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Welcome to the page of the Chair of Mathematics - Scientific Computing

The Scientific Computing group works on the development and analysis of methods in data science, in particular those based on applied harmonic analysis and functional analysis. Focus topics include signal processing, information theory, sampling theory, time-frequency analysis, quantization and machine learning.

For example, our group develops efficient methods to assemble (synthesize) from or decompose (analyse) functions or operators into well-understood basic building blocks. Analysis relies on the understanding of appropriately chosen basic components and on determining the weight of each component in a given signal. For example, a picture can be decomposed into patches of red, green, and blue of varying intensities. The dual operation is signal synthesis. Using the same building blocks as in the analysis step, we can assemble or reassemble (after transmitting and/or modifying coefficients) signals and transformations to our liking. Returning to our example, we could, starting from scratch, draw a picture by choosing patches of red, green, and blue and intensities freely.

In digital communications, synthesis and analysis are applied in succession. To transmit digital data through a medium, an analog signal is formed using a synthesis step. Here, the digital information is embedded in the weights. The receiver then performs an analysis of the obtained signal to extract the weights and with it the digital data. The principal objective is to design building blocks that are robust against disturbances present in transmission channels.

Within the past decade, mathematical contributions to these objectives had an tremendous impact on signal processing and communications engineering: wavelet bases were designed to analyze images (jpeg2000), and Gabor systems are currently used to transmit data through wired or wireless channels (OFDM). A wavelet basis consists of functions, which are all equal in shape but which are translated (shifted in time or space) or stretched copies of each other. The building blocks in Gabor theory on the other hand are functions, which are modulated (frequency-shifted) and translated (shifted in time or space) copies of each other.
In recent years, our research within the framework described above focused on time--frequency analysis of operators and Gabor analysis, and their applications in communications engineering. (For educational material, visit the website of the Summer Academy of the Jacobs University Bremen: Progress in Mathematics for Communication Systems.)

About us

Math News

New PhD Researcher at the Chair of Analysis: Welcome, Anna Simon

On 1 May 2026, Anna Simon joins the team at the Chair of Analysis. After successfully completing her Master’s degree in Mathematics at the University of Regensburg, she is now beginning her PhD at KU.

 

Her research focuses on developing new analytical approaches to precisely describe the effective behaviour of thin elastic structures with fine-scale, periodic reinforcements. These questions are motivated by concrete applications in medical technology. Her PhD project is part of the collaborative initiative “MAS-TOB: Multiscale Analysis and Structural Optimisation of Patient-Specific Therapeutic Orthoses and Bandages”, conducted jointly with the RPTU Kaiserslautern-Landau and the Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Mathematics ITWM, and funded by the Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR).

 

A warm welcome to Eichstätt, Anna - we very much look forward to working with you!

 

 

 

Mathematical Institute for Machine Learning and Data Science

[Translate to Englisch:] MIDS Logo

The Chair of Scientific Computing is part of the new founded Mathematical Institute for Machine Learning and Data Science, MIDS.
Learn more about MIDS here.