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Michigan Math & Science Scholars Summer Program 2004

COURSES

ASTRONOMY

The Luminous Universe (Session II)

Instructor: Carrie Swift

If the Universe came into existence with a 'Big Bang', as a hot, dense soup of matter and radiation, where did the objects that we see today - the stars, galaxies, and galaxy clusters - come from? Observations made over the last decades reveal tiny variations in the intensity of the radiation that permeates space - a relic of that early fireball in which the Universe was born. Those variations are the fingerprints of the equally tiny variations in the density of matter, eventually pulled together by gravity to form the large-scale structures that we see today. And, remarkably, that visible Universe of stars and galaxies explored by modern telescopes is only the tip of the iceberg. Most of the mass in the Universe is a mysterious 'dark matter' whose nature is still unknown!

Morning lectures and discussions will explore the history and future of our Universe, from the time that all matter and radiation were contained within a volume the size of an atom, to the dim and distant future predicted by the latest observations of an accelerating space-time. We will emphasize the epochs during which the Universe assumed its current form and learn how astronomers map the Universe, and what they have learned from surveys spanning hundreds of millions of light years. We will see how computer simulations enable us to reproduce the large-scale structure of the Universe, and by comparing the results of different simulations with observations, how we can learn about the quantity and nature of the "dark matter". During the afternoon computer laboratory sessions we will measure the distances to clusters of galaxies, revealing both the expansion of the Universe, and its large-scale structure. We will explore the dynamics of clusters by exploring the history of our own cluster, the "local group", simulating the exchange of satellite galaxies and the future collision of the Milky Way with our massive neighbor, Andromeda. After running a simulation of structure formation, there will be an opportunity to compare the results with observations, to see how such comparisons can shed light on the nature of "dark matter" and the fate of the Universe.

 

BIOLOGY

Explorations of a Field Biologist (Session I)

Instructor: Sheila Schueller

There are so many different kinds of living organisms in this world, and every organism interacts with its physical environment and with individuals belonging to both its own and to other species. Understanding this mass of interactions and how humans are affecting them in the short and long-term is a mind-boggling endeavor! We cannot do this unless we at times set aside our computers and beakers, and, instead, get out of the lab and classroom and into the field - which is what we will do in this course. You will not only learn a slew of natural history factoids, but also become well-acquainted with the how's and why's of practicing field biology, from making observations to hypothesis-testing in the field. We will address a myriad of questions from what mushrooms can tell you about trees, to how big a chipmunk territory is, to whether a flower shape matters to bees, to how lakes turn into forests, to how plants care for their young...to whatever questions arise in our explorations of the grasslands, forests, and wetlands of southeastern Michigan or in our discussions of other parts of the world. Learning this approach to addressing questions about what you see in nature will allow you, long after this class, to discover many more things about the natural world, even in your own back yard.

In many ways, the course is inspired by my reading of the autobiography of an examplary field biologist, E.O. Wilson. Whether he is in his own back yard or in a tropical rain forest, Wilson observes nature with patience, dilligence and an inquisitive mind. His career shows the value of making field observations and notes and of asking questions - and that is exactly what we practice in "Explorations of a Field Biologist."

Through field activities and discussions, we will practice seven steps of field biology. The first is discovering patterns in nature. Equipped with binoculars, hand lenses, field guides and a notebook, you will develop an eye for the behaviors and abundances of micro- and macro-organisms and for the identifying characteristics of different plants, animals and fungi. The second and third steps are asking questions about what you see and making a guess at the answer. For this we will tap each other's brains and learn how to refer to the physical and electronic library of past field biology research. Fourth, you will design an experiment that not only looks good on paper, but actually works when you are knee-deep in a bog. Fifth, you will use sophisticated and simple equipment (bridal veil?!) to count and measure variables in the field. Finally, you will practice analyzing and then drawing conclusions from your results, which inevitably leads to more questions and more field trips!

