Contribution of the course to learning outcomes in the Master in Mathematics programme. By the end of this activity, students will have made progress in:
- Choose and use calculation tools to solve mathematical problems.
- Identify the fundamental concepts of important current mathematical theories.
- Establish the main connections between these theories, analyse them and explain them through the use of examples.
- Identify, by use of the abstract and experimental approach specific to the exact sciences, the unifying features of different situations and experiments in mathematics or in closely related fields.
- Show evidence of abstract thinking and of a critical spirit.
- Argue within the context of the axiomatic method.
- Construct and draw up a proof independently, clearly and rigorously.
- Recognise the key arguments and the structure of a proof.
- Evaluate the rigour of a mathematical or logical argument and identify any possible flaws in it.
- Distinguish between the intuition and the validity of a result and the different levels of rigorous understanding of this same result.
- Write a mathematical text according to the conventions of the discipline.
- Find sources in the mathematical literature and assess their relevance.
- Correctly locate an advanced mathematical text in relation to knowledge acquired.
- Ask relevant and lucid questions on an advanced mathematical topic in an independent manner.
Learning outcomes specific to the course. By the end of this activity, students will be able to:
- State, prove and illustrate propositions concerning properties of solutions of partial differential equations, and also the existence and uniqueness of such solutions.
- Propose one or several strategies to establish the existence of solutions.
- Apply tools from real analysis to solve a problem.
- Manipulate notions from advanced analysis.
- Contextualize mathematical tools in their historical setting and understand how they evolved.
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