Computational Science and Numerical Analysis
Computation is now regarded as an equal and indispensable partner, along with theory and experiment, in the advance of scientific knowledge and engineering practice. Numerical simulation enables the study of complex systems and natural phenomena that would be too expensive or dangerous, or even impossible, to study by direct experimentation. The quest for ever higher levels of detail and realism in such simulations requires enormous computational capacity, and has provided the impetus for dramatic breakthroughs in computer algorithms and architectures. Due to these advances, computational scientists and engineers can now solve large-scale problems that were once thought intractable.
Computational science and engineering (CSE) is a rapidly growing multidisciplinary area with connections to the sciences, engineering, mathematics and computer science. CSE focuses on the development of problem-solving methodologies and robust tools for the solution of scientific and engineering problems.
(quoted from "Graduate Education for Computational Science and Engineering" prepared by the SIAM Working Group on CSE Education.)
Members
Pedro Aceves Sanchez
Assistant Professor, Mathematics
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Moysey Brio
Professor, Mathematics
Jean Guy Caputo
Karl B Glasner
Professor, Applied Mathematics - GIDP
Professor, Mathematics
Lise-Marie Imbert-Gerard
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Robert A Indik
Leonid Kunyansky
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Professor, Mathematics
Joceline C Lega
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Professor, Mathematics
Professor, Public Health
Kevin Lin
Professor
Professor, Applied Mathematics - GIDP
Professor, Cognitive Science - GIDP
Professor, Neuroscience - GIDP
Professor, Statistics-GIDP
Frederic Marazzato
John Peca-medlin
Marek R Rychlik
Professor, Mathematics
Tonatiuh Sanchez-Vizuet
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Mikhail Stepanov
Associate Professor, Mathematics
Member of the Graduate Faculty