Summary of Syllabus Mathematics G100
Summary of Syllabus Mathematics G100
Summary of Syllabus Mathematics G100
YEAR PROGRAMMES
FIRST YEAR PROGRAMME
The First Year programme takes place over three terms Term 1 (also known as Autumn Term),
Term 2 (also known as Spring Term) and Term 3 (also known as Summer Term).
The programme of study in the First Year is broadly based so that students are given a variety of
basic courses, each of which is a prerequisite for developments in later years of the various
degree programmes. Certain minor variations are indicated below.
In the First Year, all programme elements are compulsory. There are eight lecture courses in
Mathematics which are primarily assessed by an examination in May/June.
For G104 Mathematics with a Year in Europe an appropriate language course is also normally
required in addition to the mathematics courses taken. However, students who are especially
well prepared in the language for their proposed year of study away may exceptionally have the
language course requirements waived.
Note: Whilst G104 students must pass the language examinations at the end of First and Second
Year in order to stay on G104, language examination results do not directly contribute to their
mathematics degree Honours mark.
Students must also take M1C Mathematical Computation, currently using Maple and Matlab,
assessed by coursework during Term 1 and Term 2. Following the May/June examinations,
students participate in the M1R Individual Poster Project. M1C Mathematical Computation and the
M1R Individual Poster Project must be passed in order to progress into the Second Year.
Course
Codes
Course Titles
M1F
Foundations of Analysis
No. of
Lectures/Classes
(Approx.)
30 / 10
M1GLA
30 / 10
M1M1
M1S
M1A1
M1M2
M1P1
M1P2
M1C
M1R
Mathematical Methods 1
Probability and Statistics 1
Mechanics
Mathematical Methods 2
Analysis 1
Algebra 1
Mathematical Computation
Individual Poster Project
Language
Terms
Honours
Marks
ECTS
Values
100
6.5
100
6.5
30 / 10
30 / 10
30 / 10
30 / 10
30 / 10
30 / 10
22 / 20
6/6
1
1
2
2
2
2
1+2
3
100
100
100
100
100
100
50
50
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.5
6.5
4
4.5
Depends on course
taken
1+2
FOUNDATIONS OF ANALYSIS
Professor A. Corti
(Term 1)
An introductory course involving basic material, which will be widely used later.
Number systems. Integers, rational numbers, real numbers, decimal expansions for rationals and
reals. Inequalities, complex numbers.
Induction; examples and applications.
Sets, functions, countability, logic.
Permutations and combinations. The Binomial Theorem.
Equivalence relations and arithmetic modulo n.
Euclids algorithm.
Introduction to limits.
M1GLA
M1M1
MATHEMATICAL METHODS 1
Integration: definition as Riemann limit; indefinite & definite integrals; the fundamental theorem of
calculus; integration by substitution and by parts; partial fractions; Existence of improper and
infinite integrals. Integrals over areas and volumes.
Complex Numbers: definition; the complex plane; standard and polar representation; de Moivres
Theorem; exp(z) and log(z).
First order differential equations; separable, homogeneous, linear. Linear higher order equations
with constant co-efficients.
M1S
M1A1
MECHANICS
Dr E.E. Keaveny
(Term 2)
This introductory course on Applied Mathematics is centred on Newtonian mechanics - the
consequences of Newtons laws. Some of the course overlaps with A-level Applied Mathematics.
It includes far-reaching ideas on energy, linear and angular momentum, simple oscillatory systems
and motion under central forces such as planetary motion.
KINEMATICS: Motion along a line. Motion in a plane position vectors, velocity, acceleration.
Relative motion. Projectiles with gravity. Intrinsic co-ordinates.
DYNAMICS: Newtons Laws of Motion. Acceleration as functions of speed and/or distance.
Projectiles with resistance. Linear momentum, energy, conservative systems (potential wells,
stability of equilibrium, and small oscillations). Oscillators with damping and forcing. Central forces
angular momentum and energy conservations (inverse square law, planetary motion, isotropic
oscillator).
(Briefly: rotating frames (in plane), systems (2-body problem), variable mass (rocket).
M1M2
MATHEMATICAL METHODS 2
Professor M. Barahona
(Term 2)
This course continues and extends the techniques introduced in M1M1, with further differential
equations and partial differentiation. There are brief introductions to difference equations, curve
fitting and scaling, together with a variety of applications of integration.
First and second order differential equations.
Homogeneous and inhomogeneous linear differential equations.
Systems of linear differential equations matrix solution.
Phase plane analysis: Qualitative analysis of solutions of differential equations and stability.
M1P1
ANALYSIS 1
Professor R. Thomas
(Term 2)
A rigorous treatment of the concept of a limit, as applied to sequences, series and functions.
