Abstract

Preliminary ProgrammeThe three-day programme features approximately twenty-five invited contributions. Participants may present a poster on the topic "Applications for Industrial Measurements", concerning applied mathematics, software development and computer-based measurements.20 October Two plenary talks on mathematical methods and metrological applications"Numerical Methods and Modelling" Partial differential equations and integral equations Methods of identification and validation Algorithms for approximation Geometrical shape determination of industrial solidsRound Table21 October"Data Analysis" Spectral analysis and wavelets Calibration of precision instrumentation Comparison measurement of standards Statistical methods in metrology Robust estimation and outliers Applications of the bootstrap methodRound Table22 October (in cooperation with SIMAI and ASP)"Applications for Industrial Measurements" Data acquisition Measurement software, standard computational modules and their validationRound Table Industrial presentations Discussion of poster presentations ConclusionsLecturersMathematicians from the international metrological community; mathematicians from Italian universities (Politecnico of Torino, Milano, Università di Genova, Milano, Padova, Roma, Trento); scientists and mathematicians from national standards institutes and the Italian National Research Council.The workshop will be of interest to people in universities, research centres and industry who are involved in measurement and need advanced mathematical tools to solve their problems, and to those who work in the development of these mathematical tools.Metrology is concerned with measurement at the highest level of precision. Advances in metrology depend on many factors: improvements in scientific and technical knowledge, instrumentation quality, better use of advanced mathematical tools and the development of new tools. In some countries, metrological institutions have a tradition of close cooperation between metrologists and mathematicians, and include a division of applied mathematics. Such a tradition is lacking in Italy and the objective of this workshop is to encourage such cooperation by calling upon scientists from mathematical and metrological fields to meet and to exchange experiences. Industrial sectors, particularly those concerned with instrumentation and software, are likely to benefit, since metrology makes a high impact on the overall quality of industrial products, and applied mathematics must now be seen as an important industrial process.

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