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The Student Council at the Department of Mathematics evaluates various courses given by the Department of Mathematics each year, and this semester MAT3360 is among the chosen. We therefore hope that you would take the time to answer the evaluation by using the link below. All answers are anonymous and the evaluation should take about 10 minutes to complete.
MAT3360: https://nettskjema.no/a/120458
?The link is also sent out on e-mail. Thank you for contributing to the improvement of education at the Department of Mathematics!
Can be downloaded from this link.
The following sections in Tveito and Winther’s book Introduction to partial differential equations are the curriculum:
1.1-1.4
2.1-2.4 (excluding 2.2.3)
3.1-3.8
4.1-4.5
5.1-5.3
6.1-6.4
7.1-7.5
8.1-8.5
9.1-9.5
10.1-10.2.
A summary on important topics is given in this pdf
For those that want to practice for the exam, here is a link to many old exams.
The second compulsory assignment can be downloaded from this link
I have corrected your hand-ins of oblig 1 and uploaded a pdf with solution suggestions to Canvas. Update: if you click on the link "Files" on the left of the Canvas course page, you will now find the solution suggestion there.
Compulsory assignment 1 can be downloaded from this link
There was typo in exercise 5 c) "u(x,t)" should have been "u(x)". This is corrected in the new version.
The student representative for MAT 3360 this semester is
Simon Lederhilger: simonled"at"math.uio.no
The first lecture will be on Monday, January 23 at 14:15-16:00. The course also has sessions Thursdays 10:15-12:00, starting January 26. Mondays will mainly be lectures, while Thursdays will be a mix of lectures and exercise solving.
We will use the book "Introduction to partial differential equations", Texts in Applied Mathematics 29, Springer Verlag 2005, by Aslak Tveito and Ragnar Winther. I plan to cover chapters 1 to 10. If time permits, we will also have a glance at physics informed neural networks, which is an alternative method for solving differential equations to the more classic numerical methods covered in Tveito and Winther.