologique (ADT)

Simon​ Lemaire is the instigator​‌ and coordinator of the​​ ADT project ParaSkel++,​​​‌ funded by Inria and​ the Hauts-de-France region, which​‌ started in 2020. The​​ aim of the project​​​‌ is to develop an​ optimized parallel C++ platform​‌ for the arbitrary-order numerical​​ approximation of PDEs on​​​‌ general polytopal meshes. More​ details can be found​‌ in Section 6.​​ All software developments realized​​​‌ in the framework of​ the HIPOTHEC project (see​‌ Section 9.3.2) are​​ implemented within the ParaSkel++​​​‌ platform.

9.3.8 PEPS-JCJC

Marc​ Pegon is the recipient​‌ of a PEPS-JCJC grant​​ ( 3.5k€) of​​​‌ the INSMI section of​ the CNRS. C. Sarrazin​‌ is also a member​​ of this project. It​​​‌ is dedicated to the​ numerical resolution of isoperimetric​‌ problems involving non-local energies.​​ The non-local energies considered​​​‌ can be either of​ Gamow-type (such as Riesz​‌ potentials or non-local perimeters)​​ or related to optimal​​ transport.

Maxime Herda is​​​‌ a member of PEPS‌ JCJC 2025 (FR2037FMHF), PI:‌​‌ Antoine Zurek (UTC). The​​ goal is to design​​​‌ structure-preserving scheme for local‌ sensing chemotaxis equations. Budget‌​‌ 4k€ for research visits.​​

10 Dissemination

10.1 Promoting​​​‌ scientific activities

10.1.1 Organization‌ of scientific events

Matthieu‌​‌ Alfaro is one of​​ the organizers of the​​​‌ recurrent Groupe de Travail‌ BioMaths Normand.

Caterina‌​‌ Calgaro and Maxime Herda​​ co-organized the regional one-day​​​‌ conference “Journée Analyse‌ Appliquée des Haut-de-France”‌​‌ which gathered around 40​​ participants and was held​​​‌ on Oct. 9.

Clément‌ Cancès was the main‌​‌ organizer of the 2025​​ edition of the annual​​​‌ meeting of the MathSout‌ project held at in‌​‌ Paris on Nov. 12.​​ Seven scientific talks were​​​‌ given there, as a‌ basis for informal scientific‌​‌ discussions between the members​​ of the MathSout project.​​​‌

Théophile Chaumont-Frelet co-organized the‌ Frontiers in Numerical Methods‌​‌ for nonlinear PDEs workshop​​ held in Lausanne the​​​‌ Oct. 8-10. He also‌ co-organized the minisymposium “Numerical‌​‌ methods for complex wave​​ propagation problems” at the​​​‌ ISOCAHOM2025 conference.

Theophile Chaumont-Frelet‌ and Marc Pegon are‌​‌ co-organizers of the ANEDP​​ seminar held weekly at​​​‌ the Laboratoire Paul Painlevé.‌

Maxime Herda organized the‌​‌ ARISE team meeting workshop,​​ WIAS Berlin in Nov​​​‌ 4-5. He is also‌ the co-organiser of a‌​‌ one week bilateral French-German​​ team meeting with two-day​​​‌ workshop.

Andrea Natale co-organized‌ the Workshop “Geometry,‌​‌ duality and convexity in​​ new OT problems”​​​‌ held on November 19-21‌ at the Institut de‌​‌ Mathématique d'Orsay.

Marc Pegon​​ co-organized two mini-symposia on​​​‌ Calculus of Variations in‌ the framework of the‌​‌ SMAI biennal conference in​​ June 2025.

10.1.2 Journal​​​‌

Claire Chainais-Hillairet is editor-in-chief‌ of the book series‌​‌ Mathématiques et applications and​​ member of the editorial​​​‌ boards of ESAIM: Mathematical‌ Modelling and Numerical Analysis‌​‌, IMA Journal of​​ Numerical Analysis and North-Western​​​‌ European Journal of Mathematics‌.

10.1.3 Invited talks‌​‌

Matthieu Alfaro gave a​​ talk in Recent Advances​​​‌ in Mathematical Modelling for‌ Medicine and Biology in‌​‌ Rouen in January. He​​ also gave a talk​​​‌ in the Journée de‌ l'équipe PARADYSE, INRIA Lille‌​‌ in April, in the​​ Bruno Pini Mathematical Analysis​​​‌ Seminar. He gave‌ a talk at Univ.‌​‌ Bologna in October. He​​ also gave a talk​​​‌ in A ReaDiNet workshop‌ on deterministic and stochastic‌​‌ PDEs, in Obernai​​ in November.

Alain Blaustein​​​‌ gave a talk at‌ the Workshop of the‌​‌ ARISE associate team that​​ was held at the​​​‌ WIAS institute in Berlin‌ on November 4-5. He‌​‌ also gave a talk​​ at the Mathematics seminar​​​‌ of the LMAC in‌ Compiègne on November 18.‌​‌ He also gave a​​ talk at the Journée​​​‌ du laboratoire Paul Painlevé‌, in Lille on‌​‌ October 16. Finally, he​​ gave a seminar at​​​‌ the Laboratoire de Mathématiques‌ Jean Leray in Nantes‌​‌ on March 11.

Caterina​​ Calgaro gave a talk​​​‌ at the workshop AMRENA‌ 2025 in May.

Clément‌​‌ Cancès gave seminars in​​ the mathematics departments of​​​‌ the Université Littoral Côte‌ d'Opale (Calais), the University‌​‌ of Rennes, the University​​​‌ of Oxford, and the​ University of Lille. He​‌ further gave talks in​​ the following workshops: Mixtures:​​​‌ Modeling, Analysis and Computing​ (Prague), EYAWKADANAJKOS workshop (Lyon),​‌ Gradient Flows Face-to-Face 5​​ (Granada), ARISE workshop (Berlin).​​​‌ Clément Cancès also gave​ scientific talks during the​‌ MAthSout and RAPSODI annual​​ meeting (Nov. 14 and​​​‌ Nov. 25). Besides, he​ presented the MathSout project​‌ during the kick-off meeting​​ of the PEPR Maths-VivES​​​‌ program.

Claire Chainais-Hillairet​ was invited to give​‌ an Anneliese Niethammer lecture​​ in Stuttgart in February​​​‌ 2025. She also gave​ a talk during the​‌ workshops ARISE that were​​ held in Lille, June​​​‌ 17 and Berlin, November​ 4-6.

Theophile Chaumont-Frelet​‌ gave a talk at​​ the Conference on Mathematics​​​‌ of Wave Phenomena 2025​ in Karlsruhe in February.​‌ He was invited online​​ at the weekly numerical​​​‌ analysis seminar of the​ University of Hong Kong​‌ on Feb. 19. He​​ was also invited to​​​‌ present his work at​ the Numerical analysis seminar​‌ at Univ. Basel in​​ April. He was invited​​​‌ in June to give​ a talk in the​‌ ICAN2025 conference in Hong-Kong.​​ He participated to the​​​‌ CERAMATH weekly seminar at​ Univ. Valenciennes on June​‌ 26. He gave two​​ talks at the ICOSAHOM2025​​​‌ conference, one talk at​ the ENUMATH2025 conference, and​‌ one talk at the​​ ACOMEN2025 conference.

Pierre Gervais​​​‌ gave a talk at​ the Journées jeunes EDPistes​‌ de France on January​​ 8th.

