DSWeb 2018 Contest  – Software on Dynamical Systems

DSWeb 2018 Contest – Software on Dynamical Systems

DSWeb invites you to submit an entry to its competition for software on dynamical systems theory and its applications. 

Seeking Dynamical Tweeters

Seeking Dynamical Tweeters

Spreading the Gospel of Applied Dynamical Systems on Social Media

DSWeb is seeking graduate students, postdocs, and others to tweet content from its Twitter account (@DynamicsSIAM).

Upcoming Contests for Software and Software Tutorials 2018-2019

Upcoming Contests for Software and Software Tutorials 2018-2019

DSWeb Magazine announces upcoming contests for software contributions and software tutorials.

SIAG/DS Elections: Please Vote by December 6

SIAG/DS Elections: Please Vote by December 6

The 2017 SIAM Dynamical Systems election is going on now and will be open until December 6. Find a listing of candidates and their statements here.

2017 Conference on Complex Systems Report

2017 Conference on Complex Systems Report

Keith Burghard, a postdoctoral scholar from University of California at Davis, reports on 2017 Conference on Complex Systems held in Cancun, Mexico on September 17–22.


Student Feature - Shuyang Ling

Student Feature - Shuyang Ling

Shuyang Ling  is a recipient of the 2017 SIAM Student Paper Prize for the paper titled “Self-Calibration and Biconvex Compressive Sensing.” He is currently Courant Instructor at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University. Shuyang is also affiliated with the Center for Data Science. He received his Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics in 2017 from the University of California Davis, supervised by Prof. Thomas Strohmer, and he obtained his B.S. in Mathematics in 2012 from Fudan University, China.


Canadian Applied and Industrial Math Society (CAIMS) 2017 conference

Canadian Applied and Industrial Math Society (CAIMS) 2017 conference

This year, the Canadian Applied and Industrial Math Society (CAIMS) conference took place in beautiful Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada on July 17–21st.

Scientific Computing for Visual Effects

Scientific Computing for Visual Effects

Joseph Teran talks about scientific computing for visual effects.

Student Feature - Sulimon Sattari

Student Feature - Sulimon Sattari

Sulimon Sattari is a postdoctoral fellow working for Tamiki Komatsuzaki at the Research Institute for Electronic Science at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan. He received his PhD in Physics under Kevin Mitchell at UC Merced in May 2017. He received his BS in Physics and BA in Mathematics from UC Santa Cruz in 2011. Sulimon’s postdoctoral work applies techniques from nonlinear dynamics, information theory, and thermodynamics to study the growth structure of biological cell colonies using experimental images. In his PhD, Sulimon applied a technique called symbolic dynamics to compute mixing rates in fluid systems and ionization rates in atomic systems using topological techniques involving invariant manifolds. As an undergraduate, Sulimon worked under Hartmut Sadrozinski at the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics where he performed experimental research for the development of particle detector prototypes for the Large Hadron Collider at CERN.

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