MACM 202-4, Fall 2005: Mathematical Modeling and Computation ============================================================ Instructor: Dr. Michael Monagan, mmonagan@cecm.sfu.ca Office: K10501, Phone 291-4279 CECM Lab: P8495, Phone 291-5617 URL http://www.cecm.sfu.ca/personal/monaganm Course URL: http://www.cecm.sfu.ca/personal/monaganm/teaching/MACM202F05 Lectures: MWF 2:30-3:20pm in RCB 8100 Lab (required) Tuesdays in AQ 3148A Office hours: Mon 9-10am, Tue 10-11am, Fri 9-10am, K10501 TA: Mr. Wilson Au, wilsona@sfu.ca Office hour: Tue 12-1pm in the assignment lab. Midterm: (2 hours): Friday October 28th, 7-9pm, in the assignment lab. Final: (2 hours): Friday December 16th, 12-2pm, in the assignment lab. Course text: Understanding Nonlinear Dynamics by Daniel Kaplan and Leon Glass Course grading: 6 assignments 60% Midterm examination 20% Final examination 20% Maple: Assignments and examinations will require a substantial use of the mathematical software package Maple. Instruction on the use of Maple will be given primarily during the lab on Tuesdays but also during class time. Maple is available on many computers at SFU, including the open labs and the assignment lab. You may also purchase Maple from the SFU micro computer store. For this course, Maple V Release 8, 9, 9.5 or 10 will be fine. Help for Maple commands is available on-line in Maple. Notes on the use of Maple will be made available on the web. Cheating You are encouraged to work together on assignments but do not Policy: just copy another students work. The TA will be marking most questions on the assignments and will be looking for students who have copied other students work. When the TA reports a case of suspected copying on an assignment to me I will ask the students involved to explain their solution to me. If a student cannot then I will assign that student 0 for that assignment. If a second instance of cheating occurs you will get 0 for all assignments completed up to that point. Students caught cheating on an exam will get zero for that exam. All cases of cheating will be reported to the department chair and to the registrars office. ========================= COURSE CONTENT ================================ The primary goal of this course is to learn to use a mathematical software package proficiently so that you will be able to use it when appropriate in future courses. We will be using Maple in this course. We will learn to - graph curves and surfaces defined by functions, graph data, construct graphs containing points, lines, polygons, and text in 2 and 3 dimensions - solving math problems using techniques from calculus and linear algebra - write simple programs in Maple to generate numerical data, solve equations, draw fractal images, simulate cellular automata, etc. The second goal is to study some mathematical models for physical phenomena. Most are models of biological phenomena which are readily understood and do not require any knowledge of physics. The material includes many applications of differential calculus so it will give you a deeper understanding of derivatives. We aim to cover most of the sections from Chapter 1 Finite-Difference Equations Chapter 2 Boolean Networks and Cellular Automata Chapter 2 Self Similarity and Fractal Geometry Chapter 4 One-Dimensional Differential Equations Chapter 5 Two-Dimensional Differential Equations