Mathematics and Computer Science Department
| Dan Alexander |
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| I am an historian of mathematics. My initial research was in the history of complex dynamics which is an important subfield of the study of chaotic dynamical systems.? Complex dynamics provides the means to study such objects as the Mandelbrot Set and Newton's method. I have published a book, A History of Complex Dynamics: From Schroder to Fatou and Julia, and several other related articles. |
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| Currently I am working on two projects: |
| My second project involves and second history of complex dynamics that depicts the wider context from which the Complex Dynamics emerged in the late 1800's and early 1900's. I working with two collaborators in Italy on this and hope to have a manuscript ready in the next year or two. |
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| Michael Rieck |
| Working with Professor Subhankar Dhar at San Jose State University, and others, my scholarly research at Drake has been primarily focused on the area of "ad hoc wireless communications network," and in particular, the development and testing of new routing protocols. We concocted a new type of router set which we call a k-SPR set, and have published a number of articles related to this, and have presented our work at conferences in India and the United States. Two of these articles appear in Journal of Microprocessors and Microsystems (v. 28, n. 8, p. 427-437) and Computer Networks (v. 47, n. 6, p. 785-799). |
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| Timothy Urness |
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| Research interests: Scientific Visualization, Computer Graphics, Virtual Reality |
| I am interested in using computer graphics to help scientists better understand physical phenomena. Visualizing data using computer graphics enables researchers to obtain a succinct, meaningful visual summary of the contents of a dataset. This allows the key physical structures from multiple distributions to be understood both independently and in the context of other distributions, and can result in new scientific discoveries. |
| Experimentally acquired variables from a turbulent flow dataset can be analyzed using a "color weaving" technique that allows multiple variables to be visualized simultaneously. |
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| A visualization technique, based on embossing, encodes the out-of-plane component of a 3D vector field over a 2D domain |
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| In this image, velocity and vorticity vector fields can simultaneously be analyzed to detect the orientation of a vortex. |








