Professor: Dr. Nathan Louis Gibson
Office: Kidd 056
Office Hours: MW 3-3:50
Course Website:
http://www.math.oregonstate.edu/~gibsonn/Teaching/MTH323-010S16
Text Book:
|
Topic | Applications | Models | Concepts |
Mechanical Models | Spring-mass system
Pendulum | Ordinary differential equations | Linearization |
Population Dynamics | Discrete one-species systems Harvesting | Difference equations
Leslie matrix models Models with time delays | Equilibria and Stability
Chaos Stochasticity |
Particle Flow | Traffic flow
Heat transfer | Partial differential equations | Waves and shocks |
The remaining portion of the writing requirement will be
comprised of homework assignments and informal in-class assignments
pertaining to lecture.
For resources on writing, see Links Section below.
Writing Assignments will be posted to Canvas.
Labs will be posted to Canvas.
For resources on MATLAB, see the section below.
Deliverables in preparation for the final paper are as follows:
Please see this sample
proposal which is much longer and more detailed than you need to be,
but demonstrates the structure and layout of a proposal.
Instructions for submitting proposal: Your proposal should be typed
and exported to PDF format.
Please see this sample paper which
is much longer and more detailed than you need to be, but demonstrates the
structure and layout of each section of a research paper.
Please make
use of Writing Resources under Links below.
Please make use of Writing Resources under Links below.
Reading Assignments
Reading assignments will typically involve chapters in the text, but will
also include chapters from outside sources, journal articles, and
peer-written reports. You may be asked to provide a written summary and/or
critique, or participate in classroom/online discussions. Your grade for
this component will primarily be based on active participation.
The rest will be posted to Canvas.
Answer the following:
Writing Assignments
This is a Writing Intensive Course (WIC), thus you will be required to
write at least 5000 words, at least 2000 of which must be a polished paper
that you have revised after peer review and instructor feedback. This
formal writing requirement will be satisfied by producing a term paper,
roughly 5 pages in length (not counting figures). See the
calendar
for deadlines pertaining to this project, and Term Paper Section for a description of what is expected.
Computer Assignments (Labs)
This is not a programming course, however many topics are more easily
understood by computational experimentation. MATLAB codes will be provided
for your use. Your grade for this component will primarily be based on
written explanations of what you observe from running the simulations.
Term Paper
This is a Writing Intensive Course (WIC), thus you will be required to
write at least 5000 words, at least 2000 of which must be a polished paper
that you have revised after peer review and instructor feedback. This
formal writing requirement will be satisfied by producing a term paper,
roughly 5 pages in length (not counting figures).
Exam
There will be an in-class final exam covering material from lectures. Sample exam problems will be posted on Canvas.
Grades
Grades for each assignment will be posted on CanvasGrade Distribution
Reading Assignments | 10% |
Writing Assignments | 20% |
Computer Assignments | 10% |
Term Paper | 40% |
Final | 20% |
Total | 100% |
Oregon State University has subscribed to a Total Academic Headcount (TAH) Site License for MATLAB. This new licensing includes many, but not all MATLAB toolboxes. OSU faculty, staff and students can install on up to 4 personally-owned devices or computers.
For more information visit Information Services -- MATLAB or matlab.mathworks.com.
The following are online resources for learning Matlab:
Matlab
A scientific programming language is required for this course. Matlab is
preferred due to the integration of computation and visualization.
See also updated MATLAB version pplane8b.m (2014b version).
See also MyPhysicsLab – Chaotic Pendulum
Links
Coupled spring code
or Coupled spring code (plots position of masses, not displacements)
Author's website