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Asymptotic analysis for periodic structures

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TLDR
In this article, the authors give a systematic introduction of multiple scale methods for partial differential equations, including their original use for rigorous mathematical analysis in elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic problems, and with the use of probabilistic methods when appropriate.
Abstract
This is a reprinting of a book originally published in 1978. At that time it was the first book on the subject of homogenization, which is the asymptotic analysis of partial differential equations with rapidly oscillating coefficients, and as such it sets the stage for what problems to consider and what methods to use, including probabilistic methods. At the time the book was written the use of asymptotic expansions with multiple scales was new, especially their use as a theoretical tool, combined with energy methods and the construction of test functions for analysis with weak convergence methods. Before this book, multiple scale methods were primarily used for non-linear oscillation problems in the applied mathematics community, not for analyzing spatial oscillations as in homogenization. In the current printing a number of minor corrections have been made, and the bibliography was significantly expanded to include some of the most important recent references. This book gives systematic introduction of multiple scale methods for partial differential equations, including their original use for rigorous mathematical analysis in elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic problems, and with the use of probabilistic methods when appropriate. The book continues to be interesting and useful to readers of different backgrounds, both from pure and applied mathematics, because of its informal style of introducing the multiple scale methodology and the detailed proofs.

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Quantification of ergodicity in stochastic homogenization: optimal bounds via spectral gap on Glauber dynamics --- long version

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the effective large-scale behavior of discrete elliptic equations on the lattice with random coefficients and developed quantitative methods for the corrector problem assuming that the ensemble of coefficient fields satisfies a spectral gap estimate w.r.t. a Glauber dynamics.
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Modeling Growth in Biological Materials

TL;DR: A review of the theories used to model the biomechanical modeling of growing tissues, categorized according to whether the tissue is considered as a continuum object or a collection of cells, concludes by assessing the prospects for reconciliation between these two fundamentally different approaches to tissue growth.
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Changes in brain cell shape create residual extracellular space volume and explain tortuosity behavior during osmotic challenge

TL;DR: It is found that the plateau behavior of lambda can be explained if the shape of brain cells changes nonuniformly during the shrinking or swelling induced by osmotic challenge, thus impeding the macroscopic diffusion.
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Numerical strategies for solving continuum damage problems with softening:application to the homogenization of masonry

P. Pegon, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the homogenization theory for periodic media is used for deriving the in-plane macroscopic non-linear behaviour of masonry, and two different assumptions are envisaged: plane stress and generalized plane strain.
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Homogenization of a set of parallel fibres

TL;DR: In this article, the possibility of homogenizing a set of parallel fibres from the viewpoint of electromagnetic scattering was investigated and it was shown that for a low density of fibres, the E∥ case, an effective medium with a possibly negative permittivity, whereas in the H ∥ case the fibres disappear completely.
References
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Measurable eigenvectors for Hermitian matrix-valued polynomials☆

TL;DR: In this article, a polynomial Hermitian matrices over the complex number field C are considered and the relative eigenvalue problem is formulated as a linear combination of the repeated eigenvalues of the matrix A(p)x = λEx, x ϵ Cm.