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Explore the coupling of spatial scales in materials science, from nano to meso levels. Learn about modeling approaches and the impact of stress waves and fictive temperatures. Discover advancements in multi-scale modeling and frontier boundary issues.
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UMR5209 CNRS-Université de Bourgogne Marcos Salazar Défis dans les sciences des matériaux: Couplage d’échelles spatiales Dijon 6 avril 2007
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There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom An Invitation to Enter a New Field of Physics We have friends in other fields---in biology, for instance. We physicists often look at them and say, ``You know the reason you fellows are making so little progress?'' (Actually I don't know any field where they are making more rapid progress than they are in biology today.) ``You should use more mathematics, like we do. '' They could answer us---but they're polite, so I'll answer for them: ``What you should do in order for us to make more rapid progress is to make the electron microscope 100 times better.'' 1960 California Institute of Technology First published in Engineering and Science magazine, vol. XXIII, no. 5, February 1960.
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Ref: Handbook of materials modeling vol (1) Ed: Sidney Yip. Spriger Berlin (2005)
MODELES MULTI-ECHELLES QUASICONTINUUM COUPLAGE MESO-NANO (EF/DM) Apparition des ondes de stress fictives Température de travail 0K R. Miller, B. Tadmor,M. Ortiz (USA) MAAD Couplage Atomique-Nano-Meso Ab Initio+ DM+EF J. Q. Broughthon, F. Abraham, N. Bernstein, E. Kaxiras Harvard University (USA)
Hire a teenager they know everything Max Born (Dynamical theory of crystal lattices, 1954) Cauchy-Born Condition