Seminars

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Nathalie Vriend

Feb. 10, 2023

Nathalie Vriend, The Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering , University of Colorado Boulder Granular Flows: Photoelastic avalanches & Bedform dynamics Flowing granular materials arise everywhere around us, in industry from pharmaceutical processes to bulk good transport lines, and in nature from snow avalanches to captivating dune fields. At...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Daniel Acuña

Feb. 3, 2023

Daniel Acuña, Department of Computer Science, University of Colorado Boulder Robust Scientific Image Tampering Detection through Noise Inconsistencies and Null Models Scientific image tampering is a critical issue that undermines the research community's perception of trust and integrity. Current methods for identifying image tampering in natural images may not be...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Kyle Luh

Jan. 27, 2023

Kyle Luh, Department of Mathematics, University of Colorado Boulder Extreme Eigenvalues of a Random Laplacian Matrix The extreme eigenvalues of a random matrix have been important objects of study since the inception of random matrix theory and also have a variety of applications. The Laplacian matrix is the workhorse of...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Alessandro Peri

Jan. 20, 2023

Alessandro Peri, Department of Economics, University of Colorado Boulder Programming FPGAs for Economics: An Introduction to Electrical Engineering Economics We show how to use field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) and their associated high-level synthesis (HLS) compilers to solve heterogeneous agent models with incomplete markets and aggregate uncertainty (Krusell and Smith, 1998)...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Daniel Rothman

Dec. 8, 2022

Daniel Rothman; Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Excitations of Earth's Carbon Cycle Mysterious, transient changes in the ocean's store of carbon occur intermittently throughout Earth's history. Each of these events coincides with climate change; moreover, mass extinctions are always accompanied by such events. What...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Alex Young

Dec. 8, 2022

Alexander Young, Anderson School of Management, University of California - Los Angeles (UCLA) Inferring genetic causation using randomization of genetic material within families and modeling intergenerational inequalities Multiple phenomena contribute to genotype-phenotype associations: causal effects of alleles carried by the individual on the individual (direct genetic effects); effects of alleles...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Stephanie Chaillat

Dec. 2, 2022

Stephanie Chaillat, Laboratoire POems, École Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées Paris Fast Boundary Element Methods to simulate underwater explosions and their interactions with submarines Assessing the impact of underwater explosions on submerged structures (submarines) is an important naval engineering problem. An underwater explosion mainly induces two distinct phenomena: a "shock...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Robert MacCurdy

Nov. 11, 2022

Robert MacCurdy, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Colorado Boulder Automated Design and Fabrication of Multimaterial Soft Robots Current electromechanical design practice is predicated on the exercise of expert-level judgement through an interactive and iterative design and fabrication process that requires skilled humans at every step. This approach doesn't scale...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Heather Wilber

Nov. 4, 2022

Heather Wilber, Oden Institute, University of Texas at Austin Rational functions in computational mathematics From dynamical systems and signal processing theory to core algorithms in numerical linear algebra, rational approximation theory has always shaped the way we think about computational mathematics. Even so, outside of a few very active areas,...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Mark Ablowitz

Oct. 28, 2022

Mark Ablowitz, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado Boulder Looking Back: Reflections on Research and Teaching Mark J. Ablowitz is the recipient of the 2022 Hazel Barnes Prize. This is the most prestigious single faculty award funded by the University of Colorado Boulder. It was established in 1991 to...

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