Students

Debbie Bennett-Wood

Debbie finished her thesis which was entitled "Numerical Studies of Self-Avoiding Walks" in 1998 and her thesis was subsequently passed. Dr Bennett-Wood was then employed, in a permanent position with Wesley College.

Andrew Rechnitzer

Andrew has been working on anisotropic lattice walk models with a view of relating the symmetry of the underlying rule to the universality class of the associated critical phenomena. He spent one year visiting the University in Bordeaux, France there as part of his studies for a Ph. D.. He submitted his thesis and was awarded a Ph. D. during 2000. He then went to work as a postdoctoral fellow in Toronto and has now returned to Melbourne as an ARC postdoctoral fellow.

Andrew Oppenheim

Andrew finished a Masters thesis on the combinatorics of lattice walks in 2002. His work focussed on the enumerative combinatorics of directed walks on lattices other than the square lattice.

Henry Wong

Henry worked on a variety of self-avoiding walk problems with Professor Tony Guttmann and myself. With me he studied the so-called "two-step restricted walk rules" using Monte Carlo simulations especially in three dimenions. His PhD thesis was passed in 2003. Henry is now working in psychology doing mathematical modelling of "social networks".

Peter Fox

Peter is working on his Masters thesis exploring various enumeration and simulational problems in lattice polymers.

 


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