Workshop Announcement: ---------------------------------------------------------------- Deterministic and stochastic Navier-Stokes equations ---------------------------------------------------------------- March 14 to March 18, 2005 American Institute of Mathematics Research Conference Center Palo Alto, California http://aimath.org/ARCC/workshops/navierstokes.html ------------ Description: ------------ This workshop, sponsored by AIM and the NSF, will discuss global solutions to the Navier Stokes equation. The main goal of the workshop is improved understanding of the three dimensional initial problem. A number of other settings will be discussed which can inform the discussion including: stochastic and stationary solutions in two and three dimentions, the structure of invariant measures, and simplified model problems. Experts in numerical simulations will participate in the discussion to lend intuition and inform the analytic discussions with the wealth of numerical experiments which have been performed. The workshop is organized by Yakov Sinai and Jonathan Mattingly. For more details please see the workshop announcement page: http://aimath.org/ARCC/workshops/navierstokes.html Space and funding is available for a few more participants. If you would like to participate, please apply by filling out the on-line form (available at the link above) no later than November 15, 2004. Applications are open to all, and we especially encourage women, underrepresented minorities, junior mathematicians, and researchers from primarily undergraduate institutions to apply. Before submitting an application, please read the ARCC policies concerning participation and financial support for participants. -------------------------------------- AIM Research Conference Center (ARCC): -------------------------------------- The AIM Research Conference Center (ARCC) hosts focused workshops in all areas of the mathematical sciences. ARCC focused workshops are distinguished by their emphasis on a specific mathematical goal, such as making progress on a significant unsolved problem, understanding the proof of an important new result, or investigating the convergence between two distinct areas of mathematics. For more information about ARCC, please visit http://www.aimath.org/ARCC/