SCCS Colloquium: Difference between revisions

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'''Ayman Noureldin:''' A Master-Slave Approach for Multi-Phase Fluid-Fluid Coupling of OpenFOAM and ATHLET<br />
'''Ayman Noureldin:''' A Master-Slave Approach for Multi-Phase Fluid-Fluid Coupling of OpenFOAM and ATHLET<br />
''Master's thesis submission talk. Ayman is advised by Joachim Herb (GRS) and [[Gerasimos Chourdakis]].''
''Master's thesis submission talk. Ayman is advised by [[Gerasimos Chourdakis]], in collaboration with GRS.''
|rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:top;"|15:00-16:00 <br /> MI 00.08.053<br/>[[SCCS Colloquium - Oct 24, 2019| Details]]
|rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:top;"|15:00-16:00 <br /> MI 00.08.053<br/>[[SCCS Colloquium - Oct 24, 2019| Details]]
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Revision as of 07:50, 21 September 2019

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The SC²S Colloquium is a forum giving students, guests, and members of the chair the opportunity to present their research insights, results, and challenges.

Do you need ideas for your thesis topic? Do you want to meet your potential supervisor? Do you want to discuss your research with a diverse group of researchers, rehearse your conference talk, or simply cheer for your colleagues? This is the right place for you!

When and where: Wednesdays at 3 pm, in the room 02.07.023 (Winter semester 2019/20: Thursdays at 3 pm, in the room 00.08.053). Guests are always welcome!

You don't want to miss a talk? Subscribe to our mailing list and our Colloquium calendar (iCal link, updated regularly).


Schedule

April

Colloquium slots: April 10, 17, 24

Wednesday, April 10

Sebastian Burreiner: Comparison of classic and task-based scheduling for the local time-stepping in SeisSol using OpenMP
Master's thesis advised by Carsten Uphoff.

15:00-15:30
MI 02.07.023
Details
Wednesday, April 17

Jan Schopohl: Domain Parallelization of SGDE based Classification
Bachelor's thesis advised by Kilian Röhner.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Kislaya Ravi: Neural Network Hyperparameter Optimization using SNOWPAC
Master's thesis advised by Friedrich Menhorn and examined by Prof. Hans-Joachim Bungartz and Prof. Laura Leal-Taixe (TUM Computer Vision).

Wednesday, April 24

Jieyi Zhang: Sparse Grid Coarsening for Classification
Guided Research advised by Kilian Röhner.

14:30-15:45
MI 02.07.023
Details

Stephan Pirner: Profiling of a Distributed Task Stealing Implementation in the Parallel Adaptive Mesh Refinement Framework sam(oa)2
Bachelor's thesis advised by Philipp Samfass.

Ayman Noureldin: A Master-Slave Approach for Multi-Phase Fluid-Fluid Coupling of OpenFOAM and ATHLET

Master's thesis (introduction) advised by Gerasimos Chourdakis and in collaboration with the GRS Institute in Garching.

May

Colloquium slots: May 8, 15, 22, 29

Wednesday, May 8

Nico Rösel: Combigrid Based Dimensional Adaptivity for Sparse Grid Density Estimation and Classification
Bachelor's thesis advised by Kilian Röhner and Michael Obersteiner.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Ravil Dorozhinskii: Configuration of a linear solver for linearly implicit time integration and efficient data transfer in parallel
thermo-hydraulic computations. Master's thesis advised by Tobias Neckel.

Wednesday, May 15

Vladimir Poliakov: Inferring 3D Human Pose in Real-Time on Consumer Smartphones: A Lightweight Neural Approach
Master's thesis advised by Prof. Hans-Joachim Bungartz.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Qunsheng Huang: Helicopter Simulations with preCICE
Master's thesis (introduction) advised by Gerasimos Chourdakis and in collaboration with the TUM Chair of Helicopter Technology.

Aleksei Dolgodvorov: Parallel algorithms for reducing the bandwidth of symmetric matrices

Master's thesis (introduction) advised by Michael Rippl.

Wednesday, May 22 (if needed, different moderator required)

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, May 29

Shreyas Shenoy: Towards Non-blocking Combination Schemes in the Sparse Grid Combination Technique
Master's thesis advised by Michael Obersteiner.

15:00-15:30
MI 02.07.023
Details

June

Colloquium slots: June 5, 12, 19, 26

Wednesday, June 5 (if needed, different moderator required)

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, June 12

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, June 19

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, June 26

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

July

Colloquium slots: July 3, 10, 17, 24, 31

Wednesday, July 3

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, July 10

Arbab Akhtar: Quantifying uncertainty in the bottom topography of the shallow water equations with DG methods
Master's thesis advised by Anne Reinarz.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, July 17

Gerasimos Chourdakis: Coupling OpenFOAM to different solvers, physics, models, and dimensions using preCICE
Rehearsal talk for the OpenFOAM Workshop 2019.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, July 24 (if needed, different moderator required)

Victor-Constantin Stroescu: Analysis and Implementation of ILU Preconditioning
Bachelor's thesis advised by Prof. Thomas Huckle.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, July 31

Ji-Ho Yang: Interface Jacobian Substructuring Algorithm for Multi-Component Dynamical Systems
Master's thesis advised by Tobias Neckel and BMW Research, New Technologies, Innovations.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Vivian Haller: Evaluation of dimension-wise Error Estimates using the Spatially Adaptive Combination Technique
Bachelor's thesis advised by Michael Obersteiner.

