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I will be teaching multivariable calculus and topology this fall. I am also advising two honors students this year. See my official website for more information. Job materials: curriculum vitae, research statement, teaching statement
See my page of technology notes on things I'm learning like XML, Java, and Geogebra, or my page of PGF/TikZ code snippets. I am generally interested in Java programming with NetBeans, Geogebra for the classroom, wikis, and other new web technologies. I
I'm working on a Java package for mathematics visualization called Blaise. Here are some mathlets designed with Blaise:
I also maintain a collection of Geogebra workbooks at my Geogebra mathlets page. A long time ago I worked on the fair division calculator with Francis Su.
I'm a Sun Dot with Project NExT, and helped to organize a session on CAS (computer algebra systems) at MathFest 2008. If you're a new math PhD, check this program out! I am a managing editor for Mathematica Militaris. I used to conduct the USMA Department of Mathematical Science's Problem of the Week competition. I have worked on some Rough Guides to Mathematics. I began this as a graduate student, but haven't done much recently. I have also been known to contribute to Wikipedia. |
My research interests include:
See the complete list…
See the complete list… |
He graduated from Yosemite High School in 1996, and was accepted to Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, CA, where students sing songs about slide rules and unicycle while juggling. He couldn’t use a slide rule, unicycle, or juggle, but did memorize 314 digits of pi to make sure he fit in. He also ran Division III cross country and track for the combined Claremont McKenna/Harvey Mudd team. During the summer, he spent one year doing research in combinatorics and fair division, and the next two in a summer program at the He matriculated in September 2000 to Oxford University. There he ran with the oldest and muddiest cross country club in the world, spent his early mornings rowing on the River Thames for Magdalen College, traveled in Europe, and theoretically worked on research involving knot theory, surgery, and hyperbolic volume. In 2002 he returned to Maryland and married Jennifer, a classmate from Harvey Mudd College. The wedding did not take place in the Camp Mabry chapel in Austin as planned, one small consequence of the tragedy that occurred on his 21st birthday. In August 2002 he began his doctoral studies at the University of Maryland. He found a mathematician scratching his head over some doodles on a chalkboard one day, and decided it would be fun to write equations using pictures so mathematicians wouldn’t recognize them. Those doodles became his PhD thesis, which was formally called “Trace Diagrams, Representations, and Low-Dimensional Topology”. As was pointed out during his thesis defense, the only low-dimensional topology in his thesis is the drawing of a pair of pants on the front cover. After successfully typesetting and defending his PhD thesis in April of 2006, he joined the Math Department at the United States Military Academy (West Point). He was thrilled in January 2007 to become the father of Micah Andrew Peterson. The little guy can't tell directions very well, but he seems anxious to digest calculus and does function continuously. |
I'm a Christian because I know without a doubt that God loves me. Find out more about why I believe. I occasionally write on life with faith and science.
My family is what makes it all worthwhile. I am blessed with a beautiful and supportive wife Jennifer and a curious and energetic son Micah. We also have two small dogs that keep us walking around the block in the winter… and two household robots. Between the dogs and the robots, any mess that Micah makes while eating doesn't last long.
When I have the time, I love to run and compete in triathlons. I enjoy camping, hiking, and being outdoors. I also give Micah shoulder rides and help him put together puzzles. Here's a fun video I put together of him taking a nap. |






using the 
. His only memory from this time is one very brilliant flash of light, although he discovered after returning from
that he could juggle. He was selected as a