Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours / session

Prerequisites

Advanced Calculus for Engineers (18.075) or Mathematical Methods for Engineers II (18.086)

Although the course is self-contained, students will find some undergraduate exposure to Fourier analysis and applied linear algebra, least-squares, etc. to be helpful. Useful background includes Mathematical Methods for Engineers I (18.085) and/or the material covered in Buy at Amazon Strang, G. Introduction to Applied Mathematics. Wellesley, MA: Wellesley-Cambridge Press, 1986. ISBN: 9780961408800.

Overview

The course is directed at making scientifically sensible deductions from the combination of observations with dynamics and kinematics represented, generically, as "models". There are two overlapping central themes:

  • Theme 1: Linear "inverse" methods and data "assimilation" including regression, singular value decomposition, objective mapping, non-stationary models and data, Kalman filters, adjoint methods ("assimilation") etc.
  • Theme 2: Standard time series analysis, including basic statistics, Fourier methods, spectra, coherence, filtering, etc.

Because of the amount of material to be covered, there is little time for specific scientific applications ("case studies"), but examples from various branches of the earth sciences will be discussed.

Texbook and Readings

Theme 1 is covered by:

Buy at Amazon Wunsch, Carl.  Discrete Inverse and State Estimation Problems: With Geophysical Fluid Applications. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006.  ISBN: 9780521854245. This material will be distributed as the working draft of a book. No knowledge of fluids is required.

An earlier edition of the book, with physical oceanographic applications, is:
Buy at Amazon Wunsch, Carl. The Ocean Circulation Inverse Problem. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN: 9780521480901. But there is no need to have it.

Partial alternatives are:

Buy at Amazon Menke, William. Geophysical Data Analysis: Discrete Inverse Theory. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Academic Press, 1989. ISBN: 9780124909212.

Buy at Amazon Daley, Roger. Atmospheric Data Analysis. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1991. ISBN: 9780521382151.

Theme 2 is discussed in:

Buy at Amazon Priestley, M. B. Spectral Analysis and Time Series. Combined ed. London, UK: Academic Press, 1981. ISBN: 9780125649018.

Other highly recommended useful books are:

Buy at Amazon Bracewell, R. N. The Fourier Transform and its Applications. 3rd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1999. ISBN: 9780073039381.

Buy at Amazon Percival, D. B., and A. T. Walden. Spectral Analysis for Physical Applications: Multitaper and Conventional Univariate Techniques. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1993, pp. 83. ISBN: 9780521355322.

Homework and Projects

There will be homework roughly every two weeks, plus a modest term paper (not to exceed 10 pages) on a theme related to the class. These are most likely to be applications of some methodology to real data, or a theoretical extension of a standard result. The homework will require some small computations as can be done in any of MATLAB®, Maple®, Mathematica®, etc.

Grading

Activities Percentages
Project 60%
Homework 40%