Math 5660/CSC 5660 - Numerical Analysis I, Fall 2003

Jan Mandel

Department of Mathematics
University of Colorado at Denver

This web page http://www-math.cudenver.edu/~jmandel/classes/5660f03 serves as the class syllabus and source of further information.


Important announcements will be put here during the semester. It is a good idea to check this space regularly before the class.

Thanks to help from the system administrator, is no longer required to do anything special about the permissions of homework files.

Final exam will be Monday December 8, 2003 4-5:15PM.



Textbook: D. Kincaid and W. Cheney, Numerical Analysis, 3rd ed., Brooks/Cole Publ., 2002
Time and location:  Monday and Wednesday 4:00-5:15  SI 220
Office hours: UCD building 640 Monday 3-3:45, Wednesday 2-3:45, otherwise by appointment.


The objectives of the class are to understand

We'll cover selected material from sections 1 to 6 of the text. The progress of the class will be recorded and homework assigments available in the class notes file.  In-class computer demonstrations (and there will be many of them) will be in the matlab directory. Much of the material, and in particular anything where I cover things differently than in the texbook, will be in my Lecture notes . There will be a midterm and final, and homework assignments most Mondays, due the following Monday. The midterm will be on October 15. The final will be on December 8 or 10 as determined by the Auraria finals schedule. You cannot use any books, computers, or notes at the exams, except for one 3" by 5" card wher you can write anything you want. The final score will be computed as

            1/2(A+B+C- min(A,B,C))

where A=homework assignments, B=midterm, C=final, each scaled separately from 0 to 100. Assignments  and exams will be graded on the scale 0 to 4:  4=OK, 3=minor error, 2=significant progress, 1=some progress, 0=no progress, wrong problem, or misunderstood problem. The letter grades will be A >= 90,  A- >= 85, B+ >= 80, B >= 75, B- >=70,  C+ >= 65, C >= 60, C- >= 55, D+ >= 50, D >= 45, D- >= 40.

Homeworks will be considered on time if they are turned in on the due date at the beginning of the class or left at my office at least half an hour before the class time. I cannot accept homeworks by email (too many different formats) but if you cannot make the class you can fax your homework to 303-556-8550 and alert me by email, again at least half hour before the class begins. Late homeworks get 1/2 of the credit unless arranged ahead of time with me. There will be no makeup exams or extra credit; the grading scheme works in such a way that if you do not do well on one of the exams or on the homeworks, you can still get a very good grade.

Computer assignments must be turned in as file on our server, math.cudenver.edu. Assignments must be done in Matlab except for some assignments involving libraries, which will require Fortran or C. Most Matlab assignments can be done by simply editing M-files without any graphics; for graphics or to use the Matlab GUI, please use the Graduate Lab on 6th floor of the UCD building.  For every assignment, turn in a complete printout of the program and  of the output, and prepare a directory  named ~/5660/hwN for assignment N immediately under your home directory on math, containing a working code and any relevant data that  was used to produce your printout.  All code should be run from a single command named go   (file go.m for Matlab, script named go containing all required compile and run commands otherwise) that produces exactly the output that you turn in as a hardcopy. The program has to run on math and be in the specified directory to receive any credit for the computer project. You can prepare the assignment using another computer, such as a PC running Matlab (these are available in the undergraduate lab, SI 130, or you may purchase a student version of Matlab available at the campus bookstore for your own PC), but you must copy the files to math in the correct place and test that they run.



To use your math account

echo myself@hotmail.com > .forward
and test by sending yourself an email message



Useful links


Last updated 8/27/03