EYAWKAJKOS
Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the JKO Scheme
EYAWKAJKOS is a research project which has been awarded an ERC
Advanced Grant. Funded from the ERC AdG 2021 call, lead by
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 in collaboration with CNRS, it started on
September 2023 for a duration of 5 years.
Main research objectives
From the proposal summary
The project deals with the so-called Jordan-Kinderlehrer-Otto scheme, a time-discretization procedure consisting in a sequence of iterated optimization problems involving the Wasserstein distance W2 between probability measures. This scheme allows to approximate the solutions of a wide class of PDEs (including many diffusion equations with possible aggregation effects) which have a variational structure w.r.t. the distance W2 but not w.r.t. Hilbertian distances. It has been used both for theoretical purposes (proving existence of solutions for new equations and studying their properties) and for numerical applications. Indeed, it naturally provides a time-discretization and, if coupled with efficient computational techniques for optimal transport problems, can be used for numerics.
This project will cover both equations which are well-studied (Fokker-Planck, for instance) and less classical ones (higher-order equations, crowd motion, cross-diffusion, sliced Wasserstein flow\dots). For the most classical ones, we will mainly consider estimates and properties which are known for solutions of the continuous-in-time PDEs and try to prove sharp and equivalent analogues in the discrete setting: some of these results ($L^p$, Sobolev, BV\dots) have already been proven in the simplest cases ; the results in the classical case will provide techniques to be applied to the other equations, allowing to prove existence of solutions and to study their qualitative properties. Moreover, some estimates proven on each step of the JKO scheme can provide useful
information for the numerical schemes, reducing the computational complexity or improving the quality of the convergence.
During the project, the study of the JKO scheme will be of course
coupled with a deep study of the corresponding continuous-in-time
PDEs, with the effort to produce efficient numerical strategies, and
with the attention to the modeling of other phenomena which could take
advantage of these techniques.
See here for the full scientific proposal.
Current members of the project
Principal investigator:
Filippo Santambrogio, professor at ICJ
Permanent participants:
Aymeric Baradat, researcher at ICJ
Nicolas Bonneel, researcher at LIRIS
Ivan Gentil, professor at ICJ
Young researchers:
Noemi David, post-doc (2022/24), funded by Labex MILyon
Anastasiia Hraivoronska post-doc (2023/26), funded by EYAWKAJKOS
Anatole Gallouet (2024/26), post-doc, funded by EYAWKAJKOS and by PEPR
PDE-AI
Charles Elbar post-doc
(2023/26), funded by EYAWKAJKOS
Thibault Caillet, PhD student (2022/25), funded by UCBL
Fanch Coudreuse, PhD student (2023/26), funded by EYAWKAJKOS
Kexin Lin, PhD student (2024/27), funded by EYAWKAJKOS
Sofiane Cherf, PhD student (2024/27), funded by ENS Lyon
Publications
All the publication of the project are available at this page, hosted by the
CVGMT preprint server.
Visitors
In 2024
Sept 15 2004 - Nov 16 : Alejandro Fernandez Jimenez (Oxford)
October : Edgard Pimentel (Coimbra)
June 9-23 : Igor Vinicus Pinheiro Pereira (Firenze)
April 23-26 : Annika Bach (Eindhoven)
April 2-7 : Charles Elbar (Paris, Sorbonne)
Feb 18 - March 31 : Giacomo Cozzi (Padova)
Feb 20-21 : François Xavier Vialard (Marne la Vallée)
Jan 31 - Feb 2 : Gayrat Toshpulatov (TU Wien)
In 2023
Oct 23-26 : Giacomo Cozzi (Padova)
Events and seminars
Gradient Flows Face-to-Face 2023, Lyon
EYAWKAJKOS funded and organized the third edition of the
workshops Gradient Flows Face-to-Face (first edition: Roma
2021, second edition: L'Aquila 2022).
This small workshop took
place in Lyon in September 2023 and was the launching event of the
project. More details on the webpage of the
workshop.
A fourth edition will take place in Raitenhaslach in Sept 2024.
EYAWKAJKOS working group
We organize a working group on gradient flows and related topics, with
both reading seminars (i.e. somebody presents a paper of
interest for the group that he/she has previously studied) or research
seminars by our guests. Talks are usually on Wednesday on a very
irregular basis but approximately twice per month.
The program of this working group is available on its webpage.
Optimal transport and applications 2024, Pisa
EYAWKAJKOS will co-fund and co-organize the next edition of the
workshops Optimal transport and applications>/i> which take place
in Pisa every two years (last editions: 2018, 2022). See the webpage of the event for
more details.