The relation between mathematics and physics has a long history, in which the role of number theory and of other more abstract parts of mathematics has recently become more prominent.More than ten years after a first meeting in 1989 between number theorists and physicists at the Centre de Physique d
Frontiers in number theory, physics, and geometry II
β Scribed by Pierre E. Cartier, Bernard Julia, Pierre Moussa, Pierre Vanhove
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 806
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Subjects
Π€ΠΈΠ·ΠΈΠΊΠ°;ΠΠ°ΡΠΌΠ΅ΡΠΎΠ΄Ρ ΠΈ ΠΌΠΎΠ΄Π΅Π»ΠΈΡΠΎΠ²Π°Π½ΠΈΠ΅ Π² ΡΠΈΠ·ΠΈΠΊΠ΅;
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<P>The relation between mathematics and physics has a long history, in which the role of number theory and of other more abstract parts of mathematics has recently become more prominent.</P><P>More than ten years after a first meeting in 1989 between number theorists and physicists at the Centre de
<P>The relation between mathematics and physics has a long history, in which the role of number theory and of other more abstract parts of mathematics has recently become more prominent.</P> <P>More than ten years after a first meeting in 1989 between number theorists and physicists at the Centre d
The relation between mathematics and physics has a long history, in which the role of number theory and of other more abstract parts of mathematics has recently become more prominent.More than ten years after a first meeting in 1989 between number theorists and physicists at the Centre de Physique d
The relation between mathematics and physics has a long history, in which the role of number theory and of other more abstract parts of mathematics has recently become more prominent. More than 10 years after a first meeting between number theorists and physicists at the Centre de Physique des Houch