缅北强奸

St. 缅北强奸

Mathematical Resources


Please direct reports of broken links to Dr. Chris Hill.

St. Bonaventure Resources


  • The Mathematics Suite (De La Roche 301) contains resources on mathematical careers, graduate school, and problem solving, and houses numerous math texts and journals. The suite is also a comfortable place to study or relax next to the math professors' offices.
  • Career and Professional Readiness Center 
  • Friedsam Memorial Library 
  •   (for St. Bonaventure users only)
  • Computer Science Department
  • The Learning Center  The Learning Center offers walk-in labs and individual tutoring, all free, for several (mostly 100-level) mathematics courses. The Center is located on the first floor of Plassmann Hall.

Art


  • Architecture
    • .  Liz Stinson writes about the design of the new concert hall in Hamburg, Germany for Wired.
  • Crocheting & Knitting
    •   Mathematics through knitting and crochet, by married couple Pat Ashforth and Steve Plummer. Alex Bellos wrote a lovely piece about Ashforth and Plummer's work for The Guardian: .
  • Multi-media
    •   Mathematicians and artists continue to create strong, stunning works in all media and to explore the visualization of mathematics.
    • 's art is inspired by mathematics and nature.
  • Painting
    •  turns mathematics and science into art. He has been described as
  • Sculpture
    •  is a research professor in the engineering school at Stony Brook University and a freelance mathematical sculptor/designer.
    •  presents "virtual" mathematical sculptures by Anton Bakker. Bakker's art illustrates concepts such as curves, lines, knots, spirals, M枚bius strips, and fractals. This website includes an augmented reality (AR) feature: by viewing a sculpture on your smartphone and clicking the 鈥淎ctivate AR鈥 button, your device will put the sculpture within your environment. 
    • , the Hyperspace Bypass Construction Zone, is a series of large scale polyhedral installations and artworks that investigate geometry through light, shadow, and perception, by Serge Beaulieu and Yelena Filipchuk. The project is inspired by the intersection of math, science, technology, geometry, material, light, and of course, the artists鈥 favorite book, The Hitchhiker鈥檚 Guide to the Galaxy.
    •  pioneered , the structural principle of "floating compression." William Grimes discussed Snelson's life and art in an obituary for The New York Times.
  • Writing
    •   An article in The New Yorker by Alexander Nazaryan.

Blogs, E-zines, & YouTube Channels


  •   This YouTube channel by Grant Sanderson is "some combination of math and entertainment, depending on your disposition. The goal is for explanations to be driven by animations and for difficult problems to be made simple with changes in perspective."
  •   These essays are designed for those who have already discovered the joys of mathematics as well as for those who are curious about its promise. Each column spotlights math that is useful, fun, inspiring, or startling.
  •   A survey of math in the news, courtesy of the AMS.
  •   Professor Burkard Polster invites you to "Enter the world of the Mathologer for really accessible explanations of hard and beautiful math(s)."
  •   This YouTube channel by Brady Haran is filled with accessible, entertaining, and informative videos about numbers.
  •   A superb free online magazine dedicated to illuminating math and science research.
  •  Updates on Tao's research and expository papers, discussion of open problems, and other math-related topics. Tao is one of the world's greatest mathematicians and is exceptionally articulate and generous with his insights.

Computing and Graphing


  • Computing and graphing resources for Calculus I and II
    •   A great tool for investigating direction fields of first-order differential equations.
    • , courtesy of . Two samples are given below.
    •   Computes Riemann sums and displays the corresponding diagrams.
    •   A Geogebra resource that graphs approximations for solids of revolution using the disk method.
  • Computing and graphing resources for Calculus III
    • , courtesy of . Two samples are given below.
    •   A great tool for graphing surfaces, contour plots, space curves, vector fields, vectors, and more. Images can be printed or downloaded.
    •   Graphs parametrically-defined curves in 2d.
    •   Graphs a parametrically-defined curve in 3d (or 2d if z is zero), along with velocity and acceleration vectors. 
    • Academo graphing tools
      •   Graphs a single function of two variables. 
      •   Plots contour curves for a function of two variables.
      •   Plots pairs of vectors in 3d, along with their sum, difference, and cross product. 
  • Computing resources for statistics
    •  Computes the correlation coefficient and the regression line and graphs the regression line for a set of data points.
  • Free mathematics software packages (alternatives to excellent but typically expensive programs such as , , , and )
    •   A powerful computer algebra system.
    •   A powerful computer algebra system.
    •   A powerful numerical computation package.
    •   A powerful statistical computation package.

