You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
One of the unique Norwegian mathematicians, who continues to have an impact on modern mathematical development, is Oystein Ore. He was educated at the Universities of Oslo, Gottingen and Paris. From 1927 he was a professor of Mathematics at Yale University. Among his many contributions, his work on finite mathematics is still of great value to researchers in mathematics and in that type of engineering now considered important to the further development of information theory. The theory of error control and related areas of research now of great importance to communication theory and practice may still benefit from his far reaching work. It is hoped that the bibliography of Oystein Ore will be an aid to those who benefit from his work which is scattered throughout the mathematical literature.
Unusually clear, accessible introduction covers counting, properties of numbers, prime numbers, Aliquot parts, Diophantine problems, congruences, much more. Bibliography.
Classic text on graph theory, brought up to date by Robin Wilson, himself a best-selling maths author.
A considerable number of problems have been included. Many of these are quite simple; others are more in the nature of proposed research problems.
None
Niels Henrik Abel was first published in 1957. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. Few men are more famous in the world of modern mathematics than Niels Henrik Abel, whose concepts and results are familiar to all present-day mathematicians. This volume, the first biography of Abel published in English, presents the story of the brilliant young Norwegian whose scientific achievements were not fully recognized until after his untimely death. It is also a case history of our perennial problem of how to detect genius and ease its path. Abel wa...
The Four-Color Problem
None