Maxime Herda gave​​​‌ invited talks at The​ International Conference on emerging​‌ aspects of kinetic theory,​​ nonlocal equations, and related​​​‌ applications (Wuhan University, China),​ the Workshop on Mathematical​‌ Models for Quantum and​​ Semiclassical Dynamics (Università di​​​‌ Firenze, Italy) and Gradient​ flows face-to-face 5th edition​‌ (Universidad de Granada, Spain).​​ He also gave seminar​​​‌ talk at the MAC​ seminar (Univ. Toulouse) and​‌ the Applied Mathematics Seminar​​ at CRM (McGill University​​​‌ and Univ. Montréal, Canada).​

Marien-Lorenzo Hanot gave a​‌ talk at the SIAM​​ Conference on Computational Science​​​‌ and Engineering mini-symposium "DECFEEC:​ Discrete and Finite Element​‌ Exterior Calculus" that was​​ held in Forth Worth​​​‌ on March 3-7.

Simon​ Lemaire gave two 90-minute​‌ lectures during the Indo-French​​ (CEFIPRA) Workshop on "Innovative​​​‌ Numerical Methods for Modern​ Engineering Problems" that was​‌ held at IIT Roorkee​​ (India) in January 2025.​​​‌ He also gave invited​ talks during the 30th​‌ UK Biennial Numerical Analysis​​ Conference held in Glasgow​​​‌ in June, in the​ framework of the ICOSAHOM​‌ and ENUMATH conferences respectively​​ held in Montréal (Canada)​​​‌ and Heidelberg (Germany) in​ July and September, and​‌ during the HyBOX Workshop​​ held at ENSTA (Palaiseau)​​​‌ in December 2025. In​ September 2025, he also​‌ gave an online talk​​ in the ABB Corporate​​​‌ Research (Baden-Dättwil, Switzerland) internal​ seminar. Finally, he gave​‌ talks in the Inria​​ SERENA team (Paris) internal​​​‌ seminar in March, for​ the Kick-off Meeting of​‌ the Cross-Disciplinary Project C2EMPI​​ at Université de Lille​​​‌ also in March, and​ for the annual meeting​‌ of the RAPSODI team​​ in November 2025.

Andrea​​​‌ Natale gave a talk​ at the University of​‌ British Columbia (Canada) and​​ online as part of​​ the Kantorovich Initiative Seminar​​​‌ series. He also gave‌ a talk at the‌​‌ Séminaire Parisien d’Optimisation which​​ takes place at the​​​‌ Institut Henri Poincaré in‌ Paris.

Marc Pegon gave‌​‌ a talk at the​​ PDE and Analysis seminar​​​‌ of McMaster University (Canada)‌ in February 2025.

Juliette‌​‌ Venel gave a talk​​ at the 37th seminar​​​‌ on Computational Fluid Dynamics‌ organized jointly by the‌​‌ CEA and the SMAI/GAMNI​​ Thematic Group on January​​​‌ 27–28 at the Institut‌ Poincaré in Paris.

10.1.4‌​‌ Research administration

Matthieu Alfaro​​ is a deputy director​​​‌ of the Doctoral School‌ "Mathématiques, Information, Ingéniérie des‌​‌ systèmes" (MIIS), handling about​​ 200 students in Normandy.​​​‌

Alain Blaustein participated to‌ the “groupe de travail‌​‌ ATER” at the laboratoire​​ Paul Painlevé at the​​​‌ University of Lille whose‌ task was to examine‌​‌ the application files of​​ candidates to the position​​​‌ opening and to submit‌ recommendations to the “commission‌​‌ mixte restreinte”.

Caterina Calgaro​​ is a member of​​​‌ the management team of‌ the Faculté des Sciences‌​‌ et Technologies at Université​​ de Lille. She is​​​‌ also a member of‌ the Conseil de Département‌​‌ de Mathématiques at the​​ Faculté des Sciences et​​​‌ Technologies at Université de‌ Lille.

Clément Cancès was‌​‌ a member until Nov.​​ 2025 of the Bureau​​​‌ du Comité des Équipes-Projets‌ (BCEP) of the INRIA‌​‌ Lille research center. He​​ also heads the Research​​​‌ Jobs Committee (Commission des‌ Emplois de Recherche, CER‌​‌ for short), and represents​​ INRIA in the council​​​‌ of the MADIS graduate‌ school. He also acts‌​‌ as a member of​​ the Mathematical Domain Board​​​‌ (Bureau de Domaine) of‌ the MADIS graduate school.‌​‌ Besides, he was a​​ member of the Administration​​​‌ Council of the French‌ Society for Applied and‌​‌ Industrial Mathematics (SMAI) until​​ June 2025.

Claire Chainais-Hillairet​​​‌ is vice-director of the‌ Laboratoire Paul Painlevé, in‌​‌ charge of human resources​​ for researchers, professors and​​​‌ assistant professors since 2020.‌ She was a member‌​‌ of the scientific committee​​ of the Institut Henri​​​‌ Poincaré up to end‌ of 2025.

Emmanuel Creusé‌​‌ has been Director of​​ the Mathematics Department at​​​‌ CERAMATHS since 2022. He‌ is also President of‌​‌ the jury for the​​ Bachelor's degree in Mathematics​​​‌ and the CaSSAD Master's‌ degree at UPHF and‌​‌ INSA Hauts-de-France.

Marien-Lorenzo Hanot​​ is a member of​​​‌ "conseils du département", and‌ of the “CPVA” pour‌​‌ the “master mention math​​ et applications”.

Maxime Herda​​​‌ is an elected member‌ of the Conseil de‌​‌ Laboratoire and of the​​ Commission Mixte related to​​​‌ the math laboratory and‌ the math department, from‌​‌ 2020 to 2025. Maxime​​ Herda is also substitute​​​‌ member of the INRIA‌ Lille Center Committee since‌​‌ 2020, a nominated member​​ of the Commission des​​​‌ Utilisateurs des Moyens Informatiques‌ (CUMI) since 2021 and‌​‌ of the Commission sur​​ les formations since 2025​​​‌ at INRIA Lille.

Until‌ 2025, Simon Lemaire was‌​‌ responsible, for the Inria​​ Lille research center (15​​​‌ research teams), of the‌ coordination of the yearly‌​‌ campaign of activity reports.​​ He is currently a​​​‌ substitute member of the‌ Inria Lille Center Committee,‌​‌ as well as a​​​‌ member of the Catering​ Commission (in charge of​‌ the attribution of the​​ catering market within the​​​‌ center).

Since 2023, Marc​ Pegon is responsible for​‌ the selection of students​​ for a training program​​​‌ at the engineering school​ “Polytech Lille”.

Juliette Venel​‌ is a member of​​ the council of the​​​‌ Mathematical Federation of Hauts-de-France.​ She is the Head​‌ of the Mathematics Resource​​ Center at INSA Hauts-de-France​​​‌ since September 2025.

10.1.5​ Hiring committees

Matthieu Alfaro​‌ was a member of​​ two hiring committees for​​​‌ associate professor (MCF) positions:​ one in Univ. Sorbonne​‌ Paris-Nord and one in​​ Univ. Bretagne Occidentale.

