How do we actually compute what happens inside a power grid?
Power grids are huge, non‑linear systems that have to respect very real physical limits. In this lunch lecture, we explore how to compute voltages and currents along transmission lines, why this is harder than it looks, and how numerical methods from mathematics and computer science are used at grid scale. Starting from basic circuit theory, we connect it to large-scale power‑flow calculations used in practice, discuss their computational challenges, and compare common industry approaches with a more scalable, model‑based solution. The talk bridges mathematics, numerical methods, and software engineering, with a concrete example using open‑source tools—showing how ideas from math and computer science directly impact power system analysis.
Please contact Corporate Communication and Contact Committee or the board (ceb@gewis.nl) with any questions, concerns or if you are unable to attend after the deadline for unsubscribing has passed. Have fun!
This sign-up list has a limited capacity and is open from Thursday, April 16, 2026 at 12:00 PM till Monday, April 20, 2026 at 11:59 PM.