Real and complex sequences. Convergence, divergence and divergence to infinity.
Sums and products of convergent sequences. The Sandwich Test. Sub-sequences, monotonic
sequences, Bolzano-Weierstrass Theorem. Cauchy sequences and the general principle of
convergence.
Real and complex series. Convergent and absolutely convergent series. The Comparison Test
for non-negative series and for absolutely convergent series. The Alternating Series Test.
Rearranging absolutely convergent series. Radius of convergence of power series. The
exponential series.
Limits and continuity of real and complex functions. Left and right limits and continuity. Maxima
and minima of real valued continuous functions on a closed interval. Inverse Function Theorem for
strictly monotonic real functions on an interval.
An introduction to differentiability: definitions, examples, left and right derivative.
M1P2
ALGEBRA 1
Dr J. Britnell
(Term 2)
Introductions to three topics in abstract algebra: The theory of vector spaces and linear
transformations, the theory of groups and the theory of rings.
Vector spaces: Linear maps, rank-nullity theorem, connections with linear equations and matrices.
Groups: Axioms, examples. Cyclic groups, dihedral groups, symmetric groups. Lagranges
theorem and applications.
Rings: Polynomial rings, rings of the form Z[sqrt(d)]. Euclids algorithm for certain rings.
Uniquenes of factorisation for these rings. Applications to Diophantine Equations.
M1C
MATHEMATICAL COMPUTATION
Dr P.J. Ramsden
(Term 1)
A set of lectures and practical sessions to develop student computational skills. The use of Maple
to explore and illustrate mathematical ideas will be taught. Practical work will be based on
syllabus material in the parallel courses.
Dr P.J. Ramsden
(Term 2)
A brief introduction to numerical methods using Matlab, including error and convergence ideas.
M1R
G104: Students registered for G104 Mathematics with a Year in Europe spend their Third Year (of four) studying
mathematics courses/project material at another European institution. At the end of Second Year, students must
be in a position to take advantage of the Third Year of the course, both mathematically and linguistically.
Note: Whilst G104 students must pass the language examinations at the end of First and Second Year in order
to stay on G104, language examination results do not directly contribute to their mathematics degree Honours
mark.
REAL ANALYSIS
M2PM1
ALGEBRA 2
M2PM2
PROBABILITY AND
STATISTICS 2
M2S1
COMPLEX
ANALYSIS
M2PM3
DIFFERENTIAL
EQUATIONS
M2AA1
OPTIONS
NON-LINEAR
WAVES
M2AM
MERIC SPACES
AND TOPOLOGY
M2PM5
STATISTICAL
MODELLING 1
M2S2
ONE FROM
EXAMINATIONS
In May/June there is one written examination in each of M2AM, M2AA1, M2AA2, M2AA3, M2PM1, M2PM2,
M2PM3, M2PM5, M2S1, M2S2. The courses generally have an assessed coursework/progress test element
which is limited to ~10% of the overall assessment in each case.
Students who do not obtain Passes in examinations at the first attempt will be expected to attend resit
examinations where appropriate. September resits are available to Second Year students followed by resit
opportunities the following May/June. Two resit attempts are normally available to students.
Note: Resits may not be offered for courses assessed solely by project.
Resit examinations are for Pass credit only a maximum mark of 30 will be credited. Once a Pass is
achieved, no further attempts are permitted.
Students who have not achieved the required Passes by the beginning of the new academic year are required
by College to spend a year out of attendance. During this time they are not considered College students. This
may create a number of issues and hold visa implications.
http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/mathematics/students/undergraduate/faq/mathematicsandcollegescalemarks
The total Second Year Honours mark available is 850, made up as 8x100 lecture courses together with 1x50
(M2R Group Project)
Note: For uniformity, the total Honours marks for each year are scaled out of 1000 and are known as a year
total. Students are informed of their year total on Blackboard.
For three year BSc codings, the year weightings are 1 : 3 : 5.
For the four year MSci codings the year weightings are 1 : 3 : 4 : 5 (G103, G104).
These differences in year weighting reflect the increasing level of mathematical complexity.
ECTS
As part of the compliance with the European Bologna Process, Department of Mathematics courses and
degrees are required to be rated via the European Credit Transfer System (ECTS) which is based notionally
on hour counts for elements in the degree.
Each Second Year mathematics course has an ECTS value of 7 with M2R having an ECTS value of 5. First
Year mathematics courses have an ECTS value of 6.5 except for M1R which has an ECTS value of 4.5 and
M1C which has an ECTS value of 4. Language courses, taken by G104 Mathematics with a Year in Europe
students, have an ECTS value of 6.