Culture


  •  
  • This well-organized searchable site lists over four hundred works of fiction with mathematical content.
  •  A collection of movie clips in which mathematics appears.

Data


  • The U.S. Census Bureau provides real-time estimates for the U.S. and world populations. The Census Bureau also provides from the first in 1790 to the most recent.
  •   This amazing map animation, created by WorldPopulationHistory.org, shows the growth of humanity over the last 2000 years compressed into three and a half minutes. In the video, the map animation starts at about 1:18 and ends at about 4:48.
  • This site displays an estimate of the national debt and a wealth of related figures at the second you visit it. The Treasury Department provides for the national debt for any business day since 3/31/05 (and monthly or yearly estimates even further back).
  • The first graph on this page from the CalculatedRiskBlog displays the number of FDIC-insured bank and thrift failures by year from 1934 to 2017. The economic woes of 2008 and 2009 may lead one to expect that the number of bank failures in these years were the highest since the Great Depression. But as this graph shows, the numbers of bank failures during the S&L crisis of the '80s and '90s were much higher.
  •  Maintained by the Federal Register, this site includes electoral and popular vote tallies for every presidential election, from the first in 1789 to the most recent.
  • This Wikipedia page and its linked pages provide IAAF-sanctioned world records in track and field, road running, and racewalking for men and women.
  • The Internet Systems Consortium provides survey data for the number of Internet hosts from August 1981 through the present year. The number of hosts effectively measures the size of the Internet. Watch the number of hosts grow from 213 in 1981 to over one billion in 2017.

Data Science


Data Science seeks to draw useful information from large data sets, be they numerical, textual, or visual. It is an amalgam of statistical and machine learning, of data mining and data visualization techniques.

The Harvard Business Review asserts that data scientist will be the . McKinsey & Company predict a .

Applications of data science include...

  • helping Netflix, Amazon and Facebook to make the recommendations they do;
  • improving the flexibility of the gps system in your auto;
  • ;
  • ;
  • refining investment bankers' rates of return in the stock market;
  • increasing the survival rates of supremely premature babies.

Curious? Here are a few excellent resources.

  • , by Mayer-Sch枚nberger and Cukier.
  • , by Jeffrey Stanton & Robert De Graaf. A free ebook for a free introductory course at Syracuse University.
  • , by John Foreman. Data science in business.
  • , edited by Jonathan Gray, Liliana Bounegru, and Lucy Chambers. Big Data in Journalism.

Geometry


  •   In two dimensions, there are infinitely many regular polygons. In three dimensions, there are just five regular polyhedra, also known as Platonic solids. What happens in four dimensions? Five? Six?
  •   An interactive demonstration of the Wallace鈥揃olyai鈥揋erwien Theorem. You draw two simple polygons, and the website shows how they are equidecomposable.
  •   A surprising result about stacking circles, discovered with wine bottles.

History


  •  
  •   This resource, provided by the Mathematical Association of America, presents historical events related to mathematics that occurred on the current day or of any day of the visitor's choosing in the calendar year.

Meta-Sites


  • A collection of short articles designed to provide an introduction to the areas of modern mathematics and pointers to further information.