Clément​​​‌ Cancès was an external​ member of the hiring​‌ committee for a full​​ professor position in applied​​​‌ mathematics (PR26) at the​ Université de Pau et​‌ de Pays de l'Adour​​ (UPPA). He was also​​​‌ chairing the hiring committee​ for a full professor​‌ in statistics (PR26) at​​ the University of Lille.​​​‌

Claire Chainais-Hillairet took part​ in two hiring committees​‌ for full professor positions:​​ one in Lille (she​​​‌ was the head of​ the committee) and one​‌ in Nancy.

Claire Chainais-Hillairet​​ , Theophile Chaumont-Frelet and​​​‌ Marc Pegon were members​ of the hiring committee​‌ for an associate professor​​ position (MCF 26) within​​​‌ the AN-EDP team of​ the Laboratoire Paul Painlevé​‌ (Université de Lille).

Maxime​​ Herda was a member​​​‌ of the hiring committee​ for an associate professor​‌ position (MCF 26) at​​ Centrale Nantes.

Juliette Venel​​​‌ was a member of​ two recruitment committees for​‌ associate professor positions (MCF​​ 26) at INSA Rouen​​​‌ and at INSA Hauts-de-France.​

10.2 Teaching - Supervision​‌ - Juries - Educational​​ and pedagogical outreach

10.2.1​​​‌ Teaching

Alain Blaustein tought​ the course Refresher in​‌ Mathematics to the second​​ year students of the​​​‌ Master data science of​ Centrale Lille and Université​‌ de Lille. The course​​ lasted 24 hours (12​​​‌ hours of lectures ;​ 12 hours of exercise​‌ session).

Clément Cancès was​​ in charge of the​​​‌ course "Mathematical Tools for​ Simulation - Hyperbolic PDEs"​‌ (27h) of the M2​​ Scientific Computing at Université​​​‌ de Lille. He was​ also in charge of​‌ the course "Méthodes variationnelles​​ et équations aux dérivées​​​‌ partielles" (24h) in the​ Master of Mathematics of​‌ the Université Libre de​​ Bruxelles (Belgique).

Pierre Gervais​​​‌ tought a TD on​ “équations différentielles ordinaires” in​‌ L3 (36h).

Maxime Herda​​ was in charge of​​​‌ the course "Scientific computing"​ (28h) for 1st year​‌ (L3) students in Centrale​​ Lille.

In 2025, Simon​​​‌ Lemaire taught the course​ "Mathematical Tools for Simulation​‌ - Elliptic & Parabolic​​ PDEs" (44h) in the​​​‌ framework of the Master​ 2 "Scientific Computing" at​‌ Université de Lille.

10.2.2​​ Supervision

Interns:

  • The “contrat​​​‌ relais-thèse” of Mohammed Chaibi​ (Inria) was supervised by​‌ Théophile Chaumont-Frelet until October​​ 2025. It concerned the​​​‌ a posteriori error analysis​ of finite element discretizations​‌ to the time-dependent wave​​ equation. It was​​​‌ funded by the ANR​ project APOWA.
  • The​‌ M2 internships of Lisa​​ Grandin, Cyprien Magnier and​​​‌ Raphaël Soupart on Study​ of the impact of​‌ thermal insulation on the​​ internal temperature of a​​ tiny house were supervised​​​‌ by Emmanuel Creusé and‌ Juliette Venel .
  • The‌​‌ M1 internships of Kodjo​​ Adjoguidji and Koffi Kpelly​​​‌ on Numerical simulation of‌ the driven cavity by‌​‌ the DF-MAC method were​​ supervised by Emmanuel Creusé​​​‌ .
  • The M2 internship‌ of Cyrian Marczewski (Univ.‌​‌ Lille) on A posteriori​​ error analysis for hybrid​​​‌ high-order methods, was‌ supervised by Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌​‌ and Simon Lemaire ,​​ from January to June​​​‌ 2025. It was funded‌ by an ENS Paris-Saclay‌​‌ fellowship.
  • The L3 internship​​ of Astel Molendi-Coste on​​​‌ the Modeming and the‌ effective computation of thermodynamical‌​‌ equilibria in wet snow​​ was supervised by Clément​​​‌ Cancès and Andrea Natale‌ from May to June.‌​‌
  • The M1 internship of​​ Brondol Nguetsa on Solving​​​‌ an inverse problem for‌ characterizing structures for ultrasound‌​‌ was co-supervised by Emmanuel​​ Creusé and Mamadou N'Diaye.​​​‌
  • The M1 internship of‌ A.S.B. Sonko (Univ. Lille)‌​‌ on Finite volume approach​​ to conservation equations with​​​‌ application to biofilm dynamics‌ was supervised by Caterina‌​‌ Calgaro from June to​​ July.
  • The L3 internship​​​‌ M. Zellat (Univ. Lille)‌ on Theoretical study of‌​‌ some classical numerical methods​​ for ODEs was suprvised​​​‌ by Caterina Calgaro in‌ July.

PhD students:

  • The‌​‌ PhD thesis of Mohammed​​ Chaibi (Inria) is supervised​​​‌ by Théophile Chaumont-Frelet since‌ November 2025. The topic‌​‌ concerns the a posteriori​​ error analysis of finite​​​‌ element discretizations to the‌ time-dependent wave equation.‌​‌ It is funded by​​ the ANR project APOWA​​​‌.
  • The PhD thesis‌ of Robin Colombier (UPHF,‌​‌ Valenciennes) is co-supervised by​​ Emmanuel Creusé and Caterina​​​‌ Calgaro , since November‌ 2022. The topic concerns‌​‌ numerical schemes for solving​​ the macroscopic quantum hydrodynamics​​​‌ equations, and it‌ is co-funded by UPHF‌​‌ and the Hauts-de-France region.​​
  • The PhD thesis of​​​‌ Abdoul Aziz Diallo (Université‌ de Lille) is co-supervised‌​‌ by Maxime Herda ,​​ S. Bielawski (PhLAM, Univ.​​​‌ Lille), and C. Évain‌ (PhLAM, Univ. Lille), since‌​‌ November 2024. The topic​​ concerns the numerical simulation​​​‌ of relativistic beams of‌ charged particles in particle‌​‌ accelerators, and it​​ is funded by the​​​‌ LabEx CEMPI.
  • The PhD‌ thesis of Amelie Dupouy‌​‌ (Inria) is supervised by​​ Clément Cances and Claire​​​‌ Chainais-Hillairet since October 2023.‌ She works on the‌​‌ mathematical and numerical analysis​​ of dissipative problems with​​​‌ free boundaries. This‌ PhD isco-funded by INRIA‌​‌ and the Hauts-de-France region.​​
  • The PhD thesis of​​​‌ Cyrian Marczewski (UPHF/Inria) is‌ co-supervised by Théophile Chaumont-Frelet‌​‌ , Simon Lemaire and​​ Serge Nicaise (UPHF), since​​​‌ September 2025. The topic‌ concerns a posteriori error‌​‌ analysis for hybrid high-order​​ methods with application to​​​‌ the harmonic Maxwell equations‌, and it is‌​‌ funded by the ANR​​ project HIPOTHEC.

