Confessions of an industrial mathematician Chris Budd.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WHAT IS ENGINEERING? © 2002 MIT PSDAM LAB. root of the word... ENGINEER © 2002 MIT PSDAM LAB.
Advertisements

Math in and out of the zoo Chris Budd Where does a mathematician go to find some maths when they are not in their office? At play?
HOW MATHS CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE Chris Budd Degree opportunities in Mathematics and Statistics.
Eat, drink and be merry with maths Chris Budd Chris Budd.
Models for heat and moisture transport in a microwave oven Andrew Hill & Prof. C.J. Budd University of Bath, UK Greg Hooper CCFRA, UK Faraday CASE award.
Making sense of a complex world Chris Budd. Many natural (and human!) systems appear complex and hard to understand National Electricity Grid.
101 uses of a quadratic equation Chris Budd. Is the quadratic equation evil? And does anyone care?
HOW MATHS CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE EXCITING CAREERS IN MATHEMATICS Chris Budd.
CAN MATHS HELP IN THE FIGHT AGAINST CRIME? Chris Budd.
How Much Maths is Too Much Maths? Chris Budd and Rob Eastaway 1,1,2,3,5,8,13 …
What have mathematicians done for us? Chris Budd.
How to amaze your friends the link between mazes, murder and organised crime Chris Budd Chris Budd.
Whoever tells you that teaching and research dont go together is talking rubbish Chris Budd.
EFFECTS OF COMPUTERISATION. INTRODUCTION FAST CHANGES FAST CHANGES HUMAN MIND HUMAN MIND MORE CONVENIENCE MORE CONVENIENCE PROFESSIONALS DEPEND ON COMPUTERS.
Career and Technical Education School District of Beloit What Courses are offered at Beloit Memorial High School?
Engineering Systems & Design. We live in an increasingly complex society.
ProCSI Day 1 – Mechanical Engineering Simulation Based Engineering Lab University of Wisconsin – Madison Prepared by: Justin Madsen.
1. Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 2 Technology in Action Chapter 1 Why Computers Matter to You: Becoming Computer.
1. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 2 Technology in Action Chapter 1 Why Computers Matter to You: Becoming Computer.
CS 282 Simulation Physics Lecture 1: Introduction to Rigid-Body Simulation 1 September 2011 Instructor: Kostas Bekris Computer Science & Engineering, University.
Careers in Mathematics 24 March Careers In Mathematics What can you do with a B.Sc. degree in Mathematics ? Where do you want to work ?
Maths in and out of the zoo Chris Budd Where does an Oxford trained applied mathematician go to find some maths in action? Maths masterclass students.
Conceptual Modeling of the Healthcare Ecosystem Eng. Andrei Vasilateanu.
1 Trends in Mathematics: How could they Change Education? László Lovász Eötvös Loránd University Budapest.
David L. Spooner1 IT Education: An Interdisciplinary Approach David L. Spooner Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
MATH10001 Mathematical Workshop Mathematical Modelling and Problem Solving.
The draft curriculum. NSW  General  Mathematics  Mathematics Extension 1  Mathematics Extension 2 Draft Australian  Essential  General  Mathematical.
1 Chapter No 3 ICT IN Science,Maths,Modeling, Simulation.
Intro to the University Victoria Wilson. Scotland.
Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.
FROM NOW TO THE FUTURE MATHEMATICS Return Home Return Home Mathematics: Where do I see my future? What am I good at? What do I enjoy?
Cool Computing News Computing majors are in demand By 2016 there will be more than 1.5 million new high- end computing jobs Five of.
Confessions of an industrial mathematican Chris Budd.
Robot Crowd Navigation using Predictive Position Fields in the Potential Function Framework Ninad Pradhan, Timothy Burg, and Stan Birchfield Electrical.
Today we are going to explore the TLC Career Cluster webpage.
Course Instructor: K ashif I hsan 1. Chapter # 2 Kashif Ihsan, Lecturer CS, MIHE2.
IntelliSense.io Beyond the hype - Real World Applications / Solutions of Internet of Things.
Forensic Maths Chris Budd. A crime has been committed What challenges Do they face? The police arrive in force.
Modeling and Simulation Queuing theory
The draft curriculum. NSW  General  Mathematics  Mathematics Extension 1  Mathematics Extension 2 Draft Australian  Essential  General  Mathematical.
Project SOaR ™ Supporting STEM Education in all Southeastern States Emphasizing Title 1 Schools STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics)
Introduction to Engineering
Making sense of a complex world Chris Budd. Much of natural (and human!) behavior appears complex and hard to understand Rocks underground.
Faculty of Engineering & Design University of Bath.
About Engineering The National Electronics Museum May 16, 2015 Dan Zeitlin.
1/24 Dr. Robert Layton Internet Commerce Security Laboratory Centre for Informatics and Applied Optimisation University of Ballarat Mathematics and Cybercrime.
Types of Electromagnetic Radiation and Law of Reflection Chapter 18:2 And Chapter 19.1 page 570.
The changing landscape of CTE in Nevada A need to focus on middle-skill jobs through career pathways of promise to close the skills gap.
// Research needs in statistical modelling for energy system planning Chris Dent Amy Wilson / Meng Xu / Antony Lawson / Edward Williams Stan Zachary /
STEM DIVERSITY SUMMIT Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics “The POWER of STEM” S. Jane Fritz St. Joseph’s College Department of Mathematics/Computer.
THINKING ABOUT THE WORLD OF WORK. JOB SECTORS There are lots of different types of jobs Lots of jobs are in the same types of work They are grouped together.
Welcome to Mathematics A Level
Making sense of a complex world
Business & Computer Science Education Department
Mechanical & Manufacturing Engineering Program
Analytics Reports Available on 500 Different U. S. Industries
16. Engineer-in-Residence Program - Introduction to Engineering
ENGINEERING YOUR FUTURE 3 PP1: Discipline overview.
What have mathematicians done
ENGINEERING YOUR FUTURE 3 PP1: Discipline overview.
What have mathematicians done
Computer Science Education Week
What is the future of applied mathematics? Chris Budd.
Analytics Reports Available on 500 Different U. S. Industries
8th Grade Matter and Energy in Organisms and Ecosystems
CAN MATHS HELP IN THE FIGHT AGAINST CRIME?
ENGINEERING YOUR FUTURE 3 PP1: Discipline overview.
Making it Real for older people: Co-producing their active participation in decisions about how and where they live. Dame Philippa Russell, Vice-President,
Valuable Advice from Digital Marketing Experts To Grow Your Business.
Presentation transcript:

