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This textbook provides an introduction to the growing
interdisciplinary field of computational science. It combines a
foundational development of numerical methods with a variety of
illustrative applications spread across numerous areas of science
and engineering. The intended audience is the undergraduate who has
completed introductory coursework in mathematics and computer
science. Students gain computational acuity by authoring their own
numerical routines and by practicing with numerical methods as they
solve computational models. This education encourages students to
learn the importance of answering: How expensive is a calculation,
how trustworthy is a calculation, and how might we model a problem
to apply a desired numerical method? The text is written in two
parts. Part I provides a succinct, one-term inauguration into the
primary routines on which a further study of computational science
rests. The material is organized so that the transition to
computational science from coursework in calculus, differential
equations, and linear algebra is natural. Beyond the mathematical
and computational content of Part I, students gain proficiency with
elemental programming constructs and visualization, which are
presented in MATLAB syntax. The focus of Part II is modeling,
wherein students build computational models, compute solutions, and
report their findings. The models purposely intersect numerous
areas of science and engineering to demonstrate the pervasive role
played by computational science.
This volume chronicles the high impact research career of Harvey
Greenberg (1940-2018), and in particular, it reviews historical
contributions, presents current research projects, and suggests
future pursuits. This volume addresses several of his most
distinguished hallmarks, including model analysis, model
generation, infeasibility diagnosis, sensitivity analysis,
parametric programming, energy modeling, and computational biology.
There is also an overview chapter on the emergence of computational
OR, and in particular, how literature venues have changed the
course of OR research. He developed Computer-Assisted Analysis in
the 1970s and 80s, creating an artificially intelligent environment
for analyzing mathematical programming models and their results.
This earned him the first INFORMS Computing Society (ICS) Prize for
"research excellence in the interfaces between operations research
and computer science" in 1986, notably for his software system,
ANALYZE. In 1993, he wrote the first book in the Springer OR/CS
Series entitled A Computer-Assisted Analysis System for
Mathematical Programming Models and Solutions: A User's Guide for
ANALYZE. He applied OR methods to CS problems, ranging from using
queuing theory for optimal list structure design to using integer
programming for bioinformatic database search. He also applied CS
to OR problems, ranging from super-sparse information structures to
the use of compiler design in ANALYZE. This book can serve as a
guide to new researchers, and will report the historical trajectory
of OR as it solves current problems and forecasts future
applications through the accomplishments of Harvey Greenberg.
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