Problems in applied mathematics: selections from SIAM review
โ Scribed by Murray S. Klamkin
- Book ID
- 127456874
- Publisher
- Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 6 MB
- Category
- Library
- City
- Philadelphia
- ISBN
- 0898712599
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
People in all walks of life--and perhaps mathematicians especially--delight in working on problems for the sheer pleasure of meeting a challenge. The problem section of SIAM Review has always provided such a challenge for mathematicians. The section was started to offer classroom instructors and their students as well as other interested problemists, a set of problems--solved or unsolved--illustrating various applications of mathematics. In many cases the unsolved problems were eventually solved. Problems in Applied Mathematics is a compilation of 380 of SIAM Review's most interesting problems dating back to the journal's inception in 1959.
The problems are classified into 22 broad categories including Series, Special Functions, Integrals, Polynomials, Probability, Combinatorics, Matrices and Determinants, Optimization, Inequalities, Ordinary Differential Equations, Boundary Value Problems, Asymptotics and Approximations, Mechanics, Graph Theory, and Geometry.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
problems and answers impossible to find in any other single source. Topics include steady-state harmonic oscillations, the Fourier method, and the eigenfunction method for solving inhomogeneous problems. More advanced problems deal with integral transforms, curvilinear coordinates, and integral equa
This is a specific example of the problem type treated in 1. 'It would be equally appropriate to ask for w ( z ) with z < 0.
This is an overview of the current state of knowledge along with open problems and perspectives, clarified in such fields as non-standard inferences in description logics, logic of provability, logical dynamics and computability theory. The book includes contributions concerning the role of logic to