Albert Tarantola Homage Workshop (Journée 1/2)
21/06/2010
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle
09:00
Séminaires exceptionnels
La Grande Galerie de L'Evolution
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
http://www.ipgp.fr/pages/04092502.php
08:30-09:00 - Registration and coffee
09:00-09:15 - Vincent Courtillot/Satish Singh: Welcome and Introduction
09:15-09:30 - Georges Jobert: Les chantiers d’Albert/Albert’s workings
09:30-09:45 - Bernard Valette: Inverse theory-How did we get it?
09:45-10:00 - Patrick Lailly: Non-linear inversion: Who was first?
10:00-10:15 - Satish Singh: GTG-1 and PCP-1
10:15-10:30 - Coffee
10:30-10:50 - Raul Madariaga: Problème inverse de la source sismique par une approche Bayesienne
10:50-11:10 - Klaus Mosegaard: Computational problems in physics: quest for symmetry and simplicity
11:10-11:30 - Zvi Koren: Full azimuth angle domain decomposing and imaging
11:30-11:50 - Mark Noble: Seismic tomography following Albert’s philosophy
11:50-12:10 - Heiner Igel: Seismic inverse problems including rotations and strain
12:10-12:30 - Dominique Gibert: Inverse problem = Quest for simplicity
12:30-14:00 - Lunch
14:00-14:20 - Kurt Lambeck: Sea level during the Roman Epoch: implications for more recent sea level change and for archaeology
14:20-14:40 - Olivier Talagrand: Assimilation of observations in meteorology and oceanography
14:40-14:55 - Argyris Nicolaidis: Living in extra-dimension
14:55-15:10 - Bartolome Coll: Café Beaubourg: Albert and I
15:10-15:25 - Jesus Martin: Modèles Newtoniens d'étoiles non sphériques et non tournantes
15:25-15:40 - André Journel : Tarantola’s stochastic inversion and the direct approach by sequential Gaussian simulation: proof of the equivalence
15:40-15:55 - Tea
15:55-16:10 - Francois Cornet: The inverse problem of natural stress evaluation
16:10-16:25 - Bertrand Maillot: Inversion of fault kinematics in sand box experiment
16:25-16:40 - Stephan Nielsen: Creating earthquake avatars in the laboratory
16:40-16:55 - Aldo Zollo: Scaling relations for earthquake source parameters down to decametric fracture lengths