Genome Sequences and Human Health (Session I)

Instructor: Santhadevi Jeyabalan

This course will cover basic aspects of Mendelian and molecular genetics, and then focus on a few human disorders in detail. We will introduce human genome sequence as an aid to cloning the genes responsible for these disorders, and will demonstrate how comparative genomics allows genetic diseases to be studied using model organisms like yeast, Drosophila, nematodes and mice.

In addition to lectures, we will work with fruit flies, yeast and will do human DNA fingerprinting in a genetics laboratory. We will use computers to carry out molecular and phylogentic analysis of DNA sequences. This class should provide an understanding of Human Genome Projects and recent advances in medicine.

The Mysteries of Embryology (Session I)

Instructors: Kathryn Tosney and Kenneth Balazovich

Embryology is the science dealing with the formation, early growth and development of living organisms. This course addresses the mysteries and processes of embryology. Questions that will be investigated include: Why do babies move in the womb? Why does the lens fit the eye? Why do all human hearts have a hole in them at birth and why isn't it lethal? Why would exposure to a particular chemical throughout the majority of pregnancy have no effect, whereas exposure during the first month of pregnancy could cause severe birth defects?

This course examines the fundamentals of embryology during lecture and through experiments with chicken embryos (before central nervous system development and the ability to feel pain) in laboratory. We will be working in groups to research how disrupting development mechanisms causes birth defects and then post our findings on the world wide web.

MATHEMATICS

Codes, Ciphers and Secret Messages (Session II)

Instructor: Carolyn Dean

Around 4000 years ago in Egypt, the tomb of Khnumhotep II was nearing completion. In one particular section of the inscription, a master scribe chose to replace the usual hieroglyphic symbols with new, nonsensical ones. This act rendered that important passage of Khnumhotep's funerary inscription unintelligible except to those who knew what replacement the scribe had made. This inscription is the oldest surviving record of the use of secret codes.

Nowadays, you can order goods over the Internet with a credit card. When you forward your credit card number over the network, powerful public key encryption schemes put this information in a form that is presumably unreadable to the electronic eavesdropper. Although the sophistication of Internet code is vast compared to the simple substitution made by the Egyptian scribe, the security of both schemes are based on the difficulty of solving certain kinds of mathematical problems.

This course is about the mathematics that underlies secret codes and attacks on secret codes. We will proceed historically, beginning with substitutional codes, like the one used by our Egyptian scribe, and ending with modern public key encryption, like that used by Internet vendors. This study of secret codes introduces topics in discrete mathematics, statistics, information theory and number theory. The use of technology will be emphasized throughout. Each afternoon, students will participate in a computer lab in which they will use MAPLE, an advanced general-purpose mathematical package, to run experiments pertinent to the course material. Most importantly, students will get plenty of practice creating their own codes and trying to crack those of their instructor and their classmates.

 Mathematical Modeling in Biology (Session II)

Instructors: Trachette Jackson and Patrick Nelson

Mathematical biology is a relatively new area of applied mathematics and is growing with phenomenal speed. For the mathematician, biology opens up new and exciting areas of study while for the biologist mathematical modeling offers another powerful research tool commensurate with a new instrumental laboratory technique. Mathematical biologists typically investigate problems in diverse and exciting areas such as the topology of DNA, cell physiology, the study of infectious diseases such as AIDS, the biology of populations, neuroscience and the study of the brain, tumor growth and treatment strategies, and organ development and embryology.

This course will be a venture into the field of mathematical modeling in the biomedical sciences. Interactive lectures, group projects, computer demonstrations, and laboratory visits will help introduce some of the fundamentals of mathematical modeling and its usefulness in biology, physiology and medicine.

For example, the cell division cycle is a sequence of regulated events which describes the passage of a single cell from birth to division. There is an elaborate cascade of molecular interactions that function as the mitotic clock and ensure that the sequential changes that take place in a dividing cell take place on schedule. What happens when the mitotic clock speeds up or simply stops ticking? These kinds of malfunctions can lead to cancer and mathematical modeling can help predict under what conditions a small population of cells with a compromised mitotic clock can result in a fully developed tumor. This course will study many interesting problems in cell biology, physiology and immunology.