Confessions of an industrial mathematician Chris Budd

Traditional school view of maths? Maths is useless The only jobs for mathematicians are in accountancy and teaching Industry is full of people with oily rags All mathematicians are mad

My own view: Almost all maths can be applied to almost all problems … And this simple fact is truly amazing!!!! We can learn lots of new maths from almost all applications: Calculus My whole career has been involved in applying really nice maths to messy problems! And then using this experience to enliven my teaching

We can see maths all around us in the physical world! Swallow tail catastrophe: Find the curves: Packing and folding rocks

Didcot Power Station:.. And in engineering Hyperboloid of revolution mathsmathsmathsmathsmathsmathsmaths

A history lesson: Good applications of maths changes the world Vectors, Maxwell, Radio, FFT, digital revolution, computers GoogleMatrices, SVD, page-rank The computer

Mathematicians even save lives! Florence Nightingale

But … maths is also of great use in industry And this can help our teaching by … Motivating students with real life examples Providing challenging problems for them to work on Giving examples of future careers which use maths

In fact ….. Much of industry has problems which can potentially be formulated, and solved using mathematics Maths connects with all areas and knows no bounds or constraints! Too few people recognize that the high technology so celebrated today is essentially a mathematical technology Edward David, ex-president of Exxon R&D

Traditional industrial users of maths are Telecommunications, aerospace, power generation, iron and steel, mining, oil, weather forecasting, security, defence, finance But they could equally well be … Retail, food, zoos, sport, entertainment, media, forensic service, hospitals, air-sea-rescue, education, transport, risk, health, biomedical, environmental agencies, art, … Q. Which industries use maths?

What sort of maths does traditional industry need? Expertise (big time!!!) and teaching in …. Calculus Differential equations Mechanics Matrices Complex numbers Number theory

Example 1: Forensic mechanics.. Catching a speeding motorist.. Was the car speeding? Forensic evidence: collision damage, witness statements, skid marks

Evidence: s distance of skid Cause: u speed Other data: F brake force Mechanics links speed to distance Given the distance maths gives the speed

Example 2: Mechanics in Aircraft undercarriage: Airbus CJB 2006

Example 3: Microwave cooking What gets hotter, the outside of the food or the inside?

Thermal image of surface of food after 5 minutes heating

L: Domain length: 2-14cm d: Penetration depth: 8mm L Solving Maxwells equations for electric field predicts that the power absorbed decays exponentially. Temperature T satisfies a differential equation Starchy food Challenge.. Solve this.. (a) in general (b) steady state.

But.. 21 st century applications of maths will be driven by even more exotic industrial applications Information/Bio-informatics/Genetics Commerce/retail sector Complexity People based activity

What sort of maths do we now also need to learn and to teach for modern industry? Decision maths!!!!!! Data and data assimilation Probability and uncertainty Computational maths Networks Game theory

Example 4: Crowd Dynamics and traffic flow

Scramble crossing

Escape from a lecture theatre!

Can also model car traffic … cellular automaton models Challenge: Easy to make simulations and compare with real life

Example 5: FACEBOOK and global advertising!: Unilever/CJB

So the advantages of working with industry are … The challenges of industry make us think out of the box and address new challenges Leading to new maths in the process Which leads to great teaching examples and lots of student motivation! But.. How can we achieve this in practice???

Study groups: a way of fostering interaction Study Group Model (in use all over the world) Bring academics, students and industrialists together Pose industrial problems on the first day Work on the problems for a week in teams Great training experience! Case studies at

Example 6: A team project from industry illuminating an equation (literally) Fluorescent light tubes Temperature at each AC cycle V Applied voltage Q. Why do fluorescent tubes need a starter?

Tilted Cusp bifurcation T V Challenge: Find the steady states HINT: Solve a quadratic equation.

In Conclusion Go for it! Industry will need all the mathematicians it can get if it is to survive and grow … And that means all of our students!!!!! Who can learn a lot of exciting maths from industrial problems