Teaching
You can find our current course offerings at the bottom of this page. If you are interested in writing a thesis, please contact Mr. Schnaubelt or Mrs. Frey directly.
Together with the Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations group, we are responsible for the lectures in Higher Mathematics I and II for computer science students. Together with the other working groups in the institute, we organize the introductory analysis lectures for mathematics students:
- Analysis 1 (convergence, differential and integral calculus in one dimensions), winter semester.
- Analysis 2 (basic topological concepts, differential calculus in several dimensions, introduction to differential equations), summer semester.
- Analysis 3 (integration theory, integral theorems, Fourier series), winter semester.
- Analysis 4 (complex analysis, differential equations), summer semester.
- Analysis for the teaching profession (complex analysis, integration theory, differential equations), summer semester.
We also regularly offer proseminars and seminars on analysis for students in the Bachelor's or teaching degree programs.
For the third Bachelor's year and the Master's degree programs in mathematics, we read the following lectures each year
- Functional analysis (theory of infinite-dimensional normed vector spaces and continuous linear operators), winter semester.
- Spectral theory (spectrum of closed, continuous or compact operators, functional calculi of bounded, self-adjoint or sectorial operators), summer semester.
Functional analysis in particular forms the content and methodological foundation for our other courses in the Master's degree programs. Two other regularly offered lectures introduce our research topics:
- Harmonic Analysis,
- Evolution equations.
Further in-depth lectures can follow. The range of lectures is supplemented by seminars for Master's students.
For further details, please refer to the module handbooks of our faculty.