Dominik Volland: Coupling TherMoS with preCICE (cancelled)
Master's thesis advised by Benjamin Rüth and Matthias Killian (TUM Chair of Astronautics).

August

Colloquium slots: August 7, 14, 21, 28

Wednesday, August 7

Samuel Weber: Exploiting the Data Hierarchy with Geometry Aware Sparse Grids for Image Classification
Bachelor's thesis advised by Kilian Röhner

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, August 14 (if needed, different moderator required)

Bruno Miguel: A Distributed Actor Library for HPC Applications
Master's thesis (introduction) advised by Alexander Pöppl.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, August 21 (if needed, different moderator required)

Dominik Volland: Coupling TherMoS with preCICE
Master's thesis advised by Benjamin Rüth and Matthias Killian (TUM Chair of Astronautics).

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, August 28

Hung Phu Nguyen: Seismic Hazard Map
Application Project in the Data Engineering and Analytics program, advised by Carsten Uphoff.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Yelysei Bondarenko: Quantum Variational Learning of Generative Neural Networks
Master's thesis advised by Prof. Hans-Joachim Bungartz.

Thursday, August 29

Mohamed Farghal: Finding suspiciously dense components in dynamic edge-attributed graphs
Master's thesis advised by Prof. Thomas Huckle.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

September

Colloquium slots: September 4, 11, 18, 25

Wednesday, September 4

Christian Menges: Optimization and Evaluation of the Linked-Cell Algorithm
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Christian is advised by Fabio Gratl.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Alec Gliga: Simulation of Multivariate Distributions with various Univariate Marginals
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Alec is advised by Tobias Neckel.

Wednesday, September 11 ( ! different room: 00.08.059 ! )

Vyshakh Unnikrishnan: Implementation of a Deep Learning Based Model for Rainfall-Runoff Modelling
Master's thesis submission talk. Vyshakh is advised by Ivana Jovanovic.

15:00-16:00
MI 00.08.059
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Monday, September 16 (special AutoPas session)

Julian Spahl: Extending AutoPas to GPUs
Master's thesis submission talk. Julian is advised by Steffen Seckler, Fabio Gratl, and Alexander Pöppl.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Maximilian Geitner: Parallelizing Particle Simulations with Kokkos
Bachelor's thesis talk, in German. Maximilian is advised by Fabio Gratl.

Wednesday, September 18 (if needed, different moderator required)

Julia Konrad: Multifidelity Monte Carlo Sampling in Plasma Microturbulence Analysis
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Julia is advised by Ionut Farcas and Tobias Neckel.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Vincent Bautista Anguiano: Visualization of High Dimensional Models within the SG++ Data Mining Pipeline
Guided Research project talk. Vincent is advised by Kilian Röhner.

Wednesday, September 25 (if needed, different moderator required)

Jonas Donhauser: Radial Basis Function Surrogates for Derivative-Free Optimization in NOWPAC
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Jonas is advised by Friedrich Menhorn.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Fabio Madge: Parareal Algorithm for Circuit Simulation
IDP submission talk. Fabio is advised by Christoph Kowitz (Infineon) and Anne Reinarz.

Thursday, September 26

Richard Hertrich: Partitioned Fluid Structure Interaction: Coupling FEniCS and OpenFOAM via preCICE
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Richard is advised by Benjamin Rüth.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Severin Reiz: Distributed O(N) Linear Solver for Dense Symmetric Hierarchical Semi-Separable Matrices
Preview of a talk at MCMSOC. Severin is a doctoral candidate advised by Prof. Hans-Joachim Bungartz.

October

Wednesday, October 2

Deniz Candas: Auto-Tuning via Machine Learning in AutoPas
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Deniz is advised by Steffen Seckler and Fabio Gratl.

15:00-16:00
MI 02.07.023
Details

Martin Bogusz: Exploring Modern Runtime Systems for the SWE-Framework
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Martin is advised by Alexander Pöppl and Philipp Samfass.

Monday, October 7 (if October 9 is full)

Looking for a first talk - register here

15:00-16:00
MI 00.08.053
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here

Wednesday, October 9

Fritz Hofmeier: Applying the Spatially Adaptive Combination Technique to Uncertainty Quantification
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Fritz is advised by Michael Obersteiner.

