General Information


Instructor: Nishant Malik, Office: 310 Kemeny Hall
Email: Nishant.Malik@dartmouth.edu, Phone: 603-646-9020
Class Times: Monday, Wednesday and Friday 12:30 -1:35 PM
Class Room: 007, Kemeny Hall
Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday and Friday 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM [or by appointment].
X-hours: Tuesday 1:00 PM -1:50 PM [Will be used intermittently at instructor's discretion for review of course material etc. Do not schedule anything regular in this X-hr].


Textbook



Title: Applied Mathematics
Edition: Fourth
Authors: J. David Logan
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons





Course Description


This course introduces a wide variety of mathematical tools and methods to analyze phenomena in the physical, life and social sciences. Focus of this course will be on analytical tools (the ones involving use of pen and paper) rather then the computational tools (the ones involving use of computers). Though students are encouraged to learn numerical skills with packages from programming language like Python or Matlab or C++ (or whatever else a particular student prefers) and use them in their projects.


Tentative Syllabus*

Dimensional Analysis, Scaling, Differential Equations and Two-Dimensional Dynamical Systems. Perturbation Methods: Regular perturbation, The Poincare-Lindstedt Method, Asymptotic analysis, Singular perturbation, Boundary layers and uniform approximations, Initial layers, The WKB approximation, Asymptotic expansion of integrals, Boundary value problem. Eigenvalue Problems, Integral Equations, and Green's Functions: Sturm-Liouville problems, Orthogonal functions, Fourier Series, Integral Equations, Volterra Equations, Fredholm equations with Degenerate Kernels, Green’s function, Green’s function via eigenfunctions. Partial Differential Equations: Conservation laws, Several dimensions, Green’s identities, Energy method for uniqueness, Laplace and Poission equation, Separation of variables. Discrete Models: Difference Equations, Stochastic Models, Probability-Based Models.

*Note: This syllabus is only suggestive and few topics may be removed depending on the availability of time during the course.


Prerequisite

MATH 23, or reasonable knowledge of differential equations.

Grades

Percentage of total grades
One Midterm exam (2 hour long) 20 %
Homework 20%
Class participation 5%
Project 15%
Final Exam 40%


Exam and project Schedule

1. Midterm:May 3, 2016. Time: 4 - 6PM. Location: Carpenter Room 013
2. Project submission deadline: May 25, 2016.
3. Final Exam: June 2, 2016. Time: 3 - 6PM. Location: Kemeny 007

Resources

    Reference books:
  • Nonlinear Ordinary Differential Equations: An Introduction for Scientists and Engineers, Dominic Jordan and Peter Smith (Oxford University Press, UK, Fourth Edition, 2007)
  • Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: With Applications to Physics, Biology, Chemistry, and Engineering, Steven Strogatz (Westview Press, Second Edition, 2015)
  • Linear Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers, Tyn Myint-U and Lokenath Debnath (Birkhäuser, Fourth Edition, 2007)
  • Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers, Lokenath Debnath (Birkhäuser, Third Edition, 2012)
  • Mathematical methods for physics and engineering: A comprehensive guide, K.F. Riley, M.P. Hobson and S.J. Bence (Cambridge Univesrity Press, Third Edition, 2006)
Homework

Homework will be assigned once a week on Fridays and will be due the following Friday, unless otherwise explicitly specified by the instructor. Homework should be written neatly, clearly explaining the reasoning and feel free to use lot of extra space on the page. Please properly staple all the pages in your homework. Submit homework to the instructor after the class or during the office hours. Late homework will not be graded.

Homework Sheets

Homework Sheet 1
Posted on: 04/01/2016 Due on: 04/08/2016
Solutions
Homework Sheet 2
Posted on: 04/08/2016 Due on: 04/15/2016
Solutions
Homework Sheet 3
Posted on: 04/15/2016 Due on: 04/22/2016
Solutions






Homework Sheet 4
Posted on: 04/22/2016 Due on: 04/29/2016
Solutions
Homework Sheet 5
Posted on: 05/06/2016 Due on: 05/13/2016
Solutions
Homework Sheet 6
Posted on: 05/13/2016 Due on: 05/20/2016
Solutions






Problem Sheet 1
Posted on: 05/25/2016 Will not be collected!
Solutions






Exams

Midterm
Date: 05/03/2016
Solutions
OLD EXAMS (2007-11 and 2013). *Syallbus may be different.






