Overview


Instructor
Jeffrey Wong ( main site)
Email
jtwong at math dot duke dot edu
Office
Physics 029B
Office Hours
M11-12, F4-5 or by appointment
Lectures
Sec. 5: TTh 3:05-4:20 (Physics 235)
Syllabus
Available here.
Textbook
William E. Boyce and Richard C. DiPrima, Elementary Differential Equations and Boundary Value Problems, 10th Edition.
Prof. Stephanos Venakides, ODE and PDE Notes I and II (on Sakai)

Description
First and second order ordinary differential equations with applications, Laplace transforms, series solutions and qualitative behavior, Fourier series, partial differential equations, boundary value problems, Sturm-Liouville theory.

Course Objectives
The goal of the course is for the student to learn not only the material, but also a way of thinking. This course will introduce the classical and rich theory of differential equations. It is a subject which can easily suffer from the perception that it is little more than a collection of rules and procedures to be appropriately (and blindly) applied to a handful of problem types. In reality, there are deep insights to be gained from this material. These fundamental ideas will (hopefully) influence the way you think and problem solve. Thus, our goal is to not only teach you the content outlined in the course synopsis, but to also more broadly impact the way you think about problems in your chosen discipline.

Prerequisites
A solid understanding of fundamentals from linear algebra at the level of Math 216 is essential. This includes the concepts of linearity, span, basis, eigenvalues and eigenvectors as well as the ability to use them in argument and calculation. Thus, a review of linear algebra is a must (a review can be found in ODE and PDE Notes I on Sakai). We will also make frequent use of single variable (and on occasion, multi-variable) calculus as covered in Math 212.

Exam Schedule
Exams Date Location
Midterm 1 Tuesday, Oct. 2 In class
Midterm 2 Thursday, Nov. 15 In class
Final Exam Friday, Dec. 14
9:00AM - noon
(listed on DukeHub)

Grading
Grades will be assigned based on an assessment of your performance on homework, midterm exams, and a final exam. The components will be weighted (roughly) as follows: Note that because this baseline score does not correspond directly to a letter grade; in a vacuum, it does not provide much more information than a sense of how compontents are weighted. The interpretation of all scores and course (letter) grade will depend on the final exam and an assessment of your performance as a whole.

Homework

Ethics
Students are expected to follow the Duke Community Standard. If a student is found responsible for academic dishonesty through the Office of Student Conduct, the student will receive a core of zero for that assignment. If a student’s admitted academic shonesty is resolved directly through a faculty-student resolution agreement approved by the Office of Student Conduct, the terms of that ent will dictate the grading response to the assignment at issue.