News Release
Mathematics Addresses Problems of
Science and Technology
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For further information, contact:
Avner Friedman
Director, Minnesota Center for Industrial Mathematics
University of Minnesota
Telephone: 612-624-4025, 612-625-3377
Email: friedman@math.umn.edu
August 3, 2000
PROVIDENCE, RI---Free boundary problems are mathematical constructs that
provide powerful means for understanding various phenomena in science and
technology. In recent years, important new examples of free boundary problems
have arisen, demanding the development of new mathematical ideas and
techniques.
Free boundary problems are used to represent phenomena that change, either with
time or with the variation of another parameter. The equations describing the
nature of the change are valid only within a certain region. Sometimes a part
of the boundary of this region is not prescribed in advance, and this part is
called the "free boundary" and is determined in tandem with the solution to the
equations.
One example comes from the manufacturing of photographic film. In this
process, sheets of fluid are dispersed in layers onto the film base, which is
moving horizontally on a conveyor belt. The fluid falls under the influence of
gravity and is often guided by control of air pressure. An important problem
is to understand exactly how the fluid falls onto the film. In particular, for
good quality coating, the angle of contact between the fluid and the film must
be kept constant. Experiments have been done to measure this angle, but there
is no theory giving a precise relationship between the speed of the moving film
and the contact angle.
The motion of the fluid can be described by partial differential equations that
govern fluid flow. In such a description, the boundary between the fluid and
the air forms a free boundary. New mathematical techniques developed
specifically to address this free boundary problem have helped industrial
researchers to understand better the shape the fluid takes as it coats the
film.
The article, "Free Boundary Problems in Science and Technology" by Avner
Friedman, describes a number of examples in which progress in mathematical
techniques for addressing free boundary problems has led to new understanding
of important problems in science and technology, such as semiconductor
manufacturing and tumor growth. The article will appear in the September 2000
issue of Notices of the AMS. A PDF file containing the article may be
downloaded at
http://www.ams.org/notices/200008/fea-friedman.pdf.
Founded in 1888 to further mathematical research and scholarship, the
30,000-member American Mathematical Society fulfills its mission through
programs and services that promote mathematical research and its uses,
strengthen mathematical education, and foster awareness and appreciation of
mathematics and its connections to other disciplines and to everyday life.
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