MSO doctoral program
Modeling, Simulation, and Optimization
of discrete, continuous and stochastic systems
The MSO doctoral program ran from 2015 to 2020.
For the current doctoral program please go to:
https://www.aau.at/tewi/doktoratsprogramme/doktoratsprogramm-mao/
Research areas:
- Numerical and qualitative analysis of dynamical systems
- Nonlinear and combinatorial optimization
- Extremal discrete structures
- Bayesian spatio-temporal prediction and design
- Inverse problems
Mathematical models of systems, e.g. in modern Information Technology, quite often exhibit both discrete and continuous aspects as well as their interaction. This concerns the modeling of time in dynamical systems either as a continuum or a finite/countable number of instances when observations are taken or when control acts, and strongly influences the analysis of the qualitative behavior of such systems as well as their design via continuous or combinatorial optimization methods, respectively. Moreover, robustness with respect to uncertainty caused by noise or perturbations is a crucial issue in such systems and needs skillful stochastic modeling as well as estimation, prediction and model validation. The rigorous and efficient treatment of these problems requires knowledge from a wide range of mathematical fields, namely Dynamical Systems, Statistical Data Analysis, Nonlinear and Combinatorial Optimization, Discrete Mathematics and Inverse Problems.
The aim of the MSO Doctoral Program is to provide PhD students with a combined training in these areas and thus enable them to successfully contribute to the development of new groundbreaking mathematical methods. Not only will these methods be applicable to the challenging problems of Information Technology investigated at our university, but they will also help to tackle a wide range of discrete-continuous-stochastic problems in Engineering as well as Natural, Economic and Social Sciences.
The research within the MSO Doctoral Program is driven by applications in Information Technology, in particular control and sensor/actuator technology, where the requirement of intimate cooperation between experts on differential equations, optimization and stochastics becomes most evident.
Our research is currently mainly funded by
- Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, in the framework of the Karl Popper Kolleg
- Kärntner Wirtschaftsförderungsfonds
with additional support of our associated PhD students by
- Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF)
- Initial Training Network Mixed Integer Nonlinear Optimization (MINO)
- ENIAC-JU EPT300 – Enabling power technologies on 300mm wafers
- CTR Carinthian Tech Research
- Infineon Technologies Austria, the Austrian Research Promotion Agency FFG and the Carinthian Economic Promotion Fund KWF in a project at K-AI Kompetenzzentrum Automobil- und Industrieelektronik GmbH
Quicklinks
Information for
Address
Universitätsstraße 65-67
9020 Klagenfurt am Wörthersee
Austria
+43 463 2700
uni [at] aau [dot] at
www.aau.at
Campus Plan