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Differential Equations A Universal Language

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Presentation on theme: "Differential Equations A Universal Language"— Presentation transcript:

1 Differential Equations A Universal Language
Bethany Caron Spring 2008 Senior Honors Project

2 Math is not as scary as it seems!
Explain complex mathematical concepts in “non-math” language Used as a tool in modeling many different fields of study Pure Mathematics vs. Applied Mathematics

3 Derivatives Measures the instantaneous rate of change of a function
Denoted by f ’ (x) or df/dx

4 Types of Differential Equations
Ordinary Differential Equations Mathematical equation involving a function and its derivatives Involve equations of one single variable Partial Differential Equations Involve equations of more than one variable and their partial derivatives Much more difficult to study and solve

5 Uses of Differential Equations
Study the relationship between a changing quantity and its rate of change Help solve real life problems that cannot be solved directly Model real life situations to further understand natural and universal processes Model the behavior of complex systems

6 The Process Real World Situation Formulation Interpretation
Mathematical Analysis Mathematical Model Mathematical Results

7 Practical Applications
Physics light and sound waves Newton’s Laws of Motion radioactive decay oscillation Economics and Finance equity markets net worth Biological Sciences predator / prey population growth

8 Practical Applications
Engineering bridge design electrical circuits Astronomy celestial motion Chemistry interaction between neurons Newton’s Law of Cooling Forensics - time of death temperature of meat

9 Kermack-McKendrick Model: Modeling Infectious Disease
Famous SIR model S: Susceptible People I: Infected People R: Removed People Models contagious disease in a specific population over time Simplifies spread and recovery of disease Created to model epidemics Plague Cholera Flu Measles Tuberculosis

10 Kermack-McKendrick Model
Assumes a fixed and closed population Model in 2-dimensional space Need for partial differential equations arises Much more difficult to understand and solve More effective and accurate model

11 Newton’s Law of Heating and Cooling
Rate of change of temperature Proportional to difference between temperature of object T and temperature of environment Ta Law of Heating Positively correlated Law of Cooling Negatively correlated Forensics Time of death Temperature of body at different times

12 Newton’s Law of Heating and Cooling
Cooling a cup of coffee Defrosting food Cooking time for meat

13 Conclusion Challenges Explaining complex mathematical ideas Finding and understanding solutions “Mathematics knows no races or geographic boundaries; for mathematics, the cultural world is one country.” – David Hilbert


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