Postdoctoral​​​‌ fellows:

  • The postdoctoral fellowship‌ of Thomas Crozon is‌​‌ mentored by Clément Cancès​​ and Claire Chainais-Hillairet since​​​‌ March 2025. He works‌ on the numerical approximation‌​‌ of a thermodynamically consistent​​ model for iron corrosion.​​​‌ He particularly focuses on‌ the structure preserving character‌​‌ of the numerical method​​ he developed. This post-doc​​​‌ is funded by the‌ CPER WaveTech@HdF.
  • The postdoctoral‌​‌ fellowship of Pierre Gervais​​​‌ (CNRS) was mentored by​ Maxime Herda from September​‌ 2023 to August 2025.​​ It was concerned with​​​‌ self-consistent Vlasov–Fokker–Planck equations, and​ their application to the​‌ modeling of electron beams​​. The postdoc was​​​‌ funded by the CPER​ WaveTech. P. Gervais is​‌ now MCF in Univ.​​ Toulouse.
  • The postdoctoral fellowship​​​‌ of Sumit Mahajan is​ mentored by Théophile Chaumont-Frelet​‌ is mentored by Theophile​​ Chaumont-Frelet and M. Vohralík​​​‌ since April 2025. It​ is concerned with the​‌ a posteriori error estimation​​ for the time-dependent wave​​​‌ equation on dynamic meshes​. The postdoc is​‌ funded by the ANR​​ project APOWA.

10.2.3​​​‌ Juries

HDR juries:

  • Matthieu​ Alfaro was a referee​‌ of the HdR of​​ Jimmy Garnier (CNRS, Univ.​​​‌ Savoie Mont-Blanc). The defense​ took place on June​‌ 4th.
  • Clément Cancès took​​ part to the Habilitation​​​‌ defense committee of Maxime​ Breden (École Polytechnique, June​‌ 30).

PhD juries:

  • Matthieu​​ Alfaro was a jury​​​‌ member of the PhD​ of Nathanaël Boutillon (Univ.​‌ Aix-Marseille and INRAE Avignon).​​ The defense took place​​​‌ on June 11th. He​ was also a referee​‌ of the PhD of​​ Sheila Permanes (Univ. Picardie).​​​‌ The defense took place​ on December 9th.
  • Clément​‌ Cancès served as a​​ reviewer and took part​​​‌ to the defense committees​ for the PhD theses​‌ of Thibault Caillet (Université​​ Lyon 1, July 3)​​​‌ and Mohammed Laaziri (Université​ Côte d'Azur, Nov. 17).​‌
  • Claire Chainais-Hillairet was president​​ of the PhD jurys​​​‌ of des jurys of​ Z. Wang (ENPC, 23/9)​‌ and N. Bourdineaud (Bordeaux,​​ 17/12). She also was​​​‌ a memvber of the​ PhD jury of H.​‌ Malamut (PSL, Paris Dauphine,​​ 21/11).
  • Théophile Chaumont-Frelet was​​​‌ a jury member of​ the PhD of Simone​‌ Pescuma. The defense took​​ place on November 20th.​​​‌
  • Emmanuel Creusé was a​ referee of the thesis​‌ manuscript and a member​​ of the PhD defense​​​‌ committee of Sarah Serhal​ (Ecole centrale de Nantes​‌ and Université Saint Joseph​​ de Beyrouth) on october​​​‌ 2025.
  • Simon Lemaire served​ as Referee for the​‌ evaluation of the PhD​​ thesis of Jia Jia​​​‌ Qian (Monash University, Australia)​ in July-August 2025. He​‌ also served as Examiner​​ in the PhD defense​​​‌ committee of Farah Chaaban​ (ENSTA Paris) in December​‌ 2025.

10.3 Popularization

Alain​​ Blaustein hosted a high-school​​​‌ student at the Laboratoire​ Paul Painlevé for a​‌ half day during his​​ internship in October.

Claire​​​‌ Chainais-Hillairet is one of​ the organizers of the​‌ one-week internship "Les Fourmis​​ {éclairées}", which was held​​​‌ at Université de Lille​ in April 2025, details​‌ are available here.​​

Emmanuel Creusé co-organized the​​​‌ Sixth Valenciennes Mathematics Meetings.​ This event, bringing together​‌ mathematics students from the​​ UPHF and preparatory class​​​‌ students from the Wallon​ (Valenciennes) and Kastler (Denain)​‌ high schools, allows participants​​ to discover various aspects​​​‌ of mathematics through a​ series of scientific presentations​‌ given by teacher-researchers. The​​ program for the 2025​​​‌ edition is available here​.

Maxime Herda wrote​‌ popularization article on the​​ Inria ARISE research team​​​‌.

Simon Lemaire is​ currently (co-)Scientific Officer in​‌ charge of Mediation for​​ the Inria Lille research​​ center. He is responsible​​​‌ for both internal (organization‌ of the monthly scientific‌​‌ seminar "30 MIN. de​​ sciences") and external (through​​​‌ different events, intended in‌ particular for high school‌​‌ students) scientific outreach actions.​​ He co-organized in October​​​‌ 2025 the "Rendez-vous des‌ Jeunes Mathématiciennes et Informaticiennes"‌​‌ (RJMI). This​​ two-day event is specifically​​​‌ geared towards female high‌ school students, and aims‌​‌ at promoting scientific careers​​ amongst them. He also​​​‌ participated in the organization‌ of the Maths and‌​‌ Computer Science one-week internship​​ "Les Fourmis {éclairées}",​​​‌ which was held at‌ Université de Lille in‌​‌ April 2025. He is​​ finally invested in the​​​‌ national scientific outreach programme‌ "1 scientifique, 1 classe‌​‌ / Chiche !",​​ for which he realized​​​‌ an intervention in 2025.‌

In 2025, Marc Pegon‌​‌ co-animated two introductory research​​ activities for high school​​​‌ students on the Kakeya‌ needle problem.

On May‌​‌ 20, Juliette Venel presented​​ the various responsibilities of​​​‌ an associate professor during‌ the “Maths C for‌​‌ L” week, held at​​ the University of Artois​​​‌ in Lens.

