Vacation Research Scholarships 2010/11

Sponsored by:
CUPS

The 2010/11 AMSI Vacation Research Scholarships were awarded to 16 undergraduate students from around Australia to complete a supervised a six-week research project during the summer holiday. At the end of the summer students came together with CSIRO vacation scholars and presented their work at CSIRO sponsored Big Day In.

The scheme provides students with professional experience unavailable in the undergraduate degree program. Student supervisor, Dr Leonardo Lopes, Monash University, said: “Before the scholarship, our student was great academically. Now we feel he is also a better professional outside the classroom. He understands deadlines, feedback, and supervision in a way he would simply not be able to in the classroom.”

The Cambridge University Press book prize for best student talk was awarded to Vincent Schlegel, University of Adelaide, who eloquently explained his research on quantum structures of Yang-Mills fields.

Projects range from the applied - modelling cellular immunology of tuberculosis and Stochastic Integer programming models for asset and liability management – to the pure - expansions of Zeta and Ehrenfecuht-Fraisse games in finite algebras.

Adam Ellery, Queensland University of Technology, had his first paper published on the work undertaken during his AMSI Vacation Research Scholarship.

Students said: “The AMSI Vacation Research Scholarship gave me a unique insight into the academic research environment and allowed me to pursue some of my own mathematical interests. In all, it was a great experience.”

"The AMSI Vacation Scholarship program was an excellent opportunity for me to learn about mathematics and about the research process. The Big Day In was a valuable experience, both in that it gave me many networking opportunities and it gave me practice in making my research understandable to other scientists and students."

Published Papers

Ellery, A. J., Simpson, M. J. (2011). An analytical method to solve a general class of nonlinear reactive transport models. Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol. 169 pp 313–318

Student Reports:

Student

Supervisor

Topic

Australian National University

Alexander Amenta

Dr Bryan Wang

Orbifolds and Orbifold index theory

La Trobe University

Lucinda Ham

Dr Marcel Jackson

Ehrenfecuht-Fraisse games in finite algebras

Monash University

Anthony Carapetis

Dr Daniel Delbourgo

Expansions of Zeta

Samuel TAN

Dr Leo Lopes
&
Dr Kais Hamza

Stochastic Integer programming models for asset and liability management

Joseph Yew Choe CHAN

Prof. Robert Bartnik

Visualising space-time geometry-black holes and matter flow

Queensland University of Technology

Adam Ellery

Dr Matthew Simpson

Advection diffusion reaction in a porous catalyst

RMIT University

Karen McCulloch

Dr Stephen Davis

Contact Networks for Mathematical Models of Infectious Disease

The University of Melbourne

Richard Hughes

Prof. Hyam Rubenstein

Topology of 3-manifolds

Elena Tartaglia

Prof. Paul Pearce

Birman-Wenzl-Murakami Algebra and Non-Planar Logarithmic Models

The University of Queensland

Yui Sze Chan

Prof. You-Gan Wang

Modelling the Stochastic Growth of Ornate Rock Lobsters (Panulirus Ornatus)

Trent Spears

Prof. Phil Pollett

Probability with Martingales for Economics and Finance

The University of Sydney

Ross Oglivie

Dr Daniel Daners

Measure theory, geometric and analytic inequalities

Daniel Barter

Dr Emma Carberry

Sheaves and algebraic curves

Jason Tran

Dr Michael Stewart

TRAN_Jason.pdf

The University of Western Australia

Hui Ping Chua

Dr Thomas Stemler

Behaviour of unidirectionally coupled systems

University of Adelaide

Vincent Schlegel

Prof. Michael Murray

Quantum Structures of Yang-Mills Fields

University of Wollongong

Alison Lucas

Dr Annette Worthy

Modelling Cellular Immunology of Tuberculosis

 

Background

AMSI will fund Vacation Research Scholarships for students at AMSI member institutions. The Scholarships give intending honours students the opportunity to undertake a research project under the guidance of a supervisor.

