The event is designed to support the adaptation of foreign students to the University environment and introduce them to the language and culture of Russia.
The story of MMD Professor who introduces talented students to the world of science.
The team won four medals in the individual category: two gold, one silver, and one bronze.
Artificial intelligence technologies can help to make a long, complex, and computationally intensive process much faster and produce an image that geoscientists can interpret.
Tamara Chuchuk hopes to start mass production of her installation since it has numerous practical applications.
The algorithm will make it possible to more quickly and accurately interpret data for forecasting mineral deposits and may be of interest to oil and gas companies.
The new youth lab鈥檚 priority is the development of software for processing active and passive seismic data.
The MathWay team took 29th place in the overall standings, became the best in Siberia, and was awarded a II Degree diploma. Four other teams received III Degree diplomas.
More than 120 young scientists from 18 cities including Novosibirsk, Tomsk, Irkutsk, Kazan, Moscow, St. Petersburg, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Surgut, Ufa etc. participated. One of the winners shared his impressions.
13 NSU students and professors presented 8 reports on the properties of cryptographic discrete functions and new methods for analyzing cryptographic algorithms. Alexander Bakharev, 1st-year MA student at the MMD won the student reports competition.
Students won six medals: two gold, one silver, and three bronze.
We are launching a series of interviews with foreign students. In their interviews they share their reasons for choosing NSU, the difficulties adapting to a new country, and their most vivid impressions of being a student. This interview tells the story of a student from China.