Prof. Hazar Shtat - JordanIntroduction: In a side office attached to one of the world’s research centers, an unusual commotion is being stirred up by highly qualified professors and electrical and electronic engineers with their counterparts from the departments of theoretical and applied physics. On the other side, a group of veteran medical professors sit recording their notes, then one of them goes to a slide display board and begins a detailed explanation of the structure of the eye… a surreal scene that may not seem coherent at first glance. In another office attached to the same center, and perhaps to another center, a group of professors specializing in pure mathematics and others from the Department of Physical Mathematics sit with professional programmers to discuss a purely mathematical topic related to Fourier series in particular, and approximate solutions to differential equations in general. The discussion is limited to the most precise coefficients and partial variables that when taken into consideration, contribute to achieving the highest possible practical accuracy when performing this type of calculation. In a third, perhaps a fourth, fifth, and tenth side office, these scenes are repeated dozens of times.