 

Fibonacci Numbers (Session I)

Instructor: Mel Hochster

Sample problems available here!

The Fibonacci numbers are the elements of the sequence 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, ... , where every term is simply the sum of the two preceding terms. This sequence, which was originally proposed as describing the reproduction of rabbits, occurs in astonishingly many contexts in nature. It will be used as a starting point for the exploration of some very substantial mathematical ideas: recursive methods, modular arithmetic and other ideas from number theory, and even the notion of a limit: the ratios of successive terms (e.g., 13/8, 21/13, 55/34, ...) approach the golden mean, already considered by the ancient Greeks, which yields what may be the most aesthetically pleasing dimensions for a rectangle. As one by-product of our studies we will be able to explain how people test certain very special but immensely large numbers for being prime. We'll also consider several games and puzzles whose analysis leads to the same circle of ideas, developing them further and reinforcing the motivations for their study.

 

Fortunes Made and Lost: Financial Mathematics (Session I)

Instructor: David Kausch

In the last 30 years there has been an explosion of research in the field of financial mathematics. In 1973, three economists pioneered a revolution in finance and went on to win the Nobel Prize. The revolution started with a deceptively simple formula for calculating the fair price of a stock option. Elegant, concise, and best of all practical, the Black-Scholes formula quickly became standard knowledge for academics and options traders alike. Because of the equation, trading stock options went from a guessing game to a science virtually overnight.

Financial options now make up a multi-trillion dollar industry worldwide. The field of financial mathematics has grown to a science with applications in asset management, risk assessment, sophisticated financial transactions, and insurance. The theory helps us create optimal portfolios, model expected outcomes, and protect ourselves from financial disasters through insurance and hedging.

During the morning sessions we will learn how stocks, stock options, and markets behave. We will discuss the relationship between risk and reward, between complete markets and arbitrage, and make distinctions between speculation and hedging. We will develop the Black-Scholes option pricing model and explore applying the model to more general financial transactions. The use of technology and real world financial data will be emphasized. In the afternoon sessions, each student will create an electronic portfolio starting with an imaginary balance of $10,000 at the beginning of the session. Students can trade securities each day in a make believe account. During the session students will also have modeling assignments that may be used as aid in their investment strategies. Outcomes will be compared at the end of the session in good humor and with reflection on what we’ve learned.

Geometry and the Imagination (Session II)

Instructor: Igor Dolgachev

Geometry studies spatial relationship and shapes of bodies and space transformations which preserve the shapes. It is one of the oldest subjects of mathematics which was born in early Antiquity. A human being is born with geometrical intuition of the space surrounding us, this intuition leads to Euclidean geometry. According to the relativity theory of Einstein the real world is different and should be based on non-Euclidean geometry. We will explore this unusual world, as well as other possible geometries which may occur in other universes. One of them is a finite geometry which may occur in a universe with only finitely many objects.

The Nature of Infinity (Session II)

Instructor: Alejandro Uribe

If only "half" of the integers are even, how come the sequence 2, 4, 6, .... seems to have just as many elements as the sequence 1, 2, 3, ...? In a similar spirit, what "fraction" of the integers are prime numbers? How can I walk one mile if I first have to walk 1/2 mile, and to do that 1/4th of a mile, and so on without end? Can I even get started? Is it possible to eat a whole cookie by taking successive bites of half of what remains? Do parallel lines intersect "at infinity", and what can that possibly mean?

Such paradoxical questions about infinity have been the source of much mathematical research. In this course we'll explore a number of significant ideas and results motivated by these questions. We will study the notion of cardinality of infinite sets, and we'll re-discover Cantor's theorem on the existence of infinities greater than others. We will then look at large quantities (functions), like the number of primes less than some number x. The question of the "size" of such functions will lead us to notions of asymptotic analysis. We'll take a serious look at the real numbers and ways in which irrational numbers arise from infinite processes. This will lead us to notions of dynamical systems and chaos. Finally, we'll consider geometric notions of infinity: fractal sets and non-Euclidean geometries. It will be fun, challenging, and sometimes slightly dizzying!

