MSc Thesis / Project Work
 

Do your msc thesis / exjobb at $\Phi$

You are welcome to do your Masters Thesis at the Department of Computational Mathematics and Chalmers Finite Element Center. You can choose between several different projects within the large area of Computational Modeling in science, engineering, economy and medicine. As a preparation we suggest courses on Differential Equations/Scientific Computing within the program in Engineering Mathematics. Below you find examples of earlier Master Theses as well as thesis proposals. You are also welcome to present your own thesis proposal.

Older theses

Here you can read earlier theses written by students at $\Phi$. Click on each thesis for abstracts and fulltext versions of the documents.

edstorp-03 A dislocation based technique for the simulation of the fatigue growth of initiated microcracks Marcus Edstorp
johansson-02 Steepest descent and Newton methods using duality in structural optimization Håkan Johansson
sandstrom-shamlo-02 Development of ADRIAN Joint Analysis Software - Methods and implementation Henrik Sandström and Mattias Shamlo
heintz-01 Adaptive Goal-Oriented Finite Element Computation of the Energy Release Rate at Crack Growth P. Heintz
broman-01 On p-Mean Options in general and Asian Options in particular E. Broman
malqvist-01 Adaptive Finite Element Methods for Eigenvalue Problems with Applications in Quantum Physics A. Målqvist
foufas-00 PDE-methods for Asian options G. Foufas
wanner-00 Numerical Investigation of A Posteriori Point Error Estimates based on Duality C. Wanner
agren-99 Parametric Geometry Representation of a Waterjet Duct and Initialisation of the Related CFD Problem S. Ågren
brandberg-99 Computational Mathematical Modelling of Sound Propagation in Ducted Silencers S. Brandberg
logg-98 A Multi-Adaptive ODE-Solver A. Logg
hoffman-98 Adaptive Finite Element Methods for the Unsteady Maxwells Equations J. Hoffman
bergstrom-97 Two Equation Turbulence Models for Swirling Flow R. Bergström

This page was last rebuilt at Mon Aug 11, 2003 11:34:30 AM by Anders Logg.
© Chalmers Finite Element Center 2001