15:00-16:00
MI 00.08.053
Details

Henri Rößler: Simulation of diffraction effects of sound waves
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Henri is advised by Carsten Uphoff.


Thursday, October 17

Manuel Dell'Antonio: Definition and Evaluation of a Flight Control System for Future VTOL Applications
Master's thesis submission talk. Manuel is advised by Julian Rhein (TUM FSD) and Prof. Hans-Joachim Bungartz.

15:00-16:00
MI 00.08.053
Details

Nicol Fottner: Developing and Benchmarking a Molecular Dynamics Simulation using AutoPas
Bachelor's thesis submission talk. Nicol is advised by Fabio Gratl.

Thursday, October 24

Ayman Noureldin: A Master-Slave Approach for Multi-Phase Fluid-Fluid Coupling of OpenFOAM and ATHLET
Master's thesis submission talk. Ayman is advised by Gerasimos Chourdakis, in collaboration with GRS.

15:00-16:00
MI 00.08.053
Details

Looking for a second talk - register here


Past Colloquia

Colloquia from Winter Term 2018/19 to Winter 2007/08 can be found here.

Very old colloquium announcements can be found here.

Information for speakers

Registration

To register and schedule a talk, you should fill the form Colloquium Registration at least two weeks before the earliest desired date. Keep in mind that we only have limited slots, so please plan your presentation early. In special cases contact colloquium@mailsccs.in.tum.de.

  • Students doing their Master's thesis at our chair are expected to give two talks:
    • The first talk presents the topic, the status quo, and the research plan. This should be placed early (first month of the work), such that colleagues can comment and give adequate feedback. It also helps students to structure their coming work. (10 minutes + 5 minutes discussion)
    • The second talk presents the thesis' results and insights. (20 minutes + 5 to 10 minutes discussions)
  • Students doing their Bachelor's thesis, IDP, Guided Research, Semesterarbeit etc. at the chair are supposed to give one talk. This presents the thesis' results and insights. (20 minutes + 5 to 10 minutes discussions)
  • Doctoral candidates and guest researchers are always very welcome to give a talk to our colloquium as well. We recommend the 20min talk + 5-10min discussion format, but we can also host longer talks.

Room and equipment

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Seminar room MI 02.07.023

The SCCS Colloquium takes place in the room 02.07.023, which offers 34 seats (5 rows). In case you want to rehearse your presentation, you can freely enter when the room is available.

The room is equiped with a projector EPSON EB-4650, which offers XGA resolution (1024x768, 4:3, laptop can connect at 1920x1080). Please note that only an HDMI port is available. You can also use a laptop we provide, which runs Linux (i.e. no Microsoft Office). We recommend that you export your slides in PDF format beforehand (a USB drive will be available).

We also provide you with a presenter/laser pointer (Logitech R400, USB) and Whiteboard markers. The room offers two sliding whiteboards.

What to expect

During the colloquium, things usually go as follows:

  • 10-15min before the colloquium starts, the speakers setup their laptops or transfer the presentations to the moderator's laptop. The moderator currently is Gerasimos Chourdakis.
  • The colloquium starts with an introduction to the agenda and the moderator asks the speaker's advisor/host to put the talk into context.
  • Your talk starts. The scheduled time for your talk is normally 20min with additional 5-10min for discussion. Introduction talks are allocated 10min.
  • The moderator keeps track of the time and shows two cards to the speaker: one for "5min left" and one for "time is up", after which you should try to wrap up the most important remaining points. Please remember to look for these cards. You can also tell the moderator if you prefer to keep track of time for yourself.
  • During the discussion session, the audience can ask questions, which are meant for clarification or for putting the talk into context.
  • Congratulations! Your talk is over and it's now time to celebrate! Have you already tried the parabolic slides that bring you from the third floor to the Magistrale?

Preparing a great talk

Do you remember a talk that made you feel very happy for attending? Do you also remember a talk that confused you? What was different between the two?

Here are a few things to check if you want to improve your presentation:

  • What is the main idea that you want people to remember after your presentation? Do you make it crystal-clear? How quickly are you arriving to it?
  • Which aspects of your work can you cover in the time frame, with a reasonable pace and good depth?
  • What can you leave out (but maybe have as back-up slides) to not confuse or overwhelm the audience?
  • How are you investing the crucial first two minutes of your presentation?
  • How much content do you have on your slides? Is all of it important? Will the audience know which part of a slide to look at? Will somebody from the last row be able to read the content? Will somebody with limited experience in your field have time to understand what is going on?
  • Are the figures clear? Are you explaining the axes or any other features clearly?
  • Which questions would you like the audience to ask you? How can you trigger these?

In any case, make sure to start preparing your talk early enough so that you can potentially discuss it, rehearse it, and improve it.

Here are a few good videos to find out more:

Did you know that the TUM English Writing Center can also help you with writing good slides?