
Department of Mathematical Sciences
Colloquium Schedule
Spring 2000
Thursday, May 11, 2000
Non-commutative Projective Geometry as a Tool
by Prof. Michaela Vancliff, Department of Mathematics, The University of
Texas at Arlington
Thursday, May 4, 2000
Exchange of Stability and Singularly Perturbed
Differential Equations by Prof. Klaus R. Schneider, Weierstrass
Institute for Applied Analysis and Stochastics, Berlin
Thursday, April 13, 2000
Multi-Parameter Optimization in Plasma Physics
by Prof. Andrew Ware, Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University
of Montana
Thursday, April 6, 2000
Representations of Bicircular and Transversal
Matroids by Prof. Nancy Ann Neudauer, Department of Mathematics,
Pacific Lutheran University
Monday, April 3, 2000
Visualization and the Fubini Principle
by Prof. Roger Nelsen, Department of Mathematics, Lewis and Clark College
Thursday, March 30, 2000
Asymptotics of multivariate sequences
by Asst. Prof. Mark Wilson, Department of Mathematical Sciences, The University
of Montana
Thursday, March 16, 2000
Models of steady state evolutionary algorithms
by Prof. Alden Wright, Department of Computer Science, The University of
Montana
Wednesday, March 15, 2000 at 4:10p.m.
Compartmental Models of Biological Fluid Dynamics
by Dr. Scott Stevens, Department of Mathematics, University of Vermont,
and candidate for the Numerical Analysis position
Wednesday, March 15, 2000 at 3:10p.m.
Operator Spaces and Convolution of Multilinear
Forms by Prof. Bert Schreiber, Department of Mathematics, Wayne
State University
Thursday, March 9, 2000
Numerical evidence of stationary and breathing
concentration patterns in the Oregonator with equal diffusivities
by Prof. Richard J. Field, Department of Chemistry, The University
of Montana
Monday, February 28, 2000
Iteration Techniques for Convection Dominated
Flow Problems by Dr. Jayathi Raghavan, Department of Pure and Applied
Mathematics, Washington State University, and candidate for the Numerical
Analysis position
Tuesday, February 22, 2000
Multicomponent Gas Transport in Fuel Cell Electrodes
by Dr. John Stockie, Mathematics Department, Simon Fraser University, and
candidate for the Numerical Analysis position
Thursday, February 10, 2000
Information Transformers and the Concept of Informativeness
by Dr. Peter Golubtsov, Moscow State University
Current Colloquium Schedule | Mathematical
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