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Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd
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Page 1: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Confessions of an applied mathematician

Chris Budd

Page 2: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

What is applied maths?

• Using maths to understand an aspect of the real world … usually through a simplified model and to predict or create new things

It is crazy that this works at all

• Learning NEW mathematics in the process

• Using this new mathematics to change the world

Page 3: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Some ways that maths has changed the modern world

Maxwell: Electromagnetism … radio, TV, radar, mobile phones

Linear algebra, graph theory, SVD ...Google

Error correcting codes

Page 4: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

We live in interesting times with applied mathematics in a process of great transition!

20th century .. Great drivers of applied maths are physics, engineering and more recently biology

Expertise in ….

• Fluids

• Solids

• Reaction-diffusion problems

• Dynamical systems

• Signal processing

Page 5: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Usually deterministic Continuum problems, modelled by Differential Equations

Solutions methods

• Simple analytical methods eg. Separation of variables

• Approximate/asymptotic approaches

• Phase plane analysis

• Numerical methods eg. finite element methods

• PDE techniques eg. Calculus of variations

• Transforms: Fourier, Laplace, Radon

Page 6: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

What are the drivers of 21st century applied mathematics?

• Information/Bio-informatics/Genetics?

• Commerce/retail sector?

• Complexity?

What new techniques do we need to consider?

• Discrete maths?

• Stochastic methods?

• Very large scale computations?

• Complex systems?

• Optimisation (discrete and continuous)?

Page 7: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Example 1: What happens when we eat?

Stomach

Small intestine:

7m x 1.25cm

Intestinal wall:

Villi and Microvilli

Page 8: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Process:

• Food enters stomach and leaves as Chyme

• Nutrients are absorbed through the intestinal wall

• Chyme passes through small intestine in 4.5hrs

Stomach

Intestinal wall

Colon,

illeocecal sphincter

Peristaltic wave

Mixing process

Page 9: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Objectives

• Model the process of food moving through the intestine

• Model the process of nutrient mixing and absorption

Page 10: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Basic flow model: axisymmetric Stokes flow pumped by a peristaltic wave and a pressure gradient

• Chyne moves at slow velocity: u(x,r,t)

• Nutrient concentration: c(x,r,t)

• Peristaltic wave: r = f(x,t)

x

r=f(x,t)

r

Wavelength:8cm

h = 1.25cm

Page 11: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

• Navier Stokes

• Slow viscous Axisymmetric flow

• Velocity & Stokes Streamfunction

upuut

u 2).( 0. u

p ˆ

e

ru

ere )/( 0)( e

,ˆ eu

Page 12: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

rr

L rrrxx

11

01 L

)/)(2cos(),( txhtxfr

),,( trx ),( rtxz FIXED FRAME WAVE FRAME

No slip on boundary

Change from

Impose periodicity

Page 13: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

z

z

h

rr

0,0 ˆˆˆ rrr

ˆˆˆ1

ˆˆ ˆˆˆˆˆ2 rrrzz r

rrw ˆˆˆˆ ˆ

0ˆˆ1ˆˆ

ˆˆˆˆˆ2 rrrzz r

Axisymmetry

)ˆ2cos(1)ˆ( zzf

h

h

• Amplitude:

• Wave Number:

Small parameters

Page 14: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Flow depends on:

w ˆˆ

,6.0h

16.08

25.1

cm

cmh

Flow rate Proportional to pressure drop

Amplitude

Wave number

gives Poiseuille flow0

2Develop asymptotic series in powers of

Page 15: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

• Reflux Pressure Rise Particles undergo net retrograde

motion

• Trapping

Regions of Pressure Rise & Pressure DropStreamlines encompass a bolus of fluid particles

Trapped Fluid recirculates

Distinct flow types

Page 16: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

A

B

C D E

FG

0ˆ p

0ˆ p4/)1( 2

Flow regions

w

Poiseuille

A: Copumping, Detached TrappingA: Copumping, Detached TrappingB: Copumping, Centreline TrappingB: Copumping, Centreline TrappingC: Copumping, No TrappingC: Copumping, No Trapping

Illeocecal sphincter openIlleocecal sphincter open

D: Pumping, No TrappingD: Pumping, No TrappingE: Pumping, Centreline TrappingE: Pumping, Centreline Trapping

Illeocecal sphincter closedIlleocecal sphincter closed

4/)1( 2

Page 17: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Case A: Copumping, Detached Trapping

RecirculationParticle paths

Page 18: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

x

Case C: Copumping, No Trapping

Poiseuille FlowParticle paths

Page 19: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

x

Case E: Pumping, Centreline Trapping

Recirculation

Reflux

Particle paths

Page 20: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Calculate the concentration c(x,r,t)

oncDcuct2).(

oncKcnD a).(

1. Substitute asymptotic solution for u into

2. Solve for c(x,r,t) numerically using an upwind scheme on a domain transformed into a computational rectangle.

3. Calculate rate of absorption

Page 21: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Poiseuille flow Peristaltic flow

Type C flow: no trapping

Page 22: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Poiseuille flow Peristaltic flow

Type E flow: trapping and reflux

Page 23: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

x t

Nutrient absorbedLocation of absorbed mass at final time

Peristaltic flow

Conclusions

• Peristalsis helps both pumping and mixing

• Significantly greater absorption with Peristaltic flow than with Poiseuille flow

Page 24: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Example 2: Mathematics can look inside you

Modern CAT scanner

CAT scanners work by casting many shadows with X-rays and using maths to assemble these into a picture

Page 25: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

X-Ray

Object

Density f(x,y)

ρ : Distance from the object centre

θ : Angle of the X-Ray

Measure attenuation of X-Ray R(ρ, θ)

X-ray Source

Detector

Page 26: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Object

Attenuation R(ρ, θ)

Edge Edge

Edge Edge

Page 27: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

If we can measure R(ρ, θ) accurately we can calculate

The density f(x,y) of the object at any point

Also used to

X-ray mummies

Radon 1917

Page 28: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Example 3: Finding land mines

Land mines are hidden in foliage and triggered by trip wires

Land mines are well hidden .. we can use maths to find them

Page 29: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Find the trip wires in this picture

Page 30: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Digital picture of foliage is taken by camera on a long pole

Effect: Image intensity f

••

Cause: Trip wires .. These are like X-Rays

Radon transform

x

y

f(x,y)

R(ρ,θ)

Points of high intensity in R correspond to trip wires

θ

ρ

Isolate points and transform back to find the wires

Page 31: Confessions of an applied mathematician Chris Budd.

Mathematics finds the land mines!

Who says that maths isn’t relevant to real life?!?