NEWS FROM THE IMA
The Institute for Mathematics
and its Applications (IMA) is
funded by the National Science
Foundation and the University
of Minnesota, and is closely
associated with our department.
Professors Douglas Arnold, Fadil
Santosa, and Scot Adams serve
as the institute's administrators:
Arnold as Director, Santosa
as Deputy Director, and Adams
as Associate Director.
The
2003 - 04 annual program at
the IMA is on "Probability
and Statistics in Complex Systems:
Genomics, Networks, and Financial
Engineering." The program
has three components: Mathematical
& Statistical Problems in
Genome Sciences (September-December
2003), Communication Networks
(January - March 2004), and
Quantitative Modeling in Finance
and Econometrics (April-June
2004). For details about the
annual program please consult
the IMA website http://www.ima.umn.edu/
Every
year several department faculty
members, in addition to the
IMA administrators, participate
in the annual program. Currently
these include Professors Greg
Anderson, Maury Bramson, Naresh
Jain, Richard McGehee, Arnd
Scheel and Ofer Zeitouni. Several
of these faculty members also
serve as mentors of the IMA's
postdoctoral researchers. Other
current mentors include Professors
Nicolai Krylov, Andrew Odlyzko
and Victor Reiner as well as
Professors Emeriti Don Aronson
and Hans Weinberger. Professor
Thomas G. Kurtz (University
of Wisconsin, Madison) who is
a Distinguished Ordway Visitor
at the department, chairs the
Organizing Committee of the
2003 - 04 annual program. Another
member of the Organizing Committee,
Professor Marco Avellaneda (Courant
Institute, NYU) who is one of
the world's leading experts
in the area of financial mathematics,
is a 1985 Ph.D. graduate of
our department.
Summer
2003 saw the 20th anniversary
of the founding of the IMA.
The occasion was celebrated
by a conference "The IMA
at 20: Mathematics and its Impact",
held June 6-7, 2003. The speakers
at the conference included the
following leading mathematicians
who work in fields of mathematics
and applications where the IMA
has played a major role: Bjorn
Engquist, Princeton U., Nancy
Kopell, Boston U., Graeme Milton,
U. of Utah, Andrew Odlyzko,
U. of Minnesota, George Papanicolaou,
Stanford U., Takis Souganidis,
U. of Texas, Wim Sweldens, Bell
Labs, Margaret Wright, Courant
Institute, and Lai-Sang Young,
Courant Institute. The talks
were aimed at a broad mathematical
audience. In addition, Charles
Peskin, Courant Institute, delivered
a lecture for the general public
entitled "Secrets of the
Heart Revealed--by Mathematics
and Computer Simulation".
The
IMA Public Lectures, co-sponsored
with the IT Alumni Society,
are an important part of the
IMA outreach. During the 2003-04
academic year the Lectures include:
Leroy Hood, After the Human
Genome Project: Systems Biology
and Predictive, Preventive and
Personalized Medicine (September
15, 2003); Richard A. Tapia,
Math at Top Speed: Breaking
Myths in the Drag Racing Folklore
(November 20, 2003); Steven
H. Strogatz, Sync: The Emerging
Science of Spontaneous Order
(January 7, 2004); and Stephen
Ross, Behavioral Finance - The
Closed End Fund Puzzle (March
30, 2004).
The
speakers at the IMA Public Lectures
Series are world's leading experts
in their areas and the lectures
are always very informative
as well as great entertainment,
often including attractive videos,
and engendering lively discussion.
Large audiences at these presentations
are drawn not just from the
University community, but typically
include a strong component of
intellectually curious public,
many of whom clearly consider
these events high points of
their intellectual and entertainment
calendars. Tapia's lecture,
for example, attracted a substantial
audience of drag racing enthusiasts.
Strogatz's engaging presentation,
with its beautiful video of
thousands of fireflies flashing
in synchrony along a Malaysian
river, as well as other interesting
videos, likewise found a very
receptive audience packing a
large lecture hall, the semester
break notwithstanding.
|