Welcome to the public homepage of Math F617 Functional Analysis, Spring 2026, in the Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
This Spring I plan to teach functional analysis in support of the finite element method. Each week I will start with a numerical computation of some kind, and then spend the rest of the week gathering the functional analytic definitions and theory to support it.
Infinite-dimensional topological vector spaces are the bread-and-butter of functional analysis. These spaces become useful because they can contain high-quality approximating finite-dimensional subspaces. This is best reflected in the finite element method. You will only rarely do finite element calculations themselves, and programming will not be an essential skill.
We will see how this structure works! It is experimental.
Instructor: Ed Bueler
Email me at elbueler@alaska.edu. I hold office hours in Chapman 306C.
Signing-up
If you plan to be present on campus in Fairbanks during the semester, please sign up for the in-person “901” section (crn 35010), and plan to attend lecture in Chapman 107. If you are remote, signing up for the web-based “701” section (crn 35018) is just fine!
Canvas course page
Log in to canvas.alaska.edu/courses/30068 for the lecture Zoom link, Homework and Exam solutions, and to see your grades.
Getting Started (WARNING: UNDER CONSTRUCTION!)
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Attend lectures: MWF 10:30-11:30am in Chapman 107, or online.
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Read the Syllabus (PDF).
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The Schedule (PDF) is my longer-term plan. Check it for exam dates and due dates, and for which topics come next!
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The daily log has the recent happenings, including handouts and worksheets as PDFs.
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Check out the nearly-weekly homework Assignments.
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There are three Exams, two Midterm Quizzes and a Final. All are in class, and the Final will happen at the scheduled time. See the Exams tab for review guides.
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What are we studying? Check out these Wikipedia pages for the topics we plan to touch:
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Videos which might help with “getting started”:
Site design derived from coordinated Calc I, an original Jekyll design by David Maxwell.