Further information on the Bologna Process and ECTS can be viewed online at:
http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/ugprospectus/whatcanyoustudy/bolognaprocess
ECTS ratings of Department of Mathematics courses and degrees can be
http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/mathematics/students/undergraduate/programmeinformation
viewed
online
at:
MSci students who wish to increase their ECTS counts from roughly 240 to 270 must undertake
additional study over the summer vacations of their Second and Third Years. Contact the Director of
Undergraduate Studies for further information.
DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS
M2AA2
MULTIVARIABLE CALCULUS
Dr A. Walton
Term 1
The calculus of functions of several independent variables is developed in this course, together with an
introduction to partial differential equations. The importance of these ideas is emphasized by the inclusion of a
number of applications in Science and Engineering.
Integrals in three dimensions: curves, line integrals, Greens theorem, transformation of integrals.
Vector calculus: tensor notation, vector fields, grad, div, curl, surface integrals, divergence theorem, Stokess
theorem, curvilinear co-ordinates.
Fourier series: even and odd functions, full-range series, half-range series, Parsevals theorem, the Gibbs
phenomenon.
Partial differential equations (wave, Laplace, heat). Method of separation of variables.
M2AA3
Dr R. Nurnberg
Term 2
An important applied analysis course leading also to an introduction to some of the standard algorithms in
numerical analysis.
n
REAL ANALYSIS
Dr S. Rodriguez-Lopez
Term 1
The aim of this course is to provide a rigorous foundation for the differential and integral calculus.
Differentiable functions. Maxima and strict maxima. Rolles theorem.
Mean value theorem. Higher derivatives. Taylors theorem. Analytic functions Riemann integration. Integrability
of continuous and monotonic functions.
The fundamental theorem of calculus.
Open, closed and compact sets. Elementary measure theory. Functions of many variables.
n
Differentiation in R . Partial derivatives. Directional derivatives
M2PM2
ALGEBRA 2
Professor K. Buzzard
Term 1
A continuation from Algebra I in Groups and Linear Algebra.
Groups: Homomorphisms, isomorphisms, normal subgroups, first isomorphism theorem. Fundamental theorem
of abelian groups, groups of small order. Group actions, Burnsides lemma, applications.
Linear algebra: Direct sums, quotient spaces. Determinants, minimal polynomials, Cayley-Hamilton theorem.
Canonical forms of matrices, Jordan normal form, rational canonical form.
M2PM3
COMPLEX ANALYSIS
Professor A. Laptev
Term 2
This course concerns continuity, differentiation and integration of complex valued functions, with applications to
real integration.
The complex numbers; algebraic and metric structure. Sequences and series of complex numbers. Power
series. Exponential, Trigonometric and Logarithmic functions. Complex functions; continuity, differentiability,
behaviour on compact sets.
Functions defined by power series. Line integrals, theorem of the primitive, the ML inequality.
Cauchys Theorem for a triangle, a star domain; computation of real integrals. Local theory for analytic
functions; uniform convergence of Power Series, Cauchys Integral Formula, Taylors Theorem, Cauchy
Estimates. Liouvilles Theorem.
The Fundamental theorem of Algebra. Zeros of Analytic Functions. Functions analytic in an annulus, Laurents
expansion.
Classification of Singularities. The Residue Theorem; more real integrals!
M2S1
OPTION COURSES
One of the M2 option courses can feature as part of the Third Year choices if not taken in the Second Year.
M2AM
NON-LINEAR WAVES
Professor D. Papageorgiou
Term 2
This course considers the dynamics of a continuous medium or fluid. One dimensional flows and waves are
considered in detail.
The continuum hypothesis and fluid particles.
Revision of transformation of partial derivatives.
Dr I. Krasovsky
Term 2
This course extends various concepts from analysis to more general spaces.
Metric spaces. Convergence and continuity. Examples (Euclidean spaces, function spaces; uniform
convergence). The open sets in a metric space; equivalent metrics. Convergence and continuity in terms of
open sets: topological spaces. Subspaces. Hausdorff spaces. Sequential compactness; compactness via open
n
covers; compact spaces; determination of compact subspaces of R . Completeness in metric spaces.
Relationship between compactness and completeness. Connected and path connected spaces; equivalence of
n
these notions for open sets in R . Winding numbers, definition of fundamental group, its computation for the
circle. Example: proof of fundamental theorem of algebra.
M2S2
STATISTICAL MODELLING 1
Dr B. Calderhead
Term 2
Traditional concepts of statistical inference, including maximum likelihood, hypothesis testing and interval
estimation are developed and then applied to the linear model that arises in many practical situations.
Maximum likelihood estimation, likelihood
ratio tests and their properties, confidence intervals.
Linear models - including non-full rank models: estimation, confidence intervals and
hypothesis testing. The analysis of variance.