Number Theory


  •   Founded by Neil Sloane, this database is an incredible resource for professional and amateur mathematicians and anyone who enjoys numbers. The site can be searched by leading terms, name, or keyword. Each sequence may be experienced visually (as a graph) or aurally (as music). The database contains over 300,000 entries.
  •  This YouTube channel by Brady Haran is filled with accessible, entertaining, and informative videos about numbers.
  • Prime number research, records, and resources.
  • Pi Day Our Pi Day page includes resources about the amazing number pi and about the day of celebration named for it.
  •  Part of the Archimedes Laboratory Project, these pages provide a wealth of interesting facts about many numbers. Caution: Some assertions on these pages are false. (E.g., "The question whether 'zero' is odd or even seems to be totally subjective!" For the record, zero is definitely even, because it's twice an integer.)

Potpourri



Probability and Statistics


  • George Reese's discussion of the classic problem in probability, which includes a Java applet for simulating the underlying experiment.
  •   provides data and statistical analyses in politics, economics, and sports. The site was created by Nate Silver, who is the current editor.

Problem Solving


  •  Problem solving resources for motivated students grades 5鈥12 and beyond.
  • A repository of mathematical know-how.

Professional Societies


    •  (the awesome regional section of the MAA to which St. Bonaventure belongs)
  • (National mathematics honor society)

Projects


  • A hexastix is a mathematical "sculpture" made from 72 pencils. The pencils are arranged in four interlaced hexagonal rings of 18 pencils. The idea for this amazing project originated with mathematical artist George Hart.
  • A tetrablerone is a mathematical "sculpture" made from 12 Toblerone packages. The unusual shapes of Toblerone packages---long triangular prisms---make them ideal for a very cool (if somewhat expensive) math project. The 12 Toblerones are arranged in four interlaced triangular groups of three.
  • Card Constructions: Lovely mathematical projects made from playing cards, courtesy of mathematical artist George Hart.
    • . One is a 60-card construction based on the deltoidal hexacontahedron, and the other is a 30-card construction based on the rhombic triacontahedron. These projects are extensions of Hart's .
  • Tensegrity structures: polyhedral projects, courtesy of Angela Yu, made of paper straws and rubber bands, based on the principle of .

Puzzles and Games


  •  This site appears to read your mind... How does it do it? (The trick is based on some elementary number theory.)
  • A column written for MAA Online (the web site for the Mathematical Association of America). Ed is also the webmaster for MathPuzzle.com.
  • An extraordinary collection of mathematical puzzles and links to more mathematical puzzles, maintained by Ed Pegg Jr.
  • A list of web pages, compiled by Ken Duisenberg, that pose (mostly) mathematical problems for anyone to solve.

Shopping


  •   Math tee-shirts, mugs, and more.
  •   Mathematical curiosities, including puzzles, games, and apparel, often relating to math videos by Steve Mould, Matt Parker, and James Grime. Based in the United Kingdom (hence "maths").
  •   The definitive source for posters, t-shirts, puzzles, calendars, and other items decorated with the art of M.C. Escher.
  •   Math tee-shirts, mugs, and more.

Teaching


  • of K-12 Science/Technology/Engineering/Mathematics (STEM) education programs in the Cattaraugus County area.
  • , by Liping Ma. ISBN-13: 978-0415873840. This outstanding book describes the deep understanding of fundamental mathematics that all elementary teachers need. Ma finds that such profound understanding is more common among Chinese teachers than among U.S. teachers, despite the fact that Chinese teachers receive less formal training than their counterparts in the States. Ma's exceptionally well-written book is highly recommended for any person who teaches or plans to teach K-6 mathematics.
  • Tips on how to study mathematics, how to approach problem-solving, how to study for and take exams, and when and how to get help.
  • Each of these entertaining games and puzzles sharpens problem-solving skills and teaches a bit of mathematics. A Java-enabled browser is required to play along.

Typing Mathematics


  • Typing Mathematics: LaTeX This page addresses issues commonly faced by students (particularly St. Bonaventure students) who are writing papers or giving presentations with substantial mathematical content.

Visualization


  • is a collection of images in the Swarthmore College website that illustrate and illuminate certain mathematical concepts. Images are accompanied by discussions of the mathematics underlying them.