 

PHYSICS

The Physics of Magic and the Magic of Physics (Session II)

Instructors: Frederick Becchetti and Georg Raithel

Rabbits that vanish; objects that float in air defying gravity; a tiger that disappears and then reappears elsewhere; mind reading, telepathy and x-ray vision; objects that penetrate solid glass; steel rings that pass through each other: these are some of the amazing tricks of magic and magicians. Yet even more amazing phenomena are found in Nature and the world of physics and physicists: matter that can vanish and reappear as energy and vice-versa; subatomic particles that can penetrate steel; realistic 3-D holographic illusions; objects that change their dimensions and clocks that speed up or slow down as they move (relativity); collapsed stars that trap their own light (black holes); x-rays and lasers; fluids that flow uphill (liquid helium); materials without electrical resistance (superconductors)...In this class students will first study the underlying physics of some classical magic tricks and learn to perform several of these (and create new ones). The "magic" of corresponding (and real) physical phenomena will then be introduced and studied with hands-on, minds-on experiments. Finally, we will visit a number of research laboratories where students can meet some of the "magicians" of physics --- physics students and faculty --- and observe experiments at the forefront of physics research.

  

Roller Coaster Physics (Session II)

Instructors: Cagliyan Kurdak

What are the underlying principles that make roller coasters run? By studying the dynamics of roller coasters and other amusement park rides in the context of Newtonian physics and human physiology, we will begin to understand these complex structures. Students first review Newtonian mechanics, a=F/m in particular, with some hands-on experiments using air-tables. This will then be followed by digital-video analysis of motion of some real-life objects (humans, cars and toy rockets) and student-devised roller coaster models. Then, a field trip to Cedar Point Amusement Park where students riding roller coasters and other rides, will provide real data for analysis back at UM. Students will carry portable data loggers and 3-axis accelerometers to provide on-site, and later off-site, analysis of the motion and especially, the "g-forces" experienced. The information collected will then be analyzed in terms of human evolution and physiology and why these limit the designs of rides. Download the Roller Coaster Physics 2004 schedule in WORD or PDF.

In addition to exploring the physics of roller coasters, cutting-edge topics in physics will be introduced: high energy physics, nuclear astrophysics, condensed-matter theory, biophysics and medical physics. Students will then have a chance to see the physics in action by touring some of UM's research facilities. Students will have the opportunity to see scientists doing research at the Solid State Electronics Laboratory, the Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory and the Center for Ultrafast Optical Science.

By the end of the two-week session, students will gain insight and understanding in physics and take home the knowledge that physics is an exciting, real-life science that involves the objects and motions surrounding us on a daily basis. Check out last years Roller Coaster Physics course from MMSS 2003.

STATISTICS

Sampling, Surveys, Monte Carlo and Inference (Session I)

Instructor: Ed Rothman

Political candidates drop out of elections for the U.S. Senate and New York Governor because their poll numbers are low, while Congress fights over whether and how much statistics can be used to establish the meaning of the U.S. Census for a host of apportionment purposes influencing all our lives.

Suppose we need to learn reliably how many people have a certain disease? How safe is a new drug? How much air pollution is given off by industry in a certain area? Or even how many words someone knows?

For any of these problems we need to develop ways of figuring out how many or how much of something will be found without actually tallying results for a large portion of the population, which means we have to understand how to count this by sampling.

And Monte Carlo? Sorry, no field trips to the famous casino! But Monte Carlo refers to a way of setting up random experiments to which one can compare real data: does the data tell us anything significant, or is it just random noise? Did you know you can even calculate the number p this way?!

The survey and sampling techniques that allow us to draw meaningful conclusions about the whole based on the analysis of a small part will be the main subject of this course.

 

Michigan Math & Science Scholars Program
Department of Mathematics
525 E. University; 2082 East Hall
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1109
mmss@umich.edu
(734) 647-4466

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