Building a bridge between mathematicians and industry is both a chal-
lenging task and a valuable goal for the Institute for Mathematics and
its Applications (IMA). The rationale for the existence of the IMA is to
en- courage interaction between mathematicians and scientists who use
math- ematics. Some of this interaction should evolve around industrial
problems which mathematicians may be able to solve in "real time." Both
Industry and Mathematics benefit: Industry, by increase of mathematical
knowledge and ideas brought to bear upon their concerns, and
Mathematics, through the infusion of exciting new problems. In the past
ten months I have visited numerous industries and national laboratories,
and met with several hundred scientists to discuss mathe- matical
questions which arise in specific industrial problems. Many of the
problems have special features which existing mathematical theories do
not encompass; such problems may open new directions for research.
However, I have encountered a substantial number of problems to which
mathemati- cians should be able to contribute by providing either
rigorous proofs or formal arguments. The majority of scientists with
whom I met were engineers, physicists, chemists, applied mathematicians
and computer scientists. I have found them eager to share their problems
with the mathematical community. Often their only recourse with a
problem is to "put it on the computer." However, further insight could
be gained by mathematical analysis.