Tuesday October 20, 2:00 - 5:00 PM
- Masoud Rafiei-Ravandi
- Eric Walker
- Michael Hall
- Gene Polovy
- Natassia Orr
- Yuki Omori
- Kasun Somaratne
- Gian Matharu
- Kai-Hsuan (Shawn) Wu
- Jiajie Liang (Javen)
- Magnus Haw
- Ryan Lovelidge
- Yun-Chung (Earl) Lin
- Carmen Huang
- Maxwell (Max) Tims
- Joshua Wienands
- Andy Lin
Thursday October 22, 2:00 - 5:00 PM
- Sen Mei
- Steven Janssens
- Katherine Van Dijk
- Anffany Chen
- Ye Cheng Chen (Lewis)
- Kyung Seob (Brian) Sin
- Ian Fraser
- Chenruo (John) Qi
- Yifei Zhou (Alfie)
- Jason (Jianrong) Zhuang
- Benson Chang
- Ziad Algkafori
- Matthew Chin
- Duncan Provan
- William Kellett
- Henry Tung
Instructions
- Refer to the sample presentation, available HERE, that I gave in class Oct 8
as a guide to the expected basic content of your proposal. As
noted in class, your presentation does not have to be (and probably
should not be) as lengthy as
mine, but should include most, if not all, of the sections that mine
does, including
- Overview
- Project Goals
- Mathematical Formulation
- This will be very
important for most of you. You should have a clear grasp of the
mathematical model that will be at the core of your project.
- Numerical Approach
- This can be sketchy, given that we haven't discussed
any
relevant numerical analysis topics yet, but you should be at least
vaguely aware, through discussions with me (e-mail or otherwise) as
necessary, of
what sort of approximations will be needed.
- Testing and Numerical Experiments
- Again, although this can be sketchy, you should have a
general idea of the types of experiments you are going to perform.
- Project Timeline
- This is absolutely
crucial,
so ensure that your presentation includes one!
- References
- Highly recommended, since it shows that you've done a
little
research on your topic!
- You should plan for a presentation not to exceed 5 minutes in length
(so please practice it beforehand
to ensure that you can deliver
it in 5 minutes), so that we will have another 5 minutes for questions,
comments and suggestions.
- IMPORTANT!! Proposals must
be prepared
in
electronic form using
- Powerpoint or
open
source equivalent (e.g. ooimpress)
- Word or open
source
equivalent, (e.g. oowriter)
but only if you have a good reason not to use presentation software
- LaTeX (using, for
example, the foiltex class package. See HERE for a more complete list of
what's available for use with LaTeX)
- Scanned handwritten notes, must be legible, and must be
in a
form that I can handle with my available software, so check with me explicitly before adopting
this option!
- IMPORTANT!! The
electronic form of your presentation must
be sent to me via e-mail before 10 AM
on the day
that you will be presenting, so that I have time to assemble all
of the talks onto my laptop. For emergency purposes, you should also
bring a copy of your presentation on a USB memory stick. If you
don't have a memory stick, refer to item 6.
- IMPORTANT!! Please
ensure that when you e-mail me your presentation, it is sent as an ATTACHMENT, and NOT embedded in the body of the
e-mail message per se.
- IMPORTANT!! You
should also upload your presentation to your /phys210/$LOGNAME/public_html directory
on hyper, and link it into
your course page (this is mandatory
for those of you who will be unable to bring an emergency copy on a
memory stick).
- IMPORTANT!! All
presentations will be given IN THE
COMPUTER LAB. So do NOT
go to Buchanan next Tuesday or Thursday at 2:00 PM, go to Hennings 205!!
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