Introduction to Mathematical Modeling and Computer Simulations
Autor Vladimir Mityushev, Radoslaw Antoni Kycia, Wojciech Nawalaniec, Natalia Rylkoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 dec 2024
New to this Edition:
- A new chapter on Machine Learning and Data Analysis in order to account for recent developments in the field.
- Chapter 9, ‘Asymptotic Methods in Composites’, has been entirely re-written to make it more consistent with industry and scientific standards.
- Includes an elementary introduction to programming in Python language.
- The Jupyter notebooks with examples for Chapter 10 and Appendix A are available for a download from www.Routledge.com/9781032661513.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032661513
ISBN-10: 1032661518
Pagini: 356
Ilustrații: 300
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.8 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: CRC Press
Colecția Chapman and Hall/CRC
Locul publicării:Boca Raton, United States
ISBN-10: 1032661518
Pagini: 356
Ilustrații: 300
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.8 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: CRC Press
Colecția Chapman and Hall/CRC
Locul publicării:Boca Raton, United States
Public țintă
Postgraduate, Professional Reference, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
I. General Principles and Methods. 1. Principles of Mathematical Modeling. 1.1. How to develop a mathematical model. 1.2. Types of models. 1.3. Stability of models. 1.4. Dimension, units, and scaling. 2. Numerical and symbolic computations. 2.1. Numerical and symbolic computations of derivatives and integrals. 2.2. Iterative methods. 2.3. Newton’s method. 2.4. Method of successive approximations. 2.5. Banach Fixed Point Theorem. 2.6. Why is it difficult to numerically solve some equations? Exercises and mini-projects. II. Basic Applications. 3. Application of calculus to classic mechanics. 3.1. Mechanical meaning of the derivative. 3.2. Integral and energy. 3.3. Potential energy. 3.4. Interpolation. 3.5. Integration of discrete functions. Exercises and mini-projects. 4. Ordinary differential equations and their applications. 4.1. Principle of transition for ODE. 4.2. Radioactive decay. 4.3. Logistic differential equation and its modifications. 4.4. Time delay. 4.5. Approximate solution to differential equations. 4.6. Harmonic oscillation. 4.7. Lotka-Volterra model. 4.8. Linearization. Exercises and mini-projects. 5. Stochastic models. 5.1. Method of least squares. 5.2. Fitting. 5.3. Method of Monte Carlo. 5.4. Random walk. Exercises and mini-projects. 6. One-dimensional stationary problems. 6.1. 1D geometry. 6.2. Second order equations. 6.3. 1D Green’s function. 6.4. Green’s function as a source. 6.5. The δ–function. III. Advanced Applications. 7. Vector analysis. 7.1. Euclidean space R3. 7.2. Scalar, vector and mixed products. 7.3. Rotation of bodies. 7.4. Scalar, vector, and mixed product in Mathematica. 7.5. Tensors. 7.6. Scalar and vector fields. 7.7. Integral theorems. Exercises and mini-projects. 8. Heat equations. 8.1. Heat conduction equations. 8.2. Initial and boundary value problems. 8.3. Green’s function for the 1D heat equation. 8.4. Fourier series. 8.5. Separation of variables. 8.6. Discrete approximations of PDE. 8.7. Universality in Mathematical Modeling Table. Exercises and mini-projects. 9. Asymptotic methods in composites. 9.1. Principle of Asymptotology. 9.2. Effective properties of composites. 9.3. Principles of homogenization theory. 9.4. Maxwell’s approach. 9.5. Mathematical modeling and effective properties of composites. 9.6. Strategy of investigations. 9.7. Densely packed balls. Exercises and mini-projects. 10. Machine learning and data analysis. 10.1. Supervised, unsupervised learning, and regression. 10.2. Data storage. 10.3. A simple example of classification problem. 10.4. Reading, cleaning and scaling data. 10.5. Simple statistics. 10.6. Dimensionality reduction by PCA. 10.7. Selected models of supervised learning. 10.8. Selected models of unsupervised learning. 10.9. Regression. 10.10. Neural Networks. A. Introduction to Python.