11 Scientific‌ production

11.1 Major publications‌​‌

  • 1 articleM.Marianne​​ Bessemoulin-Chatard and C.Claire​​​‌ Chainais-Hillairet. Exponential decay‌ of a finite volume‌​‌ scheme to the thermal​​ equilibrium for drift--diffusion systems​​​‌.Journal of Numerical‌ Mathematics2532017‌​‌, 147-168HALDOI​​
  • 2 articleM.Marianne​​​‌ Bessemoulin-Chatard, M.Maxime‌ Herda and T.Thomas‌​‌ Rey. Hypocoercivity and​​ diffusion limit of a​​​‌ finite volume scheme for‌ linear kinetic equations.‌​‌Mathematics of Computation89​​January 2020, 1093-1133​​​‌HALDOIback to‌ text
  • 3 articleK.‌​‌Konstantin Brenner and C.​​Clément Cancès. Improving​​​‌ Newton's method performance by‌ parametrization: the case of‌​‌ Richards equation.SIAM​​ Journal on Numerical Analysis​​​‌5542017,‌ 1760--1785HALback to‌​‌ text
  • 4 articleC.​​Clément Cancès, V.​​​‌Virginie Ehrlacher and L.‌Laurent Monasse. Finite‌​‌ Volumes for the Stefan-Maxwell​​ Cross-Diffusion System.IMA​​​‌ Journal of Numerical Analysis‌4422024,‌​‌ 1029–1060HALDOIback​​ to text
  • 5 article​​​‌C.Clément Cancès,‌ T.Thomas Gallouët and‌​‌ L.Léonard Monsaingeon.​​ Incompressible immiscible multiphase flows​​​‌ in porous media: a‌ variational approach.Analysis‌​‌ & PDE108​​2017, 1845--1876HAL​​​‌DOIback to text‌
  • 6 articleC.Clément‌​‌ Cancès and C.Cindy​​ Guichard. Numerical analysis​​​‌ of a robust free‌ energy diminishing Finite Volume‌​‌ scheme for parabolic equations​​ with gradient structure.​​​‌Foundations of Computational Mathematics‌1762017,‌​‌ 1525-1584HALback to​​ text
  • 7 articleC.​​​‌Claire Chainais-Hillairet and M.‌Maxime Herda. Large-time‌​‌ behaviour of a family​​ of finite volume schemes​​​‌ for boundary-driven convection-diffusion equations‌.IMA Journal of‌​‌ Numerical Analysis404​​October 2020, 2473-2505​​​‌HALDOIback to‌ text
  • 8 articleT.‌​‌Théophile Chaumont-Frelet and M.​​Martin Vohralík. p-robust​​​‌ equilibrated flux reconstruction in‌ H(curl) based on local‌​‌ minimizations. Application to a​​ posteriori analysis of the​​​‌ curl-curl problem.SIAM‌ Journal on Numerical Analysis‌​‌6142023,​​​‌ 1783--1818HALDOI
  • 9​ articleF.Florent Chave​‌, D. A.Daniele​​ Antonio Di Pietro and​​​‌ S.Simon Lemaire.​ A discrete Weber inequality​‌ on three-dimensional hybrid spaces​​ with application to the​​​‌ HHO approximation of magnetostatics​.Mathematical Models and​‌ Methods in Applied Sciences​​3212022,​​​‌ 175-207HALDOI
  • 10​ articleD. A.Daniele​‌ Antonio Di Pietro,​​ A.Alexandre Ern and​​​‌ S.Simon Lemaire.​ An arbitrary-order and compact-stencil​‌ discretization of diffusion on​​ general meshes based on​​​‌ local reconstruction operators.​Computational Methods in Applied​‌ Mathematics144June​​ 2014, 461-472HAL​​​‌DOIback to text​
  • 11 articleG.Giacomo​‌ Dimarco, R.Raphaël​​ Loubère, J.Jacek​​​‌ Narski and T.Thomas​ Rey. An efficient​‌ numerical method for solving​​ the Boltzmann equation in​​​‌ multidimensions.Journal of​ Computational Physics3532018​‌, 46-81HALDOI​​
  • 12 articleE.Enrico​​​‌ Facca, G.Gabriele​ Todeschi, A.Andrea​‌ Natale and M.Michele​​ Benzi. Efficient preconditioners​​​‌ for solving dynamical optimal​ transport via interior point​‌ methods.SIAM Journal​​ on Scientific Computing46​​​‌32024HALDOI​back to text
  • 13​‌ articleT.Thomas Gallouët​​, A.Andrea Natale​​​‌ and G.Gabriele Todeschi​. From geodesic extrapolation​‌ to a variational BDF2​​ scheme for Wasserstein gradient​​​‌ flows.Mathematics of​ Computation932024,​‌ 2769-2810HALDOIback​​ to text
  • 14 article​​​‌T.Thomas Gallouët,​ A.Andrea Natale and​‌ F.-X.François-Xavier Vialard.​​ Generalized compressible flows and​​​‌ solutions of the H(div)​ geodesic problem.Archive​‌ for Rational Mechanics and​​ Analysis2020HALDOI​​​‌
  • 15 articleB.Benôit​ Merlet. A highly​‌ anisotropic nonlinear elasticity model​​ for vesicles I. Eulerian​​​‌ formulation, rigidity estimates and​ vanishing energy limit.​‌Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal.​​21722015,​​​‌ 651--680HALDOI

11.2​ Publications of the year​‌

International journals

International‌ peer-reviewed conferences

  • 47 inproceedings‌​‌T.Théophile Chaumont-Frelet,​​ V.Victorita Dolean,​​​‌ M.Maxime Ingremeau and‌ F.Florentin Proust.‌​‌ A Galerkin method with​​ microlocalised shape functions to​​​‌ solve high-frequency Helmholtz problems‌.Book of abstracs‌​‌Conference on Mathematics of​​ Wave Phenomena 2025Karlsruhe,​​​‌ GermanyFebruary 2025HAL‌

