FEniCS2021: FEniCS 2021 Online Cambridge, UK, March 22-26, 2021 |
Conference website | https://fenicsproject.org/fenics-2021 |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fenics2021 |
Abstract registration deadline | February 21, 2021 |
Submission deadline | February 21, 2021 |
The FEniCS 2021 conference is an opportunity for all those interested in the FEniCS Project and related projects to exchange ideas, communicate their results and network with the automated scientific computing community.
Unlike previous FEniCS conferences, FEniCS 2021 will be held entirely online.
We welcome developers, existing and potential users of the FEniCS ecosystem as well as mathematicians, computer scientists and application domain specialists interested in numerical methods, their implementation and applications.
The FEniCS 2021 conference will emphasise an open and inclusive atmosphere, contributed talks from a diverse range of scientific areas, and dedicated time for discussions and coding.
Submission Guidelines
We encourage anyone of any background or experience level to consider submitting a session to the conference. The deadline for proposing talks is 20th February 2021. Conference delegates will be notified shortly after this if their talk has been accepted. Talks will be 15 minutes long, plus time for questions.
Authors
In this section, enter the names and affiliations of you and any co-authors that you worked with on the work you are going to present. Please put the person who is going to present the talk as author 1.
Title
Please give a short but informative title.
For example, “Implementation of multipoint constraints in Dolfin-x”, “FEM-BEM coupling for Maxwell problems with FEniCS and Bempp”, or “Mixed-dimensional coupled finite elements in FEniCS” would all be good titles.
“Using FEniCS to solve problems” would not be a good title (not informative). “Use of Dolfin, FFC, FIAT and UFC to solve Maxwell, Helmholtz and Stokes at large and small temporal and spatial scales with engineering applications” would also not be a good title (too long, and still not very informative).
Abstract
Again, please make this short but informative.
Your abstract should be written in plaintext, but can include LaTeX formulas between and or $ and $. Please write between 100 and 300 words.
Keywords
Choose between 3 and 5 key words or phrases to help classify your talk within the FEniCS community.
For example, “multigrid”, “discontinuous Galerkin”, “multiphysics” or “optimisation” might make good keywords, but “finite element method” or “FEniCS” don’t as they will apply to almost every talk.
Files
There’s no need to upload any files.
All questions about submissions should be emailed to Matthew Scroggs (mws48@cam.ac.uk)