Registration is currently open for The 14th AIMS Conference, co-hosted by the American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) and NYU Abu Dhabi (NYUAD). This conference will take place from December 16-20, 2024 at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (ADNEC). This meeting is held in cooperation with the Association for Women in Mathematics. There will also be a satellite meeting hosted by NYUAD from 9-13 December, 2024.
As the most participated-in international conference in its fields, the AIMS conference series covers, in the broadest sense, analysis, applied and computational analysis. Included are differential equations, dynamical systems, fluid dynamics, computing, control and optimization, functional analysis and nonlinear analysis, harmonic analysis, approximation, operator theory, mathematical physics, engineering mathematics, biomathematics, and mathematical finance.
For close to 30 years, the AIMS Conference is a biennial event that provides a key international forum for mathematicians and scientists worldwide working in the fields of analysis and applied analysis, including real-world applications in the form of computations and modeling. The AIMS Conference takes place in different countries/regions to benefit the most people possible.
Format
- Plenary lectures (60-minute), invited by the Scientific Committee
- Thematic sessions (45-minute), invited by the Thematic Sessions Committee
- Special sessions (30-minute)
- Contributed sessions (20-minute)
- Poster sessions
- Student Paper Competition
Aims
The Conference aims to promote cooperation, understanding, and collaboration among scientists working in analysis, dynamical systems, differential equations and applications. The goals of the meeting are a cross-fertilization of ideas from different application areas, and increased communication between the mathematicians who develop dynamical systems techniques and the applied scientists who use them.
NYUAD’s satellite meeting will focus on Long-time Behavior and Singularity Formation in PDEs.
In Collaboration with
The Association for Women in Mathematics