Reports & preprints

11.3​​ Cited publications

  • 76 article​​​‌A.Ahmed Ait Hammou‌ Oulhaj, C.Clément‌​‌ Cancès and C.Claire​​ Chainais-Hillairet. Numerical analysis​​​‌ of a nonlinearly stable‌ and positive Control Volume‌​‌ Finite Element scheme for​​ Richards equation with anisotropy​​​‌.ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling‌ and Numerical Analysis52‌​‌42018, 1532-1567​​HALDOIback to​​​‌ text
  • 77 articleA.‌Ahmed Ait Hammou Oulhaj‌​‌ and D.David Maltese​​. Convergence of a​​​‌ positive nonlinear control volume‌ finite element scheme for‌​‌ an anisotropic seawater intrusion​​ model with sharp interfaces​​​‌.Numerical Methods for‌ Partial Differential Equations36‌​‌12020, 133-153​​HALDOIback to​​​‌ text
  • 78 articleA.‌Ahmed Ait Hammou Oulhaj‌​‌. Numerical analysis of​​ a finite volume scheme​​​‌ for a seawater intrusion‌ model with cross-diffusion in‌​‌ an unconfined aquifer.​​Numerical Methods for Partial​​​‌ Differential EquationsMay 2018‌HALDOIback to‌​‌ text
  • 79 bookL.​​Luigi Ambrosio, N.​​​‌Nicola Gigli and G.‌Giuseppe Savaré. Gradient‌​‌ flows: in metric spaces​​ and in the space​​​‌ of probability measures.‌Springer Science & Business‌​‌ Media2005back to​​ text
  • 80 articleR.​​​‌R. Araya, C.‌C. Harder, D.‌​‌D. Paredes and F.​​F. Valentin. Multiscale​​​‌ Hybrid-Mixed method.SIAM‌ J. Numer. Anal.51‌​‌62013, 3505--3531​​back to text
  • 81​​​‌ articleA.A. Arnold‌, P.P. Markowich‌​‌, G.G. Toscani​​ and A.A. Unterreiter​​​‌. On convex Sobolev‌ inequalities and the rate‌​‌ of convergence to equilibrium​​ for Fokker-Planck type equations​​​‌.Comm. Partial Differential‌ Equations261-22001‌​‌, 43-100URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1081/PDE-100002246​​DOIback to text​​​‌
  • 82 bookF.Franck‌ Assous, P.Patrick‌​‌ Ciarlet Jr. and S.​​Simon Labrunie. Mathematical​​​‌ foundations of computational electromagnetism‌.198Applied Mathematical‌​‌ SciencesSpringer, Cham2018​​, ix+458URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70842-3​​​‌DOIback to text‌
  • 83 articleN.Nathalie‌​‌ Ayi, M.Maxime​​ Herda, H.Hélène​​​‌ Hivert and I.Isabelle‌ Tristani. A note‌​‌ on hypocoercivity for kinetic​​ equations with heavy-tailed equilibrium​​​‌.Comptes Rendus. Mathématique‌3583July 2020‌​‌, 333-340HALDOI​​back to text
  • 84​​​‌ articleN.Nathalie Ayi‌, M.Maxime Herda‌​‌, H.Hélène Hivert​​ and I.Isabelle Tristani​​​‌. On a structure-preserving‌ numerical method for fractional‌​‌ Fokker-Planck equations.Mathematics​​ of Computation92340​​​‌2023, 635--693HAL‌DOIback to text‌​‌
  • 85 articleS.Sabrina​​ Bassetto, C.Clément​​​‌ Cancès, G.Guillaume‌ Enchéry and Q. H.‌​‌Quang Huy Tran.​​​‌ On several numerical strategies​ to solve Richards' equation​‌ in heterogeneous media with​​ Finite Volumes.Computational​​​‌ Geosciences262022,​ 1297--1322HALDOIback​‌ to text
  • 86 inproceedings​​S.Sabrina Bassetto,​​​‌ C.Clément Cancès,​ G.Guillaume Enchéry and​‌ Q. H.Quang Huy​​ Tran. Robust Newton​​​‌ solver based on variable​ switch for a finite​‌ volume discretization of Richards​​ equation.Finite Volumes​​​‌ for Complex Applications IX​Bergen, NorwayJune 2020​‌HALback to text​​
  • 87 articleC.C.​​​‌ Bataillon, F.F.​ Bouchon, C.C.​‌ Chainais-Hillairet, C.C.​​ Desgranges, E.E.​​​‌ Hoarau, F.F.​ Martin, S.S.​‌ Perrin, M.M.​​ Tupin and J.J.​​​‌ Talandier. Corrosion modelling​ of iron based alloy​‌ in nuclear waste repository​​.Electrochim. Acta55​​​‌152010, 4451--4467​back to textback​‌ to text
  • 88 book​​J.J. Bear and​​​‌ Y.Y. Bachmat.​ Introduction to modeling of​‌ transport phenomena in porous​​ media.4Springer​​​‌1990back to text​
  • 89 softwareL.Laurence​‌ Beaude and S.Simon​​ Lemaire. ParaSkel++: a​​​‌ C++ platform for the​ high-performance, arbitrary-order, 2/3D numerical​‌ approximation of PDEs on​​ general polytopal meshes using​​​‌ skeletal Galerkin methods.​v1August 2021 lic:​‌ GNU Lesser General Public​​ License v3.0 only.​​​‌HALSoftware HeritageVCS​back to text
  • 90​‌ articleL.L. Beirão​​ da Veiga, F.​​​‌F. Brezzi, A.​A. Cangiani, G.​‌G. Manzini, L.​​ ..L .D. Marini​​​‌ and A.A. Russo​. Basic principles of​‌ virtual element methods.​​Math. Models Methods Appl.​​​‌ Sci. (M3AS)231​2013, 199--214back​‌ to text
  • 91 incollection​​J.-D.Jean-David Benamou,​​​‌ G.Guillaume Carlier and​ F.Filippo Santambrogio.​‌ Variational mean field games​​.Active Particles, Volume​​​‌ 1Springer2017,​ 141--171back to text​‌
  • 92 articleC.C.​​ Besse. A relaxation​​​‌ scheme for the nonlinear​ Schrödinger equation.42​‌32004, 934--952​​back to text
  • 93​​​‌ articleM. C.Marianne​ Chatard Bessemoulin-Chatard and C.​‌Claire Chainais-Hillairet. Exponential​​ decay of a finite​​​‌ volume scheme to the​ thermal equilibrium for drift--diffusion​‌ systems.Journal of​​ Numerical Mathematics253​​​‌https://arxiv.org/abs/1601.00813September 2017,​ 147-168HALDOIback​‌ to text
  • 94 article​​M.M. Bessemoulin-Chatard,​​​‌ C.C. Chainais-Hillairet and​ M.-H.M.-H. Vignal.​‌ Study of a finite​​ volume scheme for the​​​‌ drift-diffusion system. Asymptotic behavior​ in the quasi-neutral limit​‌.SIAM J. Numer.​​ Anal.5242014​​​‌, 1666--1691URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/130913432​DOIback to text​‌
  • 95 articleL.L.​​ Boltzmann. Weitere Studien​​​‌ über das Wärmegleichgewicht unter​ Gasmolekl̎en.Wiener Berichte​‌661872, 275--370​​back to text
  • 96​​​‌ articleY.Yann Brenier​. Décomposition polaire et​‌ réarrangement monotone des champs​​ de vecteurs.CR​​​‌ Acad. Sci. Paris Sér.​ I Math.3051987​‌, 805--808back to​​ text
  • 97 articleD.​​​‌D. Burini, S.​S. De Lillo and​‌ L.L. Gibelli.​​ Collective learning modeling based​​ on the kinetic theory​​​‌ of active particles.‌Phys. Life Rev.16‌​‌2016, 123--139back​​ to text
  • 98 article​​​‌Y.Yunhai Cai.‌ Linear theory of microwave‌​‌ instability in electron storage​​ rings.Physical Review​​​‌ Special Topics-Accelerators and Beams‌1462011,‌​‌ 061002back to text​​back to text
  • 99​​​‌ articleJ.J. Cai‌ and J.J. Shen‌​‌. Two classes of​​ linearly implicit local energy-preserving​​​‌ approach for general multi-symplectic‌ Hamiltonian PDEs.401‌​‌2020, 108975back​​ to text
