Andrew M. Stuart

Andrew M. Stuart

Research

Andrew M. Stuart is a British mathematician, working in applied and computational mathematics. In particular his research has focussed on the numerical analysis of dynamical systems, applications of stochastic ordinary and partial differential equations, Bayesian inverse problems and data assimilation.


He has won numerous awards, including the 1989 Leslie Fox Prize for Numerical Analysis, the Monroe H. Martin Prize from IPST Maryland, the SIAM James Wilkinson Prize and Germund Dahlquist Prize in 1997, the Whitehead Prize from the London Mathematical Society in 2000, and the J.D. Crawford Prize in 2007. [1] He has been an invited speaker at the International Council for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (ICIAM) in Zurich, 2007, and at the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM) in Seoul, 2014.

Education and Career


Andrew Stuart graduated in Mathematics from Bristol University in 1983, and then obtained his DPhil from the Oxford University Computing Laboratory in 1986. After postdoctoral study in applied mathematics at MIT, he held permanent positions at the University of Bath, in mathematics, and at Stanford University, in engineering. He is currently Professor of Mathematics at Warwick University.


Books


In addition to published mathematics research in archival journals, Andrew Stuart is also the author of several books in mathematics, including a research mongoraph concerning Dynamical Systems and Numerical Analysis [a], a research text on Multiscale Methods [b], a graduate text on Continuum Mechanics [c] and a research text on Data Assimilation [d].


[a] A.M. Stuart and A.R. Humphries, Dynamical Systems and Numerical Analysis, Cambridge University Press, 1996.

[b] G.A. Pavliotis and A.M. Stuart, Multiscale Methods: Averaging and Homogenization, Springer, 2008.

[c] O. Gonzalez and A.M. Stuart, A First Course in Continuum Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 2008.

[d] K.J.H. Law, A.M. Stuart and K.C. Zygalakis, Data Assimilation: A Mathematical Introduction, Springer, 2015.


Collaborators

Andrew Stuart has worked with a large number of collaborators, including a significant number of PhD students and postdoctoral researchers.

References

  1. "J.D. Crawford Prize". SIAM. Retrieved 20 May 2015.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.