Notă biografică
Vladimir Mityushev is currently a Professor and leads the research group Materialica+ at the Cracow University of Technology. His expertise encompasses mathematical modeling, computer simulations, and industrial mathematics. He has provided a complete solution to the Riemann-Hilbert problem for multiply connected domains, applying it to the analytical theory of representative volume elements for dispersed composites. His interdisciplinary research spans a wide array of fields, including the effective properties of composites with deterministic and random structures, elliptic partial differential equations, symbolic computations, boundary value problems, asymptotic methods, packing, deterministic and random graphs, biomathematics, bioinformatics, porous media, permeability, diffusion, elasticity, heat conduction, fracture mechanics, electroosmotic phenomena, and viscous flow in wavy channels.
Radosław Antoni Kycia, PhD, MBA, earned his PhD from Theoretical Physics from Jagiellonian University. He specializes in multidisciplinary projects involving Computer Science, Mathematics, and Physics. He collaborated with CERN, Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Masaryk University. He is the Head of the Computer Science Department at the Faculty of Computer Science and Telecommunications of the Cracow University of Technology.
Wojciech Nawalaniec is a specialist in Computer Simulations and Applied Mathematics. His research focuses on the effective properties of random composites. He developed a computationally efficient symbolic-numerical algorithm to determine structural sums defined by an exponential complexity algorithm. He derived new higher-order formulas for the effective constants of dispersed composites. In addition to symbolic-numerical calculations, his scientific activity also involves simulations and the analysis of random structures using machine learning methods. Wojciech Nawalaniec currently works in the industry, exploring applications of AI in cyber risk quantification.
Natalia Rylko pursued her Doctorate in Technical Sciences, specializing in Mechanics and Thermomechanics of Fiber Composite Materials, at Poznan University of Technology. She currently serves as the Vice Dean of the Department of Computer Science and Telecommunications at the Cracow University of Technology, where she is actively involved in educational and scientific endeavors. Her research in Materials Engineering focuses on applying advanced mathematical techniques, machine learning, and analyzing large datasets, including intricate composite material structures depicted in images.
Radosław Antoni Kycia, PhD, MBA, earned his PhD from Theoretical Physics from Jagiellonian University. He specializes in multidisciplinary projects involving Computer Science, Mathematics, and Physics. He collaborated with CERN, Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Masaryk University. He is the Head of the Computer Science Department at the Faculty of Computer Science and Telecommunications of the Cracow University of Technology.
Wojciech Nawalaniec is a specialist in Computer Simulations and Applied Mathematics. His research focuses on the effective properties of random composites. He developed a computationally efficient symbolic-numerical algorithm to determine structural sums defined by an exponential complexity algorithm. He derived new higher-order formulas for the effective constants of dispersed composites. In addition to symbolic-numerical calculations, his scientific activity also involves simulations and the analysis of random structures using machine learning methods. Wojciech Nawalaniec currently works in the industry, exploring applications of AI in cyber risk quantification.
Natalia Rylko pursued her Doctorate in Technical Sciences, specializing in Mechanics and Thermomechanics of Fiber Composite Materials, at Poznan University of Technology. She currently serves as the Vice Dean of the Department of Computer Science and Telecommunications at the Cracow University of Technology, where she is actively involved in educational and scientific endeavors. Her research in Materials Engineering focuses on applying advanced mathematical techniques, machine learning, and analyzing large datasets, including intricate composite material structures depicted in images.
Descriere
This book continues to serve as an engaging and accessible textbook for undergraduates studying mathematical modeling and computer simulations. The book is heavily focussed on applications, and so may have a particular appeal to applied mathematicians, engineers, and others working in applied quantitative disciplines.