MARINE 2025


OBJECTIVES


The XI Conference on Computational Methods in Marine Engineering (Marine 2025) will be held in Edinburgh, Scotland, on 23-25 June 2025.

The previous conferences of these series were held in  Oslo (Norway) on 27-29 June, 2005, in  Barcelona (Spain) on 5-7 June, 2007, in  Trondheim (Norway) on 15-17 June, 2009, in  Lisbon (Portugal) on 28 – 30 September, 2011, in  Hamburg (Germany), on 29-31 May, 2013, in  Rome (Italy), on 15-17 June, 2015, in  Nantes (France) on 15-17 May, 2017,  in  Goteborg (Sweden) on 13-15 May, 2019, in virtual format on 2-4 June 2021 (co-organised by the Universities of Edinburgh and Strathclyde, Scotland) and in Madrid 27-29 June 2023.

Marine conference is one of the Thematic Conferences of the European Community on Computational Methods in Applied Sciences (ECCOMAS) and a Special Interest Conference of the International Association for Computational Mechanics (IACM). It is also supported by other scientific organizations in Europe and worldwide.

The objective of Marine 2025 is to be a meeting place for researchers developing computational methods and scientists and engineers focusing on challenging applications in marine engineering.

By marine engineering we include applications within the maritime and offshore industry as well as scientific and engineering challenges related to the marine environment. The conference goal is to make a step forward in the formulation and computational solution of marine engineering problems accounting for all the complex couplings involved in the physical description of the problems.

The conference covers the entire range of issues and technologies related to the application of computational methods to ships and offshore structures, including: ship hydrodynamics, structural analysis of ships and marine structures, offshore structures, sea-pipe mechanics, advances in mechanical methods for marine engineering (new finite element, finite difference, finite volume and boundary element methods, particle methods, meshless methods, etc.), computational environmental mechanics in marine problems, algorithms for solving multidisciplinary problems in marine engineering, marine engineering and shipbuilding applications.