May 1 - 3, 2007; Yale University: Linsly-Chittenden Hall
This workshop is the fourth in a sequence which started in 1995 at the
University of Kentucky and continued
in 1999 in Wuppertal and in 2003 at
University of Edinburgh. The aim is
to bring together applied mathematicians and theoretical physicists
to stimulate the exchange of ideas between leading experts in the fields
of lattice QCD and numerical analysis.
This workshop is organized by
Dr. George T. Fleming
of Yale University. Primary support is provided by the Physics
at the Information Frontier (PIF)
program of the National Science Foundation. Additional support is provided
by Yale University and Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
(JLab).
As the scale of computational resources available for lattice quantum
field theory calculations steadily increases, the ambitions
of practitioners has also kept pace in the desire for more realistic
calculations of a widening variety of physical observables.
Many numerical methods discussed at the previous workshops have been
integrated into current large scale computations generating ensembles
of configurations with such a substantial reduction in overall cost
per configuration that computational requirements are fairly balanced
between configuration generation and measurement of observables.
The focus of this meeting will be equally divided between numerical
methods relevant for the generation of lattice configurations and those
relevant for the calculation and analysis of physical observables.