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Dr. Philippe H. Trinh \\ | Dr. Philippe H. Trinh \\ | ||
- | Departmental Lecturer in Mathematical Modelling \\ | + | University of Bath \\ |
- | Mathematical Institute \\ | + | Department of Mathematical Sciences |
- | University of Oxford | + | p.[my-last-name]@bath.ac.uk |
- | Oxford, Oxfordshire, | + | |
- | [my-last-name]@maths.ox.ac.uk | + | |
- | [[https:// | + | {{: |
- | [[http://www.lincoln.ox.ac.uk/Fellows/PhilippeTrinh|Lincoln College Profile]] \\ | + | [[https:// |
- | {{:trinh_cv.pdf|+ Curriculum Vitae (2016)}} | + | [[https://researchportal.bath.ac.uk/en/persons/ |
- | /*{{:trinh_shortcv.pdf|+ Short Curriculum Vitae (2015)}}*/ | + | [[https://scholar.google.co.uk/ |
+ | [[https://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php? | ||
- | /* | + | //To find your way around, click the navigation element on the left.// |
- | * If you're looking for current course scheduling, then the [[: | + | |
- | * If you're looking for course notes, then please go [[http:// | + | |
- | */ | + | |
- | * You might also be interested in learning a bit about [[: | + | ===== Student talks (December 2021) ===== |
- | ==== 25 May 2017: A tax on those who can't do maths ==== | + | For students and others who would like to learn a bit more about the research going on in our group, I have started collecting video presentations. |
- | It's said that playing the lottery is akin to imposing a tax on those who cannot do mathematics. However, there are plenty of real-life situations where it becomes difficult to gauge whether or not you are getting a good deal. Issues of real-estate, | + | ===== Group report (October 2021) ===== |
- | Here's a typical situation that will be familiar | + | //As we enter the start of the 2021-22 academic term, it is time to bring our summer |
- | Now when you fill out the details of the mortgage on their calculators, | + | {{ :news: |
- | This turns out to be a question of recurrence relations. Let $L_n$ be the current loan amount in the nth month. During the first period, $0 < n < n_1$ we can verify that | + | > [[news_2021-10-04|Group report |
- | \[ | + | |
- | L_n = L_{n-1}(1 + r_1/12) - m_1, | + | |
- | \] | + | |
- | where $r_1 = 0.0211$ is the interest rate and it is assumed to be compounded monthly. From this, it follows that | ||
- | \[ | ||
- | L_n = k_1^n L_0 - m_1 \left(\frac{1 - k_1^n}{1- k_1}\right), | ||
- | \] | ||
- | where we have set $k_1 = 1 + r_1/12$. In the same vein, we reason that in the second period, where $n_1 < n \leq n_e$, it follows that | ||
- | \[ | ||
- | L_n = k_2^{(n-n_e)} L^* - m_2 \left(\frac{1 - k_2^{n-n_e}}{1- k_2}\right), | ||
- | \] | ||
- | where we have set $k_2 = 1 + r_2/12$. The key parameter here is the value of $L^*$, which is the loan amount that exists in the changeover month, $t = n_1$. By solving the above equations for $m_1$ and $m_2$, then these fixed monthly payments can be determined as a function of $L^*$ and all the other parameters of the problem. | ||
- | As a test, I found that Halifax was quoting me monthly figures of $m_1 = £620.87$ and $m_2 = £755.81$ for a loan of $£176,999.00$. This is for the initial fixed period | + | /* |
+ | [[https:// | ||
+ | [[: | ||
+ | {{:trinh_cv.pdf|+ Curriculum Vitae (2016)}} \\ | ||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | */ | ||
- | {{ :start:mortgage.jpg? | + | /* |
+ | * If you're looking for current course scheduling, then the [[:teaching|teaching overview here]] might be useful. | ||
+ | * If you're looking for course notes, then please go [[http://www.theshapeofmath.com/ | ||
- | Based on the image, you see two things. First, there is a critical point of intersection where you would pay exactly | + | * You might also be interested in learning |
+ | */ | ||
- | The second point is that the changeover amount that Halifax imposes is instead on the right side of the intersection. Hence it requires a smaller initial monthly payment but a larger later payment. Because the total amount of interest paid increases (linearly) as you decrease $m_1$, this is in Halifax' | + | /* |
+ | ==== Edit in progress ==== | ||
- | What this certainly indicates is that it' | + | It' |
- | ==== 30 January 2017: On reduced models for gravity waves generated by moving bodies ==== | ||
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- | I'm happy to announce a recent [[https:// | ||
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- | {{ : | ||
- | (Left) Ernie Tuck (1939--2009) (Right) Marshall Tulin (1926--) | ||
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- | Since around 2007--2010, I'd often play with certain reduced models for studying gravity wave generation by two-dimensional bodies. These reduced models you can derive using some more modern techniques in asymptotics, | ||