  • 100 article​​​‌C.Clément Cancès,‌ C.Claire Chainais-Hillairet,‌​‌ J.Jürgen Fuhrmann and​​ B.Benôit Gaudeul.​​​‌ A numerical analysis focused‌ comparison of several Finite‌​‌ Volume schemes for an​​ Unipolar Degenerated Drift-Diffusion Model​​​‌.IMA Journal of‌ Numerical Analysis411‌​‌2021, 271-314HAL​​DOIback to text​​​‌
  • 101 articleC.Clément‌ Cancès, C.Claire‌​‌ Chainais-Hillairet, A.Anita​​ Gerstenmayer and A.Ansgar​​​‌ Jüngel. Convergence of‌ a Finite-Volume Scheme for‌​‌ a Degenerate Cross-Diffusion Model​​ for Ion Transport.​​​‌Numerical Methods for Partial‌ Differential Equations352‌​‌https://arxiv.org/abs/1801.094082019, 545-575​​HALDOIback to​​​‌ text
  • 102 articleC.‌Clément Cancès, C.‌​‌Claire Chainais-Hillairet, M.​​Maxime Herda and S.​​​‌Stella Krell. Large‌ time behavior of nonlinear‌​‌ finite volume schemes for​​ convection-diffusion equations.SIAM​​​‌ Journal on Numerical Analysis‌585September 2020‌​‌, 2544-2571HALDOI​​back to text
  • 103​​​‌ articleC.Clément Cancès‌, C.Claire Chainais-Hillairet‌​‌ and S.Stella Krell​​. Numerical analysis of​​​‌ a nonlinear free-energy diminishing‌ Discrete Duality Finite Volume‌​‌ scheme for convection diffusion​​ equations.Computational Methods​​​‌ in Applied Mathematics18‌3https://arxiv.org/abs/1705.10558 - Special‌​‌ issue on ''Advanced numerical​​ methods: recent developments, analysis​​​‌ and application''2018,‌ 407-432HALDOIback‌​‌ to text
  • 104 article​​C.Clément Cancès,​​​‌ C.Claire Chainais-Hillairet,‌ B.Benôit Merlet,‌​‌ F.Federica Raimondi and​​ J.Juliette Venel.​​​‌ Mathematical analysis of a‌ thermodynamically consistent reduced model‌​‌ for iron corrosion.​​Zeitschrift für Angewandte Mathematik​​​‌ und Physik = Journal‌ of Applied mathematics and‌​‌ physics = Journal de​​ mathématiques et de physique​​​‌ appliquées743June‌ 2023, 96HAL‌​‌DOIback to text​​
  • 105 articleC.Clément​​​‌ Cancès, T.Thomas‌ Gallouët, M.Maxime‌​‌ Laborde and L.Léonard​​ Monsaingeon. Simulation of​​​‌ multiphase porous media flows‌ with minimizing movement and‌​‌ finite volume schemes.​​European Journal of Applied​​​‌ Mathematics3062019‌, 1123-1152HALDOI‌​‌back to text
  • 106​​ articleC.Clément Cancès​​​‌, T.Thomas Gallouët‌ and G.Gabriele Todeschi‌​‌. A variational finite​​ volume scheme for Wasserstein​​​‌ gradient flows.Numerische‌ Mathematik14632020‌​‌, pp 437 -​​ 480HALDOIback​​​‌ to text
  • 107 article‌C.Clément Cancès and‌​‌ B.Benôit Gaudeul.​​ A convergent entropy diminishing​​​‌ finite volume scheme for‌ a cross-diffusion system.‌​‌SIAM Journal on Numerical​​ Analysis585https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.11222​​​‌2020, pp. 2784-2710‌HALDOIback to‌​‌ text
  • 108 articleC.​​​‌Clément Cancès and F.​Flore Nabet. Finite​‌ Volume approximation of a​​ two-phase two fluxes degenerate​​​‌ Cahn-Hilliard model.ESAIM:​ Mathematical Modelling and Numerical​‌ Analysis5532021​​, 969--1003HALDOI​​​‌back to text
  • 109​ articleC.Clément Cancès​‌, F.Flore Nabet​​ and M.Martin Vohral\'ik​​​‌. Convergence and a​ posteriori error analysis for​‌ energy-stable finite element approximations​​ of degenerate parabolic equations​​​‌.Mathematics of Computation​903282021,​‌ 517-563HALDOIback​​ to text
  • 110 article​​​‌C.Clément Cancès and​ A.Antoine Zurek.​‌ A convergent finite volume​​ scheme for dissipation driven​​​‌ models with volume filling​ constraint.Numerische Mathematik​‌1512022, 279--328​​HALDOIback to​​​‌ textback to text​
  • 111 incollectionJ.José​‌ Carrillo, J.Jingwei​​ Hu, Z.Zheng​​​‌ Ma and T.Thomas​ Rey. Recent development​‌ in kinetic theory of​​ granular materials: analysis and​​​‌ numerical methods.Trails​ in Kinetic TheorySEMA​‌ SIMAI Springer Serieshttps://arxiv.org/abs/2001.11206​​ - 36 pages, 5​​​‌ figuresSpringerFebruary 2021​, 1-36HALDOI​‌back to text
  • 112​​ articleJ. A.J.​​​‌ A. Carrillo, A.​A. Jüngel, P.​‌ A.P. A. Markowich​​, G.G. Toscani​​​‌ and A.A. Unterreiter​. Entropy dissipation methods​‌ for degenerate parabolic problems​​ and generalized Sobolev inequalities​​​‌.Monatsh. Math.133​12001, 1--82​‌URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s006050170032DOIback​​ to text
  • 113 article​​​‌C.C. Chainais-Hillairet and​ F.F. Filbet.​‌ Asymptotic behaviour of a​​ finite-volume scheme for the​​​‌ transient drift-diffusion model.​IMA J. Numer. Anal.​‌2742007,​​ 689--716URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/imanum/drl045DOI​​​‌back to text
  • 114​ articleC.Claire Chainais-Hillairet​‌, M.Maxime Herda​​, S.Simon Lemaire​​​‌ and J.Julien Moatti​. Long-time behaviour of​‌ hybrid finite volume schemes​​ for advection-diffusion equations: linear​​​‌ and nonlinear approaches.​Numerische Mathematik1512022​‌, 963-1016HALDOI​​back to textback​​​‌ to text
  • 115 article​C.C. Chainais-Hillairet,​‌ A.A. Jüngel and​​ S.S. Schuchnigg.​​​‌ Entropy-dissipative discretization of nonlinear​ diffusion equations and discrete​‌ Beckner inequalities.Modelisation​​ Mathématique et Analyse Numérique​​​‌5012016,​ 135-162HALback to​‌ text
  • 116 articleC.​​Claire Chainais-Hillairet, B.​​​‌Benôit Merlet and A.​Antoine Zurek. Convergence​‌ of a finite volume​​ scheme for a parabolic​​​‌ system with a free​ boundary modeling concrete carbonation​‌.ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling​​ and Numerical Analysis52​​​‌22018, 457-480​HALDOIback to​‌ text
  • 117 articleT.​​Théophile Chaumont-Frelet, A.​​​‌Alexandre Ern, S.​Simon Lemaire and F.​‌Frédéric Valentin. Bridging​​ the Multiscale Hybrid-Mixed and​​​‌ Multiscale Hybrid High-Order methods​.ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling​‌ and Numerical Analysis56​​12022, 261-285​​​‌HALDOIback to​ text
  • 118 articleF.​‌Florent Chave, D.​​ A.Daniele Antonio Di​​​‌ Pietro and S.Simon​ Lemaire. A discrete​‌ Weber inequality on three-dimensional​​ hybrid spaces with application​​​‌ to the HHO approximation​ of magnetostatics.Mathematical​‌ Models and Methods in​​ Applied Sciences321​​2022, 175-207HAL​​​‌DOIback to text‌
  • 119 articleM.Matteo‌​‌ Cicuttin, A.Alexandre​​ Ern and S.Simon​​​‌ Lemaire. A Hybrid‌ High-Order method for highly‌​‌ oscillatory elliptic problems.​​Computational Methods in Applied​​​‌ Mathematics1942019‌, 723-748HALDOI‌​‌back to text