Application for the scholarships will be competitive, as judged by the Director and Deputy Director of AMSI. This will be based on a combination of the past grades of the nominee student and the substance of a 1-page project application. In the event of large numbers of applications, preference may be given to the top two from each institution.

The scholarship payments have 2 components:

  • an award of $380/week for up to 6 weeks

  • travel and accommodation costs for the student to attend CSIRO’s Big Day In for 2 days and make a presentation about their project.

Student eligibility and requirements

1. Nominees must be:

  • Australian citizens or permanent residents.
  • Outstanding students. In practice, this means that AMSI awards should be made to the best candidates before any locally funded awards are made.
  • Third-year students doing a major in the mathematical sciences and with the expressed intention of proceeding to an honours year. This includes students doing joint degrees that include mathematics, and students from disciplines such as physics, engineering or economics who take a substantial amount of third year mathematics (taught by the mathematics department) in their degrees. However, outstanding second-year students may also be nominated if they will be undertaking a course of study in their third year along the lines just described.

AMSI Vacation Research Scholarships will not be awarded to students already doing honours or postgraduate study, or who have received an AMSI scholarship previously.

2. After completion of the project, vacation scholars must submit a project report by the end of February for the AMSI web site. The report should summarise the project and address the nature of the topic, methods of investigation, results found, and benefits of the experience. It needs to be provided as a word document.

3. AMSI Vacation Research Scholars, together with CSIRO vacation scholars, are expected to attend the CSIRO Big Day In (BDI) for 2 full days in February 2011. At this event they will make 15-minute presentations about their project and take questions for up to 10 minutes. This will enable them to

  • meet and socialise with their peers
  • gain experience presenting to their colleagues and supervisors, and
  • learn about a range of careers in science by interacting with several CSIRO scientists (including mathematicians) in a discussion panel.

AMSI covers the cost of airfares and accommodation and CSIRO covers the cost of meals for this event. Detailed information will be available to vacation scholars in early January.

4. In preparation for the Big Day In, supervisors are expected to:

  • assist vacation scholars to prepare a 15-minute presentation on their project, suitable for an audience of their peers. The end result should be a set of pdfs or PowerPoint.
  • arrange an opportunity for students to do a trial run of their presentations locally. The aim is to provide feedback from experienced presenters so that students can improve their presentations before the BDI.

AMSI strongly encourages supervisors to attend their student’s presentation at the BDI, both to provide support and to assist with questions if required. Travel and accommodation are not covered, but meals are provided.

Nomination Process

Nominations are recommendations to AMSI and will be judged by us on a competitive basis, as described above. Supervisors who have not ensured that previous students completed their requirements in a timely manner will not be approved. The process is as follows:

  1. Departments or Schools of Mathematical Sciences call for applications from eligible undergraduates. (Some Departments ask their staff to pre-nominate projects that they are willing to supervise.)

  2. Departments select the most outstanding applicants for nomination as an AMSI Vacation Research Scholar, complete the online nomination form, attach most recent statement of results and project description by 20 October 2010.

  3. AMSI contacts the Departments soon after and indicates whether the nomination was successful. Those accepted are designated AMSI Vacation Research Scholar and receive a certificate, which is presented at the BDI.

Payment Process

  1. The value of each Vacation Research Scholarship is $380 per week (plus GST if applicable) for up to 6 weeks. It is paid in 2 installments: all but the final 2 weeks at the beginning of the period, and the final 2 weeks at the end of the period.

  2. On being notified of acceptance, the nominating Department invoices AMSI for the initial period of the scholarship (being the total period less the final 2 weeks). It is expected that Departments pay the awardees out of their own funds and treat the AMSI payment as a reimbursement.

  3. AMSI reimburses the last two weeks of the vacation scholar stipend when the student's final report is received. The Department needs to invoice AMSI for the final amount at that time.