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Nonlinear eigenvalue problems often depend on a physical parameter, about which one seeks to optimize or analyze.  We will describe concrete examples from several collaborations, showing how such problems can emerge from the exact reduction of infinite-dimensional linear problems to finite-dimensional nonlinear ones.  Our first case is motivated by a continuum Fibonacci quasicrystal model, where the parameter scales the potential in a Schroedinger equation.  As second class of examples comes from mechanical systems, where the parameter can reflect a material property, such as a damping coefficient.  Contour integral methods approximate eigenvalues within some specified bounded domain.  To generalize such methods to parametric problems, we describe a parametric extension of Keldysh's theorem (work with Balicki and Gugercin). The resulting algorithm reduces the dimension of nonlinear eigenvalue problems while allowing changes to eigenvalue multiplicity as the parameter evolves.

Further information

Time:

13Apr
Apr 13th 2026
11:45 to 12:45

Venue:

Seminar Room 1, Newton Institute

Speaker:

Mark Embree (Virginia Tech)

Series:

Isaac Newton Institute Seminar Series