  • 120​​ articleB.B. Cockburn​​​‌, J.J. Gopalakrishnan‌ and R.R. Lazarov‌​‌. Unified hybridization of​​ discontinuous Galerkin, mixed, and​​​‌ continuous Galerkin methods for‌ second-order elliptic problems.‌​‌SIAM J. Numer. Anal.​​4722009,​​​‌ 1319--1365back to text‌
  • 121 bookO.O.‌​‌ Coussy. Poromechanics.​​John Wiley & Sons​​​‌2004back to text‌
  • 122 inproceedingsM.Marco‌​‌ Cuturi. Sinkhorn Distances:​​ Lightspeed Computation of Optimal​​​‌ Transport.Proceedings of‌ the 26th International Conference‌​‌ on Neural Information Processing​​ Systems - Volume 2​​​‌NIPS'13Red Hook, NY,‌ USALake Tahoe, Nevada‌​‌Curran Associates Inc.2013​​, 2292–2300back to​​​‌ text
  • 123 articleD.‌ ..D .A. Di‌​‌ Pietro and A.A.​​ Ern. A Hybrid​​​‌ High-Order locking-free method for‌ linear elasticity on general‌​‌ meshes.Comput. Methods​​ Appl. Mech. Engrg.283​​​‌2015, 1--21back‌ to text
  • 124 article‌​‌A.A. Dragulescu and​​ V. M.V. M.​​​‌ Yakovenko. Statistical mechanics‌ of money.The‌​‌ European Physical Journal B-Condensed​​ Matter and Complex Systems​​​‌1742000,‌ 723--729back to text‌​‌
  • 125 articleJ.J.​​ Droniou. Finite volume​​​‌ schemes for diffusion equations:‌ introduction to and review‌​‌ of modern methods.​​Math. Models Methods Appl.​​​‌ Sci.2482014‌, 1575-1620back to‌​‌ text
  • 126 articleC.​​C Evain, C.​​​‌C Szwaj, E.‌E Roussel, J.‌​‌J Rodriguez, M.​​M Le Parquier,​​​‌ M.-A.M-A Tordeux,‌ F.F Ribeiro,‌​‌ M.M Labat,​​ N.N Hubert,​​​‌ J.-B.J-B Brubach and‌ others. Stable coherent‌​‌ terahertz synchrotron radiation from​​ controlled relativistic electron bunches​​​‌.Nature Physics15‌72019, 635--639‌​‌back to text
  • 127​​ articleR.R. Eymard​​​‌, T.T. Gallouët‌, C.C. Guichard‌​‌, R.R. Herbin​​ and R.R. Masson​​​‌. TP or not‌ TP, that is the‌​‌ question.Comput. Geosci.​​182014, 285--296​​​‌back to text
  • 128‌ articleT.Thomas Gallouët‌​‌, Q.Quentin Merigot​​ and A.Andrea Natale​​​‌. Convergence of a‌ Lagrangian discretization for barotropic‌​‌ fluids and porous media​​ flow.SIAM Journal​​​‌ on Mathematical Analysis54‌32022HALDOI‌​‌back to text
  • 129​​ inproceedingsK.K. Gärtner​​​‌ and L.L. Kamenski‌. Why Do We‌​‌ Need Voronoi Cells and​​ Delaunay Meshes?Numerical Geometry,​​​‌ Grid Generation and Scientific‌ ComputingLecture Notes in‌​‌ Computational Science and Engineering​​ChamSpringer International Publishing​​​‌2019, 45--60DOI‌back to text
  • 130‌​‌ articleB.Benôit Gaudeul​​ and J.Jürgen Fuhrmann​​​‌. Entropy and convergence‌ analysis for two finite‌​‌ volume schemes for a​​ Nernst-Planck-Poisson system with ion​​​‌ volume constraints.Numerische‌ Mathematik1511April‌​‌ 2022, 99-149HAL​​​‌DOIback to text​
  • 131 articleS.S.​‌ Gottlieb, C.-W.C.-W.​​ Shu and E.E.​​​‌ Tadmor. Strong stability-preserving​ high-order time discretization methods​‌.SIAM Rev.43​​12001, 89--112​​​‌URL: https://doi.org/10.1137/S003614450036757Xback to​ text
  • 132 articleM.​‌Maxime Herda and L.​​ M.Luis Miguel Miguel​​​‌ Rodrigues. Anisotropic Boltzmann-Gibbs​ dynamics of strongly magnetized​‌ Vlasov-Fokker-Planck equations.Kinetic​​ and Related Models 12​​​‌3https://arxiv.org/abs/1610.051382019,​ 593-636HALDOIback​‌ to text
  • 133 article​​P.-E.Pierre-Emmanuel Jabin and​​​‌ T.Thomas Rey.​ Hydrodynamic limit of granular​‌ gases to pressureless Euler​​ in dimension 1.​​​‌Quarterly of Applied Mathematics​75https://arxiv.org/abs/1602.09103 - 26​‌ pages, 1 figure2017​​, 155-179HALDOI​​​‌back to text
  • 134​ articleR.R. Jordan​‌, D.D. Kinderlehrer​​ and F.F. Otto​​​‌. The variational formulation​ of the Fokker-Planck equation​‌.SIAM J. Math.​​ Anal.2911998​​​‌, 1--17back to​ text
  • 135 articleL.​‌L. Kantorovitch. On​​ the translocation of masses​​​‌.C. R. (Dokl.)​ Acad. Sci. URSS, n.​‌ Ser.371942,​​ 199--201back to text​​​‌
  • 136 articleC.C.​ L eBris, F.​‌F. Legoll and A.​​A. Lozinski. MsFEM​​​‌ à la Crouzeix--Raviart for​ highly oscillatory elliptic problems​‌.Chinese Annals of​​ Mathematics, Series B34​​​‌12013, 113--138​back to text
  • 137​‌ articleP.P. Lafitte​​ and G.G. Samaey​​​‌. Asymptotic-preserving Projective Integration​ Schemes for Kinetic Equations​‌ in the Diffusion Limit​​.3422012​​​‌, A579–-A602back to​ text
  • 138 articleA.​‌ M.A. M. M.​​ Leal, D. A.​​​‌D. A. Kulik,​ W. R.W. R.​‌ Smith and M. O.​​M. O. Saar.​​​‌ An overview of computational​ methods for chemical equilibrium​‌ and kinetic calculations for​​ geochemical and reactive transport​​​‌ modeling.Pure Appl.​ Chem.8952017​‌, 597--643back to​​ text
  • 139 articleS.​​​‌Simon Lemaire. Bridging​ the hybrid high-order and​‌ virtual element methods.​​IMA J. Numer. Anal.​​​‌4112021,​ 549--593DOIback to​‌ text
  • 140 articleD.​​D. Matthes and S.​​​‌S. Plazzotta. A​ variational formulation of the​‌ BDF2 method for metric​​ gradient flows.ESAIM:​​​‌ M2AN5312019​, 145-172back to​‌ text
  • 141 articleA.​​A. Mielke. A​​​‌ gradient structure for reaction-diffusion​ systems and for energy-drift-diffusion​‌ systems.Nonlinearity24​​42011, 1329--1346​​​‌URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0951-7715/24/4/016DOIback​ to text
  • 142 article​‌J.JB Murphy,​​ R.RL Gluckstern and​​​‌ S.S Krinsky.​ Longitudinal wake field for​‌ an electron moving on​​ a circular orbit.​​​‌Part. Accel.57BNL-63090​1996, 9--64back​‌ to text
  • 143 article​​A.Andrea Natale and​​​‌ G.Gabriele Todeschi.​ A mixed finite element​‌ discretization of dynamical optimal​​ transport.Journal of​​​‌ Scientific Computing912​2022, 1--26back​‌ to text
  • 144 article​​A.Andrea Natale and​​​‌ G.Gabriele Todeschi.​ Computation of optimal transport​‌ with finite volumes.​​ESAIM: Mathematical Modelling and​​ Numerical Analysis555​​​‌September 2021, 1847-1871‌HALDOIback to‌​‌ textback to text​​
  • 145 inproceedingsA.Andrea​​​‌ Natale and G.Gabriele‌ Todeschi. TPFA finite‌​‌ volume approximation of Wasserstein​​ gradient flows.International​​​‌ Conference on Finite Volumes‌ for Complex ApplicationsSpringer‌​‌2020, 193--201back​​ to text
  • 146 article​​​‌L.L. Onsager.‌ Reciprocal relations in irreversible‌​‌ processes. II..Physical​​ Review381931,​​​‌ 2265--2279back to text‌
  • 147 articleM. A.‌​‌Mark A. Peletier and​​ M.Matthias Röger.​​​‌ Partial Localization, Lipid Bilayers,‌ and the Elastica Functional‌​‌.1933September​​ 2009, 475--537DOI​​​‌back to text
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