Presentation Day Gallery March 2024
Below is a selection of images from our Research Project Presentation Day at Imperial's South Kensington Campus on 27 March 2024. Credits to
Brendan Foster Photography.
Students worked in small groups with a mentor from either Imperial, our partner university and globally top-10 ranked institution, a mentor from another prominent university, or a mentor from a relevant industry, to complete an academic research project on a topic within the mentor’s area of expertise. Students produced an academic report that was published in the Imperial Maths School journal, a summary poster and presented their research at Imperial at the end of the project.
The presentation day begins
Family, friends, and mentors gather for ICLMS's first Research Project Presentation Day
The Mentors
The people who made this happen are the mentors. Take a look at how they helped under School Life > Student Research Projects 2023/24
Students getting ready to present
Students created posters showing their research
A welcome from Imperial College London
Before the presentations begin
Guests and students taking a look at one of the research project posters
Headteacher's Welcome
Our Headteacher David Lee welcomes the students and guests
A welcome from the students
Maxwell Chisholm, the Chair of the Student Council, welcomes the guests
Students and parents discussing upcoming presentations
Global Dynamics of Connected Vehicle Systems
Students studied the behaviour of connected vehicle systems by simulating a mathematical model of the interactions between human-driven and autonomous vehicles
The Application of K-Means Clustering to a Diabetes Dataset
Exploring K-Means; a method of clustering groups from a given dataset
Deputy Headteacher Tim Grundy discusses a project with a student
The Game of Sim
An investigation into the surprisingly complex mathematics surrounding the seemingly simple Game of Sim
Galaxy Rotation Curves and Dark Matter
An investigation into the existence of the elusive and invisible substance that is dark matter by observing galaxy rotation speeds
Students watching their peers present
The audience applauding a presentation
A demonstration
Students demonstrating how orbital velocities work
Pursuit Problems
Investigating dilemmas which involve two or more objects that obey simple rules within an environment using simulations
Dyson Extractor Fan
Students redesigned a product that is commonly used but has many flaws: the extractor fan
Investigating the Genus of Topological Manifolds
Students explored ways of determining the number of holes in a surface using functions in morse theory and vector fields in the Poincaré-Hopf Theorem
Students look at each other's posters during a break between presentations
A food break between presentations
The students' posters on display in the reception of Imperial College London
Students looking for their names in the schedule
Students looking at the timetables
The presentations continue
A team presents
Students watch another member of their team presenting
Social Networks, Compartmental Models & COVID-19
Students explored how mathematics can be used to predict the spread of disease, with particular focus on the recent COVID-19 pandemic
Dyson-Powered Motor Shoes
Students employed design engineering strategies as used at Dyson to develop a novel idea: Motor-Powered Shoes
Students projects have real-world implications
Period Doubling and Chaos in Nonlinear Maps
Students investigated how to model and 'quantify' chaos - and looked into how it emerges in the first place
Students were asked questions by the audience
On the Associativity of Floating-Point Arithmetic
Students investigated floating-point arithmetic, which is used to represent real numbers with fractional parts within a computer
Congratulations to all our students