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- | A few years ago, I spotted a curious question that was written in a transcription of audience questions in a conference where Tuck had presented his research (in fact, such transcriptions are quite rare in this day and age). [[https:// | ||
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- | //" | ||
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- | Tuck had replied that he didn't know the answer, and the matter was apparently left at that. However, Tulin' | ||
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- | Tulin was quite pleased to have been asked for more details (as it had been over two decades since that conference!). He told me that he had, in fact, published a report in 1983 for the 14th Symposium on Naval Hydrodynamics where he laid out a particularly involved reduction of the water wave equations. | ||
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- | He explained that nobody had really picked up on the 1983 paper (1 current citation!), even though there were a series of questions he had asked and a series a results he had presented that had seemed of some importance. He encouraged me to look up the manuscript and close the chapter, if I could. | ||
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- | And so I did. The result is this most recent paper. | ||
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- | {{ : | ||
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- | ==== 8 September 2016: A topological study of gravity free-surface waves generated by bluff bodies using the method of steepest descents ==== | ||
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- | {{ : | ||
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- | This paper, now published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A (PRSA) has a few interesting distinctions. It's the first paper I've published in PRSA---but hopefully not the last as it's certainly a strong journal with an illustrious history. It's the first solo paper I've published. And it has the longest title of any other paper I've worked on. | ||
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- | In any case, it's a paper where I explore exponential asymptotic techniques for free-surface flows (now well known) from a slightly different viewpoint. It turns out that the situation of gravity waves permits the governing equations to be re-formulated in a particularly simple way: that of a first-order nonlinear differential equation. In this paper, I show how the differential equation is studied using steepest descents. What results is a visual and beautiful way of understanding wave-structure interactions through a correspondence with the topology of certain Riemann surfaces (seen above). | ||
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- | You can download a copy of the paper {{: | ||
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- | ==== 01 June 2016: New singularities in Stokes waves ==== | ||
< | < | ||
<iframe src=' | <iframe src=' | ||
</ | </ | ||
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- | I'm happy to announce the publication of a paper in collaboration with [[collaborators# | ||
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- | Interestingly, | ||
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- | ==== 18 May 2016: Jet flows from angled nozzles ==== | ||
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- | [[this> | ||
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- | A late congratulations to second-year student [[collaborators# | ||
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- | ==== Jan 2016: Spot patterns on the surface of the sphere ==== | ||
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- | I'm happy to announce the publication of my paper in the journal // | ||
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- | ==== June 2015: Fluids and elasticity in France | ||
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- | I'll be attending the Fluid and Elasticity 2015 conference, from June 22-24 in Biarritz, France, and presenting some joint work with Stephen K. Wilson (Strathclyde University) and Howard A. Stone (Princeton University). | ||
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- | ==== May 2015: Two new papers published ==== | ||
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- | {{ : | ||
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- | I'm happy to announce the publication of two new papers. The [[http:// | ||
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