Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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846958
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Main Entry
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Cipra, Barry
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Title & Author
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What's happening in the mathematical sciences /\ Barry Cipra ; edited by Paul Zorn.
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Publication Statement
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Providence, RI :: American Mathematical Society,, ©1993-
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Page. NO
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volumes :: illustrations (some color) ;; 26-28 cm
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ISBN
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0821803557
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: 0821807668
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: 0821829041
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: 0821835858
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: 0821844784
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: 0821849999
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: 0821887394
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: 0821889982
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: 0821889990
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: 1470422042
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: 9780821803554
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: 9780821807668
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: 9780821829042
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: 9780821835852
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: 9780821844786
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: 9780821849996
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: 9780821887394
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: 9780821889985
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: 9780821889992
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: 9781470422042
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Notes
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Cover title.
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Vol. 6 [by] Dana Mackenzie and Barry Cipra, vol. 7-<9> [by] Dana Mackenzie, vol. 10 [by] Dana Mackenzie, Barry Cipra.
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Contents
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v. 1. Equations come to life in mathematical biology -- New computer insights from "transparent" proofs -- You can't always hear the shape of a drum -- Environmentally sound mathematics -- Disproving the obvious in higher dimensions -- Collaboration closes in on closed geodesics -- Crystal clear computations -- Camp geometry -- Number theorists uncover a slew of prime imposters -- Map-coloring theorists look at new worlds.
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v. 10. Origami: unfolding the future -- Prime clusters and gaps: out-experting the experts -- The truth shall set your fee -- Climate past, present, and future -- Following in Sherlock Holmes' bike tracks -- Quod erat demonstrandum -- The Kadison-Singer problem: a fine balance -- A pentagonal search pays off - The brave new world of sports analytics.
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v. 2. "A truly remarkable proof" -- From knot to unknot -- New wave mathematics -- Mathematical insights for medical imaging -- Parlez-vous wavelets? -- Random algorithms leave little to chance -- Soap solution -- Straightening out nonlinear codes -- Quite easily done -- (Vector) field of dreams.
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v. 3. Fermat's Theorem--at last! -- A tale of two theories -- Computer science discovers DNA -- Divide and conquer -- The gentle art of control -- Computational fluid dynamics--verging on turbulence -- Cellular automata offer new outlook on life, the universe, and everything -- Are group theorists simpleminded? -- The secret life of large numbers -- In math we trust.
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v. 4. A blue-letter day for computer chess -- A prime case of chaos -- Proof by example : a mathematician's mathematician -- Computers take algebraic geometry back to its roots -- As easy as EQP -- Beetlemania : Chaos in ecology -- From wired to weird -- Tales from the cryptosystem -- But is it math? -- Mathematical discovery (by Henri Poincaré).
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v. 5. New heights for number theory -- A mathematical twist to protein folding -- Nothing to sphere but sphere itself -- Finite math -- The mathematics of traffic jams -- Rewriting history -- It's a small, big, small, big world -- A celestial Pas de Trois -- Think and grow rich -- Ising on the cake.
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v. 6. First of seven millennium problems nears completion -- Classifying hyperbolic manifolds--all's well that ends well -- Digits of Pi -- Combinatoricists solve a Venn-erable problem -- New insights into prime numbers -- From Rubik's cube to quadratic number fields ... and beyond -- Vortices in the Navier-Stokes equation -- Fluid dynamics explains mysteries of insect motion -- Brownian motion, phase transitions, and conformal maps -- Smooth(ed) moves.
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v. 7. A new twist in knot theory -- Error-term roulette and the Sat-Tate conjecture -- The fifty-one percent solution -- Dominos, anyone? -- Not seeing is believing -- Getting with the (Mori) program -- The book that time couldn't erase -- Charting a 248-dimensional world -- Compressed sensing makes every pixel count.
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v. 8. Accounting for taste -- A brave new symplectic world -- Mathematics and the financial crisis -- The ultimate billiard shot -- SimPatient -- Instant randomness -- IN search of quantum chaos -- 3-D surprises -- -As one heroic age ends, a new one begins.
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v. 9. Massive breakthrough -- Tubing through hyperspace -- Tsunamis: learning from math, learning from the past -- Today's forecast: ten percent chance of burglary -- Topologists cross four off "bucket list" -- Mathematicians do the twist -- The right epidemic at the right time -- Thinking topically -- Thinking tropically.
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Subject
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Mathematics.
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Subject
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Mathematics.
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Dewey Classification
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510
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LC Classification
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QA3.C57 1993
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Added Entry
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Mackenzie, Dana
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Zorn, Paul,1951-
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Added Entry
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American Mathematical Society,issuing body.
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