Mechanical
Engineering 432, Optimization Methods In Science & Engineering
Catalog description
Prerequisites: Calculus to the level of ODEs, partial derivative
and multiple integrals, some knowledge of PDEs helpful but not essential.
Who takes it
Since optimization problems are encountered in every branch of
science and engineering, students with diverse backgrounds would
benefit from it. In particular students with research interests
in any area of mechanical engineering, physics, applied mathematics,
chemistry, chemical engineering and biomedical engineering are encouraged
to register. The course is primarily for graduate students (at any
level) but advanced undergraduates may also benefit from it if they
have the prerequisites mentioned above.
What it's about
We often marvel at the manner in which animals seem so perfectly
adapted to their environment: the cheetah is perfectly build for
running at high speeds in open areas, the shark has all the adaptations
for swimming at high speeds under water, certain eels use electric
fields instead of vision to navigate in muddy waters and so on.
Mathematically speaking each of these animals is a "solution"
to an "optimization problem" that nature has solved through
the iterative method of mutation and natural selection! In the machines
that we build, as in natures "machines" the need to maximize
or minimize certain things (such as energy consumption, cost, aerodynamic
resistance etc.) is the essence of the design process. In this practically
oriented course we will look at the various common types of "optimization
problems" that arise in diverse areas of science and engineering
and learn some of the methods that have been developed to solve
them.
Minisyllabus:
- Introduction
- Extremizing functions of several variables (review)
- Extremizing with constraints - Lagrange multipliers
- Functionals and the Euler-Lagrange equations
- Constrained optimization of functionals
- Some classical problems in the calculus of variations
- Applications: classical mechanics, geometrical optics, elasticity,
fluid mechanics, vibrations and waves
Assignment/Evaluation:
Home work, Projects
Textbook:
Calculus of Variations: with applications to Physics and Engineering
(Robert Weinstock, Dover)
Contact:
Professor: Sandip Ghosal
e-mail: s-ghosal@northwestern.edu
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