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Advanced MATLAB For Scientific Computing: Course Description

This document provides an overview of an advanced MATLAB course for scientific computing. The 7-lecture course will cover numerical linear algebra, optimization, ODEs, PDEs and their applications in machine learning, engineering. Lectures will introduce advanced MATLAB features, toolboxes and programming techniques for graphics, debugging, optimization. Participants will gain exposure to MATLAB tools and experience with advanced features to become independent MATLAB users. Successful completion requires a 70% score on assessments.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
102 views3 pages

Advanced MATLAB For Scientific Computing: Course Description

This document provides an overview of an advanced MATLAB course for scientific computing. The 7-lecture course will cover numerical linear algebra, optimization, ODEs, PDEs and their applications in machine learning, engineering. Lectures will introduce advanced MATLAB features, toolboxes and programming techniques for graphics, debugging, optimization. Participants will gain exposure to MATLAB tools and experience with advanced features to become independent MATLAB users. Successful completion requires a 70% score on assessments.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Advanced MATLAB for Scientific Computing

Autumn 2018

Course Description
The course is aimed for participants working or conducting research in scientific computing. Covered top-
ics in scientific computing will include numerical linear algebra, numerical optimization, ODEs, and PDEs.
Relevant applications areas include machine learning, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, and
aeroastro.

There will be seven interactive based lectures with application based assignments to follow. Participants
will be introduced to advanced MATLAB features, syntaxes, and toolboxes not traditionally found in in-
troductory courses. Material will be reinforced with in-lecture examples, demos, and homework assignment
involving topics from scientific computing. MATLAB topics will be drawn from: advanced graphics (2D/3D
plotting, graphics handles, publication quality graphics, animation), MATLAB tools (debugger, profiler),
code optimization (vectorization, memory management), object-oriented programming, compiled MATLAB
(MEX files and MATLAB coder), interfacing with external programs, toolboxes (optimization, parallel com-
puting, symbolic math, PDEs).

Participants should expect to gain: ‚ exposure to the tools available in the MATLAB software ‚ knowledge of
and experience with advanced MATLAB features ‚ independence as a MATLAB user. Successful completion
of the course requires a cumulative score of 70% on the six assessments.

Course Outline
• Lecture 1
– Fundamental MATLAB features, syntaxes, concepts [1]
∗ Data types
∗ Numeric arrays
∗ Functions/scripts
∗ Memory management
• Lecture 2
– Additional MATLAB Desktop features
∗ Publishing
∗ Debugger

1
∗ Profiler
∗ Code perfrmance and optimization

• Lecture 3
– Graphics
∗ Advanced Plotting Functions
· Vector fields
· Contour plots, surfaces, volumes, polygons
∗ Graphics handles and objects
∗ Publication-quality graphics
∗ Animation
• Lecture 4
– Numerical linear algebra [2, 3]
∗ Dense vs. sparse matrices
∗ Direct vs. iterative linear system solvers
∗ Matrix decompositions
· LU, Cholesky, QR factorizations
· Eigenvalue decomposition (EVD)
· Singular value decomposition (SVD)
• Lecture 5
– File manipulation and system interaction
∗ Text/binary file manipulation
∗ System calls
∗ Interfacing to spreadsheet (Excel)
• Lecture 6

– Object-oriented programming
∗ User-defined classes
• Lecture 7
– MATLAB toolboxes & functionality
∗ Solution of nonlinear systems of equations
∗ Numerical optimization [4, 5, 6]
∗ Symbolic Math Toolbox
∗ Parallel Computing Toolbox
∗ ODE solvers
∗ PDE Toolbox

Prerequisites
• (highly recommended) Basic programming skills in MATLAB (CME 192 or equivalent)
• (recommended) Basic knowledge of numerical analysis and numerical linear algebra

2
Instructor
Matan Leibovich, Ph.D. Candidate
Institute of Computational and Mathematical Engineering
William F. Durand Building, Room 028, 496 Lomita Mall
E-mail: matanle@stanford.edu

References
[1] T. A. Driscoll, “Crash course in matlab,” 2003.
[2] G. H. Golub and C. F. Van Loan, Matrix computations, vol. 3. JHU Press, 2012.
[3] Y. Saad, Iterative methods for sparse linear systems. Siam, 2003.
[4] P. E. Gill, W. Murray, and M. H. Wright, “Practical optimization,” 1981.

[5] J. Nocedal and S. Wright, Numerical optimization, series in operations research and financial engineering.
Springer, 2006.
[6] A. Geletu, Solving Optimization Problems using the Matlab Optimization Toolbox-a Tutorial. 2007.
[7] R. Burden and J. Faires, Numerical Analysis. Cengage Learning, 2004.

[8] R. J. LeVeque, Finite difference methods for ordinary and partial differential equations: steady-state and
time-dependent problems, vol. 98. Siam, 2007.

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