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Mathematics and Computation, a Contemporary View [electronic resource] : The Abel Symposium 2006 Proceedings of the Third Abel Symposium, Alesund, Norway, May 25–27, 2006 / edited by Hans Munthe-Kaas, Brynjulf Owren.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Abel Symposia ; 3Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008Description: XIV, 127 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540688501
Other title:
  • Proceedings of the Third Abel Symposium, Alesund, Norway, May 25-27, 2006
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 518 23
LOC classification:
  • QA297-299.4
Online resources:
Contents:
Geometric Methods in Engineering Applications -- Boundary Integral Equations for the Laplace-Beltrami Operator -- Numerical Study of Nearly Singular Solutions of the 3-D Incompressible Euler Equations -- Energy-Preserving and Stable Approximations for the Two-Dimensional Shallow Water Equations -- A Conjecture about Molecular Dynamics -- The Dynamics of Transition to Turbulence in Plane Couette Flow.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The 2006 Abel symposium is focusing on contemporary research involving interaction between computer science, computational science and mathematics. In recent years, computation has been affecting pure mathematics in fundamental ways. Conversely, ideas and methods of pure mathematics are becoming increasingly important within computational and applied mathematics. At the core of computer science is the study of computability and complexity for discrete mathematical structures. Studying the foundations of computational mathematics raises similar questions concerning continuous mathematical structures. There are several reasons for these developments. The exponential growth of computing power is bringing computational methods into ever new application areas. Equally important is the advance of software and programming languages, which to an increasing degree allows the representation of abstract mathematical structures in program code. Symbolic computing is bringing algorithms from mathematical analysis into the hands of pure and applied mathematicians, and the combination of symbolic and numerical techniques is becoming increasingly important both in computational science and in areas of pure mathematics. We are witnessing a development where a focus on computability, computing and algorithms is contributing towards a unification of areas of computer science, applied and pure mathematics. The 2006 Abel symposium brought together some of the leading international researchers working in these areas, presented a snapshot of current state of the art, and raised questions about future research directions.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E-BOOKS ISI Library, Kolkata Not for loan EB1421
Total holds: 0

Geometric Methods in Engineering Applications -- Boundary Integral Equations for the Laplace-Beltrami Operator -- Numerical Study of Nearly Singular Solutions of the 3-D Incompressible Euler Equations -- Energy-Preserving and Stable Approximations for the Two-Dimensional Shallow Water Equations -- A Conjecture about Molecular Dynamics -- The Dynamics of Transition to Turbulence in Plane Couette Flow.

The 2006 Abel symposium is focusing on contemporary research involving interaction between computer science, computational science and mathematics. In recent years, computation has been affecting pure mathematics in fundamental ways. Conversely, ideas and methods of pure mathematics are becoming increasingly important within computational and applied mathematics. At the core of computer science is the study of computability and complexity for discrete mathematical structures. Studying the foundations of computational mathematics raises similar questions concerning continuous mathematical structures. There are several reasons for these developments. The exponential growth of computing power is bringing computational methods into ever new application areas. Equally important is the advance of software and programming languages, which to an increasing degree allows the representation of abstract mathematical structures in program code. Symbolic computing is bringing algorithms from mathematical analysis into the hands of pure and applied mathematicians, and the combination of symbolic and numerical techniques is becoming increasingly important both in computational science and in areas of pure mathematics. We are witnessing a development where a focus on computability, computing and algorithms is contributing towards a unification of areas of computer science, applied and pure mathematics. The 2006 Abel symposium brought together some of the leading international researchers working in these areas, presented a snapshot of current state of the art, and raised questions about future research directions.

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