Mathematical paradigms of climate science

Author(s)

    • Ancona, Fabio
    • Cannarsa, Piermarco
    • Jones, Christopher
    • Portaluri, Alessandro

Bibliographic Information

Mathematical paradigms of climate science

Fabio Ancona ... [et al.], editors

(Springer INdAM series / editor in chief V. Ancona, v. 15)

Springer, c2016

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Other editors: Piermarco Cannarsa, Christopher Jones, Alessandro Portaluri

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book, featuring a truly interdisciplinary approach, provides an overview of cutting-edge mathematical theories and techniques that promise to play a central role in climate science. It brings together some of the most interesting overview lectures given by the invited speakers at an important workshop held in Rome in 2013 as a part of MPE2013 ("Mathematics of Planet Earth 2013"). The aim of the workshop was to foster the interaction between climate scientists and mathematicians active in various fields linked to climate sciences, such as dynamical systems, partial differential equations, control theory, stochastic systems, and numerical analysis. Mathematics and statistics already play a central role in this area. Likewise, computer science must have a say in the efforts to simulate the Earth's environment on the unprecedented scale of petabytes. In the context of such complexity, new mathematical tools are needed to organize and simplify the approach. The growing importance of data assimilation techniques for climate modeling is amply illustrated in this volume, which also identifies important future challenges.

Table of Contents

1 Christof Meile and Chris K. R. T. Jones: A mathematical perspective on microbial processes in Earth's biogeochemical cycles.- 2 Fatiha Alabau-Boussouira, Piermarco Cannarsa and Masahiro Yamamoto: Source reconstruction by partial measurements for a class of hyperbolic systems in cascade.- 3 Didier Auroux, Jacques Blum and Giovanni Ruggiero: Data assimilation for geophysical fluids: the diffusive back and forth nudging.- 4 Alberto Carrassi and Stephane Vannitsem: Deterministic treatment of model error in geophysical data assimilation.- 5 Franco Flandoli: Remarks on stochastic Navier-Stokes equations.- 6 Jan Gairing, Michael Hoegele, Tetiana Kosenkova and Alexei Kulik: On the calibration of Levy driven time series with coupling distances and an application in paleoclimate.- 7 Damon McDougall and Chris K. R. T. Jone:, Decreasing flow uncertainty in Bayesian inverse problems through Lagrangian drifter control.- 8 Takahito Mitsui and Michel Crucifix: Effects of additive noise on the stability of glacial cycles.- 9 Francesco Paparella: Turbulence, Horizontal Convection, and the Ocean's Meridional Overturning Circulation.- 10 Alessio Porretta and Enrique Zuazua: Remarks on long time versus steady state optimal control.

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Details

  • NCID
    BB22530257
  • ISBN
    • 9783319390918
  • Country Code
    sz
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Switzerland
  • Pages/Volumes
    x, 228 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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