Seminars

Department Colloquium - Margaret Cheney

Jan. 19, 2018

Waveform Design for Radar Detection and Imaging This talk addresses 3 related questions: 1) What is the best space-time waveform to transmit for detecting the presence of a weakly scattering object in free space? 2) What is the best waveform to use to suppress clutter in synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) imaging?...

APPM Department Colloquium - Mevin Hooten

Feb. 24, 2017

Event Description: Mevin Hooten, Department of Statistics, babyÖ±²¥app State University De Motu Animalium: Modern Models for Animal Trajectories Advances in animal telemetry data collection techniques have served as a catalyst for the creation of statistical methodology for analyzing animal movement data. Such data and methodology have provided a wealth of...

APPM Department Colloquium - Eric Vance

Feb. 17, 2017

Event Description: Eric Vance, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder Toward a Theory of Collaboration for Data Science The emerging field of Data Science is, by construction, an interdisciplinary, collaborative field. Statisticians, Mathematicians, and Computer Scientists work together (ideally) to create theoretically sound methods for domain experts and...

APPM Department Colloquium - Doug Nychka

Feb. 10, 2017

Event Description: Doug Nychka, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), Boulder, CO Large and non-stationary spatial fields: Quantifying uncertainty in the pattern scaling of climate models Pattern scaling has proved to be a useful way to extend and interpret Earth system model (i.e. climate) simulations. In the simplest case the...

APPM Department Colloquium - Ana Maria Rey

Feb. 3, 2017

Event Description: Ana Maria Rey, Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics, University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder Building with Crystals of Light and Quantum Matter: From clocks to computers Understanding the behavior of interacting electrons in solids or liquids is at the heart of modern quantum science and necessary for technological advances. However,...

APPM Department Colloquium - Xuemin Tu

Jan. 27, 2017

Event Description: Xuemin Tu, Department of Mathematics, University of Kansas Nonoverlapping Domain Decomposition Methods for Saddle Point Problems Two widely used nonoverlapping domain decomposition methods BDDC (Balancing domain decomposition by constraints) and FETI-DP (Dual-primal finite element tearing and interconnecting) are studied for the systems of linear equations arising from the...

APPM Department Colloquium - Steffen Borgwardt

Jan. 20, 2017

Event Description: Steffen Borgwardt, Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of babyÖ±²¥app - Denver Operations Research in Land Exchange With geometric modeling techniques, one can represent the feasible solutions of problems in operations research as objects in high-dimensional space. The properties of these objects reveal information about the underlying...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium

Dec. 9, 2016

Event Description: A weekly presentation of current research in the field of Applied Mathematics, suitable for most audiences. Location Information: Main Campus - Engineering Classroom Wing ( View Map ) 1111 Engineering DR Boulder, CO Room: 245 Contact Information: Name: Ian Cunningham Phone: 303-492-4668 Email: amassist@colorado.edu

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Will Kleiber

Dec. 2, 2016

Event Description: Will Kleiber, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder Multivariate Random Fields Most modern spatial datasets involve multiple variables that can exhibit complex cross-process dependencies. We review some classic approaches to building statistical models for multivariate spatial data, nearly all of which rely on specifying cross-covariance functions...

Applied Mathematics Colloquium - Yi Qiang

Nov. 11, 2016

Event Description: Yi Qiang, The Earth Lab and Dept. of Geography, University of babyÖ±²¥app Boulder From Time to Time: Novel Representations of Time for Visual Analytics How to represent time is a fundamental question in many disciplines. Conventionally, time intervals are represented as linear segments in a one-dimensional space, which...

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