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Undergraduate Program
Minor in Scientific Computation
The Minor in Scientific Computation is a natural complement to the curriculum
for majors in natural sciences, mathematics, economics, and CSOM finance
concentrators. A minor in Scientific Computation enriches training in
any of these disciplines, adding an applied emphasis on the methodologies
which have been developed for empirical research, and stressing the cross-fertilization
of research methods across disciplines.
The advancement of science in many fields is becoming less discipline-specific,
and nowhere is this more apparent than in the common tools used for challenging
computational problems. For instance, the solution of 'hard' optimization
problems or the simulation of large-scale nonlinear models are common
to many fields of science and applied mathematics. Significant resources
exist among the Boston College faculty for the advancement of applied
computational methodologies.
An interdisciplinary minor in Scientific Computation provides students
with a valuable, intellectually challenging experience and marketable
skills applicable in many fields, but would also stimulate interdisciplinary
collaboration and exchange among faculty. The program does not have significant
overlap with existing offerings and programs in Computer Science, which
are not generally oriented toward the scientific applications of computation
such as simulation, modelling, and data visualization. Thus, a minor in
Scientific Computation would be a useful complement to a major or concentration
in Computer Science.
The interdisciplinary minor in Scientific Computation consists of six
courses and a one-credit senior seminar (lecture series).
Learn more about a Minor in Scientific Computation.
Go to BC Theoretical Physics Computing
Facility mini-site
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