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Newton Gateway Events

The Newton Gateway to Mathematics delivers activity across a broad range of sectors and engages in partnership with the users of mathematics - academics from other disciplines, those from industry and the public sector. 
Activities are bespoke and may originate from the need to address a specific technical issue or look for a better solution. Alternatively, they could be in response to the need to obtain ideas for next generation solutions from mathematicians involved in frontier research.

Activities take a number of forms:

  • Events - workshops and consultations
  • Training programmes
  • Short to medium-term research programmes
  • Projects

The Newton Gateway delivers Open for Business knowledge exchange events on behalf of the Isaac Newton Institute. These are specifically designed to bring together industrial, commercial and government organisations with mathematical scientists and can be run as part of an ongoing research programme, or as an independent event.

 

Past Events

Data-Rich Phenomena - Modelling, Analysis and Simulations using Partial Differential equations

Monday 14th December 2015 to Wednesday 16th December 2015

This event was one of a number of scientific scoping workshops funded by the Alan Turing Institute.
These workshops have helped to define the research programme at the
Alan Turing Institute, whose mission is to undertake data science
research at the intersection of computer science, mathematics,
statistics and systems engineering. It aims to provide technically
informed advice to policy makers and enable researchers from industry
and academia to work together towards practical applications and
solutions.

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Understanding the Mathematics and Physics of Cell Motility and Pattern Formation - Open for Business Event

Wednesday 9th December 2015

Cell motility, morphogenesis, and pattern formation are essential
features of cell dynamics. They involve biochemical processes and
biomechanical properties coupling multiscales
ranging from the intracellular level, cell surface dynamics,
cell-cell and cell-tissue interactions up to the scale of cell
population behaviour influencing organ formation and
functioning. Hence, there is a need to develop new predictive
mathematical models with the ability to handle large datasets of
biological events and process thereby providing a
powerful quantitative framework to understand these phenomena
across multiple scales.

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Predictive Multiscale Materials Modelling

Tuesday 1st December 2015 to Friday 4th December 2015

The multiscale/multiphysics nature of materials gives rise to extremely challenging and unique mathematical and algorithmic problems currently prohibiting uncertainty quantification and predictive materials modelling. For example, information loss during coarse graining; high-dimensionality and scalability of stochastic multiscale simulations and UQ; learning in models with a high dimensional parameter space; rare events; transferability of potentials in electronic structure, atomistic and molecular simulations. Materials of interest include, but are not limited to, metallic alloys, ceramics, polymers and composites, semiconductors, biological and geological media and meta-materials. The ability to predict the properties of these materials with confidence is paramount to a number of sectors. Currently there is a huge gap between state-of-the-art mathematical methods and the analysis tools routinely used by the materials community.

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Environmental Modelling in Industry Study Group

Monday 21st September 2015 to Thursday 24th September 2015

In partnership with the EPSRC Living with Environmental Change - Maths Foresees Network and the NERC Probability, Uncertainty and Risk in the Environment (PURE) Network, the TGM hosted a Maths Study Group.

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3rd European Optimisation in Space Engineering (OSE)

Thursday 17th September 2015 to Friday 18th September 2015

The third workshop on Optimisation in Space Engineering (OSE) was
jointly organised by the Turing Gateway to Mathematics (TGM), the
University of Southampton, University of Birmingham, the European Space
Agency (ESA), Airbus Defence and Space, University of Strathclyde and
University of Bremen.

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