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Introduction to Physics Computing

Outline. MotivationResourcesNumbers and numeralsSolving nonlinear equationsOrdinary differential equations. Motivation. AlgorithmsUnderstand programs like Matlab which just

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Introduction to Physics Computing

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    1. Introduction to Physics Computing HT 2008 Lecture 3 Numerical aspects of computing

    2. Outline Motivation Resources Numbers and numerals Solving nonlinear equations Ordinary differential equations

    3. Motivation Algorithms Understand programs like Matlab which just “do it” Solve problems with no analytic solution Match computing realities with calculations in principle Formerly: real time savers when a “computer” was a person

    4. Resources My main resource: R.L. Burden, J.D. Faires, Numerical Methods, 3rd ed., Boston: Prindle, Weber & Schmidt, 1985. More mathematical: S.D. Conte, Carl de Boor, Elementary Numerical Analysis: An Algorithmic Approach, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980. Koonin and Meredith, Computational Physics Veterling, Numerical Recipes S17 webpage: http://www-pnp.physics.ox.ac.uk/~tseng/teaching/s17/ Interactive Educational Modules in Scientific Computing, http://www.cse.uiuc.edu/iem/ Kalos and Whitlock, Monte Carlo Methods, vol. 1. Luc Devroye, Non-Uniform Random Variate Generation http://cg.scs.carleton.ca/~luc/rnbookindex.html

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