Events

Colloquium – Todd Burwell, Boeing Research & Technology

228 Gordon Palmer Hall Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title:  An Overview of Applied Mathematics at Boeing Abstract: In this talk we will give an overview of Boeing Research and Technology and discuss how we support the major Boeing business units. We will discuss research and consulting in Applied Mathematics in an industrial setting and give a few examples from Statistics and Operations Research

Pi Mu Epsilon Seminar – Toyin Alli

302 Gordon Palmer Hall

Building Large Economic and Financial Networks “The study of high dimensional networks has increased dramatically. Group wise information from large datasets can be used to build networks where nodes represent variables and edges represent the conditional dependency between two variables. Economic policy makers can use these networks to measure impulse responses and determine how an

Undergraduate advising for Summer and Fall 2016

302 Gordon Palmer Hall

Mathematics undergraduate advising for Summer/Fall 2016 Wednesday, February 24th at 12:00 pm in 302 Gordon Palmer Hall. Refreshments will be served.  

Graduate Recruiting Expo 2016

302 Gordon Palmer Hall

As part of the Graduate Recruiting Expo, faculty members will give overview talks about their current research.  These talks will be accessible to advanced undergraduates as well as graduate students.  This is a great opportunity to learn more about some (though not all!) of the research being done in the department.  Graduate students who have not

Colloquium – Emil Alexov, Clemson University

228 Gordon Palmer Hall Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Emil Alexov, Ph.D. Computational Biophysics and Bioinformatics, Department of Physics, Clemson University Title: Multi-scale modeling of kinesin motion along microtubule utilizing DelPhi     Poisson-Boltzmann solver Abstract: Electrostatics plays major role in molecular biology because practically all atoms carry partial charge while being situated at Angstroms distances. Many biological phenomena involve the binding of proteins to a large object.

Colloquium – Maria Pereyra, University of New Mexico

228 Gordon Palmer Hall Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Title: Dyadic Harmonic Analysis and Weighted Inequalities Abstract: In this talk we will present some basic ideas in harmonic analysis via simpler dyadic models. We will show how they can be used to describe important continuous objects such as the Hilbert transform or more generally singular integral operators. We will introduce the dyadic setting, Haar functions, and basic

Applied Math Seminar

228 Gordon Palmer Hall Tuscaloosa, AL, United States