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Lecture: Mathematics of Infrastructure Planning (ADM III) |
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Summer Semester 2012 |
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Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. mult. Martin Grötschel and PD Dr. habil. Ralf Borndörfer |
In the 2012 summer semester
we will offer, in the framework of the Berlin Mathematical School (BMS), a
course entitled: "Mathematics of Infrastructure Planning (ADM III)". It
will be held in English, unless all participants are German speaking.
This is one of the courses offered in the series “Algorithmic Discrete
Mathematics” at the Mathematical Institute of TU Berlin. The participants are assumed
to be knowledgeable in the topics that are taught in the courses ADM I and ADM
II. In this course the students will be made acquainted with (some of) the
mathematical methods that are used to plan (and operate) infrastructure. The
methodology presented is based on linear and integer programming as well as combinatorial
optimization. The students will learn the theory of these methods as well as their
employment in concrete examples of infrastructure planning. Lectures
and exercises will be offered in an integrated way. The software necessary to treat
the cases discussed will be made available. Students are assumed to solve
homework exercises.
Our modern society relies
on the availability of efficient infrastructure for communication,
transportation, energy and water supply, health care, to mention just a few
examples. Infrastructure is expensive; infrastructure design has a long term
impact and many decisions are almost irreversible.
Today, infrastructure design is usually in the hands of politicians and planning
engineers; mathematics rarely plays a significant role. However, due to the
long term effects and the costs involved it is mandatory to use great care in
the associated decision making processes (if possible using appropriate mathematical
tools) in order to obtain best possible results and to ensure optimal
usability. Topics of this type will be addressed in this course. Students will
learn how to approach infrastructure planning problems and how to model the
problems arising as optimization problems. They will study the solution methods
available and in what size ranges infrastructure problems can be attacked
today. At the end of the course the students should be able to address
significant problems of infrastructure planning on their own and should have
learnt with which methods they can be handled.
The focus of the mathematical methodology taught in this course will be on
integer and combinatorial optimization. Nonlinear and stochastic optimization
models will be addressed as well.
Applications of infrastructure planning abound. We just mention issues such as:
network and line planning in public transport, facility location, gas pipeline
and electricity network design, city toll and parking space control, traffic
light control and route guidance, electronic ticketing, intermodal transport
and railway network capacity auctioning. Under this heading long term planning
for infrastructure concentration and deconstruction (for instance for an aging
society) or long term staff recruitment can be treated as well.
Several of these practical problems have been addressed in projects at the Zuse Institute and will be mentioned in the course. Some
will be introduced in detail.
We will also provide the data of some practical examples and expect the
students to solve these with software such as ZIMPL and SCIP which will be made
available to all participants. Exercises will be integrated into the lectures.
The students are expected to solve homework assignments.
Students will be requested to register during the first lecture. Arrangements for homework assignments will discussed during that as well.
Two classes of ninety minutes per week, on Monday and Thursday, starting at 16:15 h.
First lecture on Thursday, April 12, 2012 at 16:15 h.The lecture will take place at: TU Berlin, Math Building, room MA 313.
Knowledge in computer-oriented mathematics (COMA), combinatorial linear and integer programming (ADM I and ADM II) is expected.
Office |
Name |
Consultation-hours |
Room |
Phone |
|
Office at TU Berlin: |
Martin Grötschel |
on appointment |
Room: MA 302 |
314-23266 |
Please use: groetschel |
Office at Zuse Institute: |
Martin Grötschel |
on appointment |
Room: 3025 |
84185-210 |
groetschel |
Office Zuse Institute: |
Ralf Borndörfer |
on appointment |
Room: 3033 |
84185-243 |
borndoerfer |
The lecture is classified
as an ADM III course with 10 ECTS credit points and is an advanced Berlin
Mathematical School (BMS) class.
Please, find here the status quo of your credit points.
Criteria for scientific acquisition:
50 % of the exercise points.
Last changes: August 2, 2012