Seminars

APPM Department Colloquium - Travis Austin

Sept. 28, 2007

Event Description: Travis Austin, Tech-X Corporation Discontinuous Cardiac Activation Modeling using Fast Multilevel Solvers The ventricles are the core pumping chambers of the heart, responsible for pumping deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs and oxygenated blood from the heart to the rest of the body. Both left and...

APPM Department Colloquium - Joseph F. Grcar

Sept. 21, 2007

Event Description: Joseph F. Grcar, Center for Computational Science and Engineering, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory John von Neumann and the Origins of Scientific Computing Scientific computing as we understand it today began to be practiced around the time of Carl Friedrich Gauss in the form of astronomical calculations based on...

APPM Department Colloquium - Juan G. Restrepo

Sept. 14, 2007

Event Description: Juan G. Restrepo, Postdoc with Alain Karma at the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Complex Systems, Northeastern University Dynamics on complex networks: synchronization, percolation, and the dynamical importance of nodes and links. There has been much recent interest in studying dynamical processes on networks due to the realization...

APPM Department Colloquium - Cleve Moler

Sept. 7, 2007

Event Description: Cleve Moler, Author of MATLAB and Founder of MathWorks Evolution of MATLAB We show how MATLAB has evolved over the last 25 years from a simple matrix calculator to a powerful technical computing environment. We demonstrate several examples of MATLAB applications. We conclude with a few comments about...

APPM Department Colloquium - Bob Eisenberg

May 4, 2007

Event Description: Bob Eisenberg, Department of Molecular Biophysics & Physiology, Rush University Medical Center Ion Channels: Devices for Atomic Control of Molecular Transport Protein channels conduct ions through a narrow tunnel of fixed charge and act as gatekeepers for cells and cell compartments. Hundreds of types of channels are studied...

APPM Department Colloquium - Dongbin Xiu

April 27, 2007

Event Description: Dongbin Xiu, Department of Earth And Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University Efficient methods for numerical simulations with uncertainty Most of the research efforts in scientific computing so far have been in developing efficient algorithms for different applications, assuming ideal inputs with precisely defined computational domains. Recently, there has been...

APPM Department Colloquium - Webster Cash

April 20, 2007

Event Description: Webster Cash, Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Scienes (APS), University of Colorado Boulder Struggling with the mathematics of diffraction and the search for life in the universe Our best hope of finding evidence of life in the Universe is to study the Earth-like planets around nearby stars. Spectra...

APPM Department Colloquium - Natasha Flyer

April 13, 2007

Event Description: Natasha Flyer, Institute for Mathematics Applied to Geosciences (IMAGe), NCAR Modeling simple atmospheric flows on the sphere using radial basis functions Since the early 1990s, radial basis functions (RBFs) have been applied to solve simple elliptical and mixed parabolic partial differential equations (PDEs). Not until 2003 was the...

APPM Department Colloquium - Bengt Fornberg

April 6, 2007

Event Description: Bengt Fornberg, Department of Applied Mathematics, ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Boulder Radial basis functions for solving PDEs - some recent developments Radial basis functions (RBFs) originated in the 1970s as a method for interpolating scattered data. More recently, both our knowledge about RBFs and their range of applications have grown tremendously...

APPM Department Colloquium - Sheldon Newhouse

April 6, 2007

Event Description: Sheldon Newhouse, Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Scienes (APS), University of Colorado Boulder What we do and do not know about simple dynamical systems It is well-known that simple dynamical systems can have complicated orbit structures. We describe some recent progress in understanding the structures of polynomial maps...

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