MasterPhDLawBachelorMBAHealthcareCoursesOnline
Keystone logo
University of Southern Denmark BSc in Applied mathematics
University of Southern Denmark

BSc in Applied mathematics

3 Years

Request teaching languages

Full time

Request application deadline *

Request earliest startdate

Request tuition fees

On-Campus

* 15th March at 12 noon

* free for full degree students from the Nordic countries or from the EU/EEA countries and Switzerland; 4,545 EUR per semester for students with a non-EU/EEA-citizenship or non-Swiss-citizenship

Introduction

Applied mathematics is an interdisciplinary program focusing on solving concrete problems by means of advanced mathematical tools.

The bachelor program in Applied mathematics at SDU is offered only in Danish.

In the Applied mathematics program, you will learn to model and solve problems from the practical world using advanced mathematical methods. Aside from the basic mathematical principles, the Applied mathematics program will acquaint you with mathematical modeling, i.e. formulating complex problems in applications as mathematical problems, in order to analyze them and perform calculations digitally.

Our areas of expertise

Do you want to be a problem solver? Would you like to learn to utilize advanced mathematical tools and computers to model, analyze and solve complex problems in business or research? Then study Applied mathematics in Odense.

Applied mathematics is a broad subject arena, combining mathematics, statistics, and computer science. However, there is room for elective subjects, allowing you to specialize in a sub-field of your choice.

Work with mathematics

Applied mathematics is not a particular kind of mathematics, but a way to work with mathematics. It is impossible to say whether a mathematical subject is applied or not. Most of the mathematics considered “pure” mathematics was developed in order to solve practical problems.

A specific example of the opposite case, which still has great practical potential, is the French lawyer and government official Pierre de Fermat, who worked with mathematics solely to satisfy his own curiosity. After more than 350 years, it was recently proven that his famous equation: xn+yn=zn, where x, y, z, and n are positive, natural numbers, has no solution with n=2 (because n=2 makes 3, 4, and 5 one of an infinite number of solutions).

Fermat had no ambition for his work in numbers theory to be practically utilized. Nonetheless, his work is fundamental in the code theory (cryptology) used every time we make transactions and do banking online.

In short, you could say that an applied mathematician is often motivated by a problem outside the realm of mathematics.

Curriculum

Program Admission Requirements

Show your commitment and readiness for Grad school by taking the GRE - the most broadly accepted exam for graduate programs internationally.

Get Started Today

About the School

Questions