For an MS in pure math, you would take a year of Real Analysis, a year of Topology, and a year of Abstract Algebra (group theory, ring theory and Galois theory), You would also take two year's worth of electives.
For an MS in applied math, you would probably take a year of statistics, a year of mathematical modelling, a year of differential equations and two years of electives.
2007-01-24 08:23:07
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answer #1
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answered by Ranto 7
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Examples:
Mathematical Modeling, Modeling Case Studies, Numerical Methods, Nonlinear Programming, Perturbation Methods, Mathematical Physics, Time Series, Knot Theory, Computational Fluid Dynamics, Numerical Methods for Partial Differential Equations, Advanced Topics in Numerical Analysis, Deterministic Operations Research, Stochastic Operations Research, Combinatorial Optimization, Inverse Problems, Advanced Combinatorics, Ordinary Differential Equations, Bifurcation Theory, Wave Phenoma, Fluid Dynamics, Topology, Functions of a Real Variable, Functional Analysis
+ a thesis credit.
But remember: choosing 8 (or so) specific courses from the above list is determined by what your research topic is.
Good Luck!
2007-01-24 07:36:43
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answer #2
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answered by No Sugar Added 2
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you all diff, type of math courses, like "financial Math" "math workplace", "basic math" "acounting" "Trig"...etc
2007-01-24 07:23:11
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answer #3
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answered by sportbest 2
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