Progress in Industrial Mathematics at ECMI 2000 (Mathematics in Industry Vol.1) (2002. XV, 666 p. w. 217 b&w figs. and 2 col. plates. 24 cm)

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Progress in Industrial Mathematics at ECMI 2000 (Mathematics in Industry Vol.1) (2002. XV, 666 p. w. 217 b&w figs. and 2 col. plates. 24 cm)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 713 p.
  • 商品コード 9783540425823

Full Description

Realizing the need of interaction between universities and research groups in industry, the European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry (ECMI) was founded in 1986 by mathematicians from ten European universities. Since then it has been continuously extending and now it involves about all Euro­ pean countries. The aims of ECMI are • To promote the use of mathematical models in industry. • To educate industrial mathematicians to meet the growing demand for such experts. • To operate on a European Scale. Mathematics, as the language of the sciences, has always played an im­ portant role in technology, and now is applied also to a variety of problems in commerce and the environment. European industry is increasingly becoming dependent on high technology and the need for mathematical expertise in both research and development can only grow. These new demands on mathematics have stimulated academic interest in Industrial Mathematics and many mathematical groups world-wide are committed to interaction with industry as part of their research activities. ECMI was founded with the intention of offering its collective knowledge and expertise to European Industry. The experience of ECMI members is that similar technical problems are encountered by different companies in different countries. It is also true that the same mathematical expertise may often be used in differing industrial applications.

Contents

Plenary talks.- Minisymposia: Finance; Fuel pipelines; Image processing: linear and nonlinear techniques; Information and communication technologies; Kinetic transport in semiconductor devices; Liquid/solid phase transictions and interfaces; Mathematical problems in glass industry; Microelectronics; Models of highway traffic; Models from the texile industry; Numerical methods for hyperbolic and kinetic equations; Problems of charge transport in semiconductor nanostructures; Polymers; Some applications of fluid and gas dynamics; Teaching of industrial mathematics at ECMI centers.- Contributed talks.