The International conference on Multiscale problems in science and technol ogy; Challenges to mathematical analysis and applications brought together mathematicians working on multiscale techniques (homogenisation, singular perturbation) and specialists from applied sciences who use these techniques. Our idea was that mathematicians could contribute to solving problems in the emerging applied disciplines usually overlooked by them and that specialists from applied sciences could pose new challenges for multiscale problems. Numerous problems in natural sciences contain multiple scales: flows in complex heterogeneous media, many particles systems, composite media, etc. Mathematically, we are led to study of singular homogenisation limits and the procedure is called upscaling or homogenisation. The processes to be up scaled are usually described by differential equations. For simple cases, when the differential equation is linear and the heterogeneities are periodic some progress has been made. However, most natural phenomena are described by nonlinear differential equations in a random nonhomogeneous medium and, despite an intensive development in recent years, there are many open problems. The objective of the conference was to bring together leading special ists from Europe and the United States and to discuss new challenges in this quickly developing field. Topics of the conference were Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations and Applied Analysis, with direct applications to the modeling in Material Sciences, Petroleum Engineering and Hydrodynamics.
These are the proceedings of the conference "Multiscale Problems in Science
and Technology" held in Dubrovnik, Croatia, 3-9 September 2000. The objective
of the conference was to bring together mathematicians working on multiscale
techniques (homogenisation, singular pertubation) and specialists from
the applied sciences who need these techniques and to discuss new challenges
in this quickly developing field. The idea was that mathematicians could
contribute to solving problems in the emerging applied disciplines usually
overlooked by them and that specialists from applied sciences could pose
new challenges for the multiscale problems. Topics of the conference were
nonlinear partial differential equations and applied analysis, with direct
applications to the modeling in material sciences, petroleum engineering
and hydrodynamics.