間眅埶AV

Applied and Computational Mathematics Doctor of Philosophy Program

Department of Mathematics | Faculty of Science
間眅埶AV Calendar 2012 Fall

Program Requirements

PhD candidates must complete a further eight graduate units beyond the MSc requirements shown below.

Candidates who are admitted to the PhD program without an MSc are required to obtain credit or transfer credit for an amount of course work equivalent to that obtained by students with an MSc.

Core Course Requirements

    Normally courses that are cross-listed as undergraduate courses cannot be used to satisfy graduate course requirements.

Beyond all the courses the student completed for the bachelor's degree, the candidate will complete 26 units, normally completed during five terms, that is comprised of one of

  • APMA 900 Asymptotic Analysis of Differential Equations (4)
  • APMA 901 Partial Differential Equations (4)

and one of

  • APMA 920 Numerical Linear Algebra (4)
  • APMA 922 Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations (4)

and one of

  • APMA 930 Computational Fluid Dynamics (4)
  • APMA 935 Analysis and Computation of Models (4)

and at least one other course from the above course lists that has not already been completed

and an additional seven graduate units.

and a further three units which may be chosen from either graduate or 400 division undergraduate courses

Candidacy Examination

    Students pass an oral candidacy exam given by the supervisory committee before the end of the fourth full time term. The exam consists of a proposed thesis topic defence and supervisory committee questions about related proposed research topics. The exam follows submission of a written PhD research proposal and is graded pass/fail. Those with a fail will complete a second exam within six months. A student failing twice will normally withdraw.

Thesis

    A PhD candidate must submit and defend a thesis based on his/her original work that embodies a significant contribution to mathematical knowledge.

Academic Requirements within the Graduate General Regulations

All graduate students must satisfy the academic requirements that are specified in the graduate general regulations (residence, course work, academic progress, supervision, research competence requirement, completion time, and degree completion), as well as the specific requirements for the program in which they are enrolled, as shown above.

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