Dear friends,
The IIC seminar series, renamed the IIC Colloquium Series, begins its fourth
year next Wednesday, Oct. 1. We hope you'll join us for a talk by journalist
Brian Hayes, who writes the "Computing Science" column for American
Scientist magazine. A collection of Brian's essays, _Group Theory in the
Bedroom, and Other Mathematical Diversions_, was published this year by Hill
& Wang. He blogs at
http://bit-player.org. See schedule and location details
below and at
iic.harvard.edu.
If you would like to subscribe to our listserv for announcements of IIC
colloquia and workshops, or if you would like to be removed from the list,
please contact Helene Tingle Uysal, helene_tingle(a)harvard.edu.
Pavlos Protopapas
Senior Scientist, IIC
*******
Initiative in Innovative Computing Colloquium
Wednesday, October 1, 2008 at 4pm
Location: 60 Oxford Street, Room 330
Brian Hayes, Senior Writer, American Scientist magazine
Title: Computing in Alfonso's Universe
Abstract:
"If the Lord Almighty had consulted me before embarking on creation, I
should have recommended something simpler." This sentiment, supposedly the
response of Alfonso X, King of León and Castile, to the explanation of
Ptolemaic astronomy, is likely to be shared by anyone who delves into
algorithms for simulating the physical universe. Nature seems to have no
difficulty with n-body problems, protein folding or fluid turbulence, but
these phenomena are tedious, messy and computationally expensive when you
try to capture them in code. Really serious physics, such as quantum field
theory, gets far worse. The very difficulty of some of these problems may
tell us something about the connections between physics and computation.
For more information:
http://iic.harvard.edu/seminars/iic-colloquium-series-fall-2008-through-spr…
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