Andrew M. Stuart

Andrew M. Stuart ( born August 19, 1962) is a British mathematician who deals with numerical mathematics.

Stuart graduated from the University of Bristol with a Bachelor degree in 1983 and the University of Oxford, where he earned his doctorate under John Norbury 1986. As a post - graduate student, he was at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and since 1989 lecturer at the University of Bath. In 1991 he became assistant professor in 1995 and associate professor at Stanford University. From 1999 he was Professor of Applied Mathematics at the University of Warwick. 2005 to 2007 he was the Director of The Centre for Scientific Computing.

It deals with numerical methods for stochastic differential equations and differential equations and their long-term behavior and with data assimilation.

In 1997 he received the James H. Wilkinson Prize, the 1989 Leslie Fox prize, 1997 Germund Dahlquist price of SIAM and 2000 Junior Whitehead Prize. Stuart held 2002 DiPerna Lecture ( Extracting Macroscopic Dynamics ). 2002/ 03 he was a Senior Research Fellow of the Royal Society and the Leverhulme Trust, and in 2013 he was awarded the Wolfson Merit Award from the Royal Society. Since 2009 he has SIAM Fellow. In 2008 he received an Advanced Grant from the European Research Council ( ERC).

He is 2014 selected as a guest speaker at the ICM in Seoul.

Writings

  • With GA Pavliotis Multiscale methods: averaging and homogenization, Springer 2008
  • Oscar Gonzalez A first course in continuum mechanics, Cambridge University Press 2008
  • With AR Humphries Dynamical systems and numerical analysis, Cambridge University Press 1996
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