Ignacio Rozada

rozada arroba gmail dot com

CV available upon request

I recently graduated from my PhD in applied mathematics at the University of British Columbia. My supervisor was Dr. Michael Ward.

The topic of my dissertation was on the mathematical theory behind pattern formation in organisms. Specifically, on the types of instabilities that give rise to pattern variation.

Thesis details

Teaching

Math 215-255 - fall 2011
Math 102 - fall 2010
Math 253 - fall 2009
Math 102 - fall 2008
Math 184 - fall 2007

Research

I am interested in the stability and nonlinear properties of Turing-type solutions that emerge from reaction-diffusion PDEs. Other topics that interest me, or that I've worked on before, are:

applied network theory , epidemiology,
neuron models, networks of coupled oscillators,
large-scale data visualization, sparse solvers
pattern formation on growing domains

Presentations

Misc

Non-scientific writings (espanglish, ingrish)
The Glison torus
My alma maters
Turing patterns on live growing domains
Outdoors options around Vancouver (VOC wiki)
A great song at a good concert