Project

At the end of the course each student has to submit a research project based on the material learned during the course. Students can choose either to work on a project individually or in a team of 2 to 4 students. The main criteria for grading a project will be the originality of the idea/problem, complexity of methods, concepts and techniques used and most importantly independent learning. Students are especially encouraged to learn numerical methods and use them in their project. Once a student or group of students decide on a project then they must contact the instructor for an approval.
The final project report/document should be typed and submitted to the instructor only via the email. Print outs or written documents will not be accepted. Use of LaTex in preparing project report is highly recommended.

Some Ideas/Inspirations for project

Download the folder containing relevant papers.
Please also read and explore section 2.5-2.6 of the textbook.

Class Notes

Date Topic/Book Chapter Slides/Class Notes Worksheets
03/28 Introduction Slides
03/30 Dimensional Analysis,
Ch. 1.1
Slides
04/01 Dimensional Analysis and Scaling
Ch. 1.1-1.2
Slides Sheet_with_solutions
04/04 Scaling and Review of Differential Equations
Ch. 1.2-1.3
Slides
04/06 Review of Differential Equations and Satbility and Bifuractions
Ch. 1.3
Slides Sheet_with_solutions
04/08 Satbility and Bifuractions
Ch. 1.3
Slides
Python Notebook
04/11 Phase Plane Phenomena
Ch. 2.1
Slides
04/12*
X-hr
TALK: Maria Masilover
visiting grad student from TU Berlin
Slides
04/13 Linear Systems
Ch. 2.2
Slides
04/15 Nonlinear Systems
Ch. 2.3
Slides
Python Notebook
Sheet_with_solutions
04/18 Bifurcations
Ch. 2.4
Slides
04/20 Bifurcations
Ch. 2.4
Slides
04/22 Review of HW#3
Regular perturbation
Ch. 3.1
Slides
Python Notebook
04/25 Poincaré-Lindstedt Method
Ch. 3.1.3
Slides
04/27 Asymptotic Analysis
Ch. 3.1.4
Sheet_with_solutions
04/29 Review of HW# 4
Singular Perturbation
Ch. 3.2
05/02 Singular Perturbation and Boundary Layer Analysis
Ch. 3.2-3.3
Slides
05/06 Boundary Layer Analysis
Ch. 3.3
Slides
05/06 Initial Layers
Ch. 3.4
Slides
Python Notebook
Sheet_with_solutions
05/09 Initial Layers and WKB Approximation
Ch. 3.4 -3.5
Slides
05/11 WKB Approximation
Ch. 3.5
Slides
05/13 WKB Approximation and Asymptotic expan. of Integrals
Ch. 3.5-3.6
Slides
05/16 Asymptotic expan. of Integrals
Ch. 3.6
Slides
05/17*
X-hr
Boundary-Value Problems
Ch. 5.1
Sheet_with_solutions
05/18 Sturm-Liouville Problems
Ch. 5.2
Slides
05/20 Sturm-Liouville Problems and Classical Fourier Series
Ch. 5.2-5.3
05/23 Classical Fourier Series and Basic concepts PDE
Ch. 5.3 and Ch. 6.1
Slides
05/25 Basic concepts PDE and Conservation laws
Ch. 6.1 and Ch. 6.2
Slides
05/27 Conservation laws
Ch. 6.2


Special needs

Students with diagnosed learning disability are encouraged to discuss with the instructor any appropriate accommodations that might be helpful. All discussions will remain confidential, although the Student Accessibility Services office may be consulted.

Honor Principle

You are encouraged to work together on homework. However, the final writeup should be your own. On exams, all work should be entirely your own; no consultation of other persons, printed works, or online sources is allowed without the instructor's explicit permission.