Anne Gelb

Anne E. Gelb is a mathematician interested in numerical analysis, partial differential equations, and Fourier analysis of images. She is John G. Kemeny Parents Professor of Mathematics at Dartmouth College.[1]

Research interests

More specifically, Gelb describes her research as "developing highly accurate and efficient data-driven numerical methods for extracting important information in applications such as medical imaging, synthetic aperture radar imaging, climatology, signal processing, and fluid dynamics".[1]

Education and career

Gelb graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1989, with a bachelor's degree in mathematics.[2] She went to Brown University for her graduate studies, completing a Ph.D. in 1996. Her dissertation, Topics in Higher Order Methods for Partial Differential Equations, was supervised by David I. Gottlieb.[2][3]

After postdoctoral research with Herbert Keller at the California Institute of Technology, she joined the department of mathematics and statistics at Arizona State University in 1998. In 2016 she moved from Arizona State to Dartmouth as the John G. Kemeny Parents Professor.[2]

gollark: Library idea: a convenient utility library for stuff like writing/reading files (as text/JSON/table format/whatever), HTTP requests, and other random stuff.
gollark: The server decides what to send you and when and also decides what to do with your messages.
gollark: You can't just receive messages through them without doing anything, you *connect* to a websocket server and then receive messages and can also send them.
gollark: <@426660245738356738> Websockets are basically bidirectional communication channels built on HTTP.
gollark: There is no slow mode. Slow mode does not exist. It has never existed. There has never been a slow mode.

References

  1. "New Faculty Broaden the Ranks of Dartmouth Talent", Dartmouth News, January 3, 2017, retrieved 2018-02-14
  2. Curriculum vitae (PDF), 2017, retrieved 2018-02-14
  3. Anne Gelb at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
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