Invited speakers
Thierry Cazenave (Université Pierre et Marie Curie & CNRS, France) |
Marek Fila |
Joost Hulshof (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands) |
Jong-Shenq Guo (Tamkang University, Taiwan) |
Joachim Krieger (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland) |
Philippe Laurençot (Institut de Mathématiques de Toulouse, France) |
Peter Poláčik (University of Minnesota, USA) |
Pavol Quittner (Comenius University, Slovakia) |
Philippe Souplet (Université Paris 13, France) |
Michael Winkler (Paderborn University, Germany) |
Hatem Zaag (Université Paris 13, France) |
|
Yoshikazu Giga (University of Tokyo, Japan) |
Kazuhiro Ishige (Tohoku University, Japan) |
Michinori Ishiwata (Osaka University, Japan) |
Hideo Kozono (Waseda University, Japan) |
Hiroshi Matano (University of Tokyo, Japan) |
Yuki Naito (Ehime University, Japan) |
Kenji Nakanishi (Kyoto University, Japan) |
Hirokazu Ninomiya (Meiji University, Japan) |
Takashi Sakajo (Kyoto University, Japan) |
Hiroyuki Takamura (Future University Hakodate, Japan) |
Short communications
Amal Attouchi |
Asma Azaiez (Université Paris 13, France) |
Alexandre Montaru (Université Paris 13, France) |
Van Tien Nguyen (Université Paris 13, France) |
Mikolaj Sierzega (University of Warwick, UK) |
Hannes Stuke (Free University Berlin, Germany) |
Ken Abe (Nagoya University, Japan) |
Yohei Fujishima (Osaka University, Japan) |
Masahiro Ikeda (Kyoto University, Japan) |
Sachiko Ishida (Tokyo University of Science, Japan) |
Yoshifumi Mimura (Tohoku University, Japan) |
Michiaki Onodera (Kyusyu University, Japan) |
Jin Takahashi (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan) |
Scientific committee
Marek Fila (Comenius University, Slovakia) |
Kazuhiro Ishige (Tohoku University, Japan) |
Yuki Naito (Ehime University, Japan) |
Philippe Souplet (Université Paris 13, France) |
Eiji Yanagida (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan) |
Local organizing committee
Toru Kan (Tokyo Institute of Technology) |
Masahiro Suzuki (Tokyo Institute of Technology) |
Eiji Yanagida (Tokyo Institute of Technology) |
General presentation and history
Blow-up phenomena are ubiquitous in mathematical models in the sciences. Virtually every model including nonlinear terms exhibits solutions which may form singularities, such as "real" blow-up in chemical reactions, turbulence in fluid flows, defects in liquid crystals, tip growth in cells, flows in porous media, fronts in thin viscous flows, combustion, chemotaxis, inverse mean curvature and other geometric flows. The interest in these phenomena, motivated by a wide variety of applications, provides scientists from different backgrounds and using different methodologies with an inspiring common research focus in which the main language is that of nonlinear partial differential equations (PDE's).This will be the 6th edition of a series of Euro-Japanese workshops on blow-up phenomena. The first five editions of this series took place in
-
Bratislava (Slovakia) in September 2004,
http://www.iam.fmph.uniba.sk/institute/rtn/conference/blowup/ - El Escorial (Spain) in September 2006,
-
Sendai (Japan) in September 2008,
http://www.research.kobe-u.ac.jp/eng-applmath/naito/ejc.htm -
Leiden (The Netherlands) in September 2010,
http://www.lorentzcenter.nl/lc/web/2010/411/info.php3?wsid=411 -
Luminy (France) in September 2012.
http://www.iam.fmph.uniba.sk/institute/quittner/luminy/
The aim of this workshop is to bring together leading researchers in various fields related to blow-up as well as junior scientists.
Venue
Tokyo Institute of Technology, Ookayama Campus, Ookayama areaWest Bldg. 8 E, 10F, E1001 Meeting Room
![]() |
Tokyo Institute of Technology, Ookayama Campus |
Acknowledgements
This workshop is supported by the following Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science:Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A) (No. 24244012) Eiji Yanagida |
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) (No. 23340035) Kazuhiro Ishige |