[Home]Mathematical model

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Mathematical modelling is the use of mathematical language to describe the behaviour of a system, be it biological, economic, electrical, mechanical, thermodynamic, or one of many other examples.

Often when an engineer analyses a system or is supposed to control a system, he uses a mathematical model. In analysis, the engineer can build a descriptive model of the system as a hypothesis of how the system could work, or try to estimate how an unforseeable event could affect the system. Similarly, in control of a system the engineer can try out different control approaches in simulations.

Mathematical modelling problems are often classified into white-box or black-box models, according to how much prior information is available of the system. A black-box model is a system of which there is no prior information available, and a white-box model is a system where all necessary information is available. Naturally, practically all systems are somewhere between the white-box and black-box models, so this concept only works as an intuitive guide for approach.

Another basic issue is the complexity of a model. If we were, for example, modelling the flight of an airplane, we could embed each mechanical part of the airplane into our model and would thus acquire an almost white-box model of the system. However, the computational cost of adding such a huge amount of detail would effectively inhibit the usage of such a model. Additionally, the uncertainty would increase due to an overly complex system, because each separate part induces some amount of variance into the model. It is therefore usually apropiate to make some approximations to reduce the model to a sensible size.


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Edited November 24, 2001 12:53 am by 130.159.254.xxx (diff)
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