Computational Geometry, also known as Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications, is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal for research in theoretical and applied computational geometry, its applications, techniques, and design and analysis of geometric algorithms. All aspects of computational geometry are covered, including the numerical, graph theoretical and combinatorial aspects, as well as fundamental problems in various areas of application of computational geometry: in computer graphics, pattern recognition, image processing, robotics, electronic design automation, CAD/CAM, and geographical information systems. The journal was founded in 1991 by Jörg-Rüdiger Sack and Jorge Urrutia.It is indexed by Mathematical Reviews, Zentralblatt MATH, Science Citation Index, and Current Contents/Engineering, Computing and Technology. (Wikipedia).
SIAM publishes 16 peer-reviewed journals covering a broad range of disciplines in applied math and computational science, including SIAM Review, a quarterly journal of expository survey and education-oriented papers; SIAM/ASA Journal on Uncertainty Quantification, all-electronic and new in
From playlist SIAM Conference Videos
Analytic geometry and the continuum (b) | Math History | NJ Wildberger
The development of Cartesian geometry by Descartes and Fermat was one of the main accomplishments of the 17th century, giving a computational approach to Euclidean geometry. Involved are conics, cubics, Bezout's theorem, and the beginnings of a projective view to curves. This merging of nu
From playlist MathHistory: A course in the History of Mathematics
SketchySVD - Joel Tropp, California Institute of Technology
This workshop - organised under the auspices of the Isaac Newton Institute on “Approximation, sampling and compression in data science” — brings together leading researchers in the general fields of mathematics, statistics, computer science and engineering. About the event The workshop ai
From playlist Mathematics of data: Structured representations for sensing, approximation and learning
Analytic geometry and the continuum (a) | Math History | NJ Wildberger
The development of Cartesian geometry by Descartes and Fermat was one of the main accomplishments of the 17th century, giving a computational approach to Euclidean geometry. Involved are conics, cubics, Bezout's theorem, and the beginnings of a projective view to curves. This merging of nu
From playlist MathHistory: A course in the History of Mathematics
This math book covers geometry, trigonometry, algebra, calculus, etc. It was published in 1965 and it is called Foundations of Advanced Mathematics and it was written by Kline, Oesterle, and Willson. Here is one version https://amzn.to/3EQuwqd Useful Math Supplies https://amzn.to/3Y5TGcv
From playlist Book Reviews
The Computational Complexity of Geometric Topology Problems - Greg Kuperberg
Greg Kuperberg University of California, Davis September 24, 2012 This talk will be a partial survey of the first questions in the complexity theory of geometric topology problems. What is the complexity, or what are known complexity bounds, for distinguishing n-manifolds for various n? Fo
From playlist Mathematics
Jean Bourgain - Decoupling in harmonic analysis and applications to PDE and number theory
Princeton University - January 26, 2016 This talk was part of "Analysis, PDE's, and Geometry: A conference in honor of Sergiu Klainerman."
From playlist Anlaysis, PDE's, and Geometry: A conference in honor of Sergiu Klainerman
Using Algebra and Geometry in the Real World
You hear terms like “algebra” and “geometry” and these theories we memorized in high school start to dance a jig in our heads – a jig many of us weren’t overly interested in! But the past decade has seen an explosion of applications of algebra, geometry, and topology to the real world, lik
From playlist What is math used for?
Affordable Mathematical Physics Book
In this short video I will show a book on mathematical physics. It is called Mathematical Physics and it was written by Donald H. Menzel. Do you have other book recommendations? If so, please leave a comment below. Here it is https://amzn.to/3iK4vRJ Useful Math Supplies https://amzn.to/3Y
From playlist Book Reviews
Lennart Carleson - The Abel Prize interview 2006
0:00 Glimpses of the Abel Prize ceremony made for Norwegian television 05:00 Interview proper starts (Norwegian) 07:46 (English) Almost-everywhere convergence of Fourier series for square-integrable (L^2) functions 10:08 Interesting example of need to have conviction about outcome before c
From playlist The Abel Prize Interviews
Alex Kontorovich: Improving math | 3b1b podcast #1
Alex Kontorovich is a research mathematician at Rutgers University, a distinguished visiting professor at the MoMath Museum, and Editor-in-Chief of Experimental Mathematics, among other things. The tweet referenced at the end: https://twitter.com/AlexKontorovich/status/1172715174786228224
From playlist 3b1b Podcast (reverse order)
ICM 2006 Closing Round Table Are pure and applied mathematics drifting apart? Intervention by John Ball (Slides https://www.mathunion.org/fileadmin/IMU/Videos/ICM2006/tars/table2006_ball.pdf) Intervention by Lennart Carleson (Slides https://www.mathunion.org/fileadmin/IMU/Videos/ICM2006/
From playlist Number Theory
Robert Adler interviewed by Omer Bobrowski (October 20, 2021)
Robert Adler interviewed by Omer Bobrowski (October 20, 2021) For more on the interview series, along with the advertisement posters, please see https://www.aatrn.net/interviews.
From playlist AATRN Interviews
Math Talk! Taylor Dupuy, professor of mathematics, (differential) algebraic geometry and IUTT.
A conversation with Dr. Dupuy about differential algebraic geometry, the abc-conjecture and IUTT, the field with one element, Clifford algebras, and more! Dr. Dupuy's channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHWnZ1NtJ4WvE5AHmNVXziw Homepage: https://www.uvm.edu/~tdupuy/ AWS: https://
From playlist Math Talk!
Bertrand Kerautret : Publier un journal en accès ouvert ou pas, l'exemple du Journal IPOL
Durant l'ANF du RNBM qui s'est déroulé la semaine du 16 au 20 octobre 2017, les journées du mardi et mercredi ont été consacrées à l'accès ouvert. Ces deux journées sont conçues pour s’adresser à un large public et doivent favoriser les échanges entre les différents acteurs de la publicati
From playlist Documentation mathématique
SHM - 20/03/15 - Maurice d’Ocagne (1862-1938) - Table ronde
Table ronde, avec la participation, outre des conférenciers, de David Aubin (IMJ, Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie), Christian Gilain (IMJ, Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie), Norbert Verdier (GHDSO, Université Paris-Sud)
From playlist Séminaire d'Histoire des Mathématiques
Check out our weekly system design newsletter: https://bit.ly/3tfAlYD Checkout our bestselling System Design Interview books: Volume 1: https://amzn.to/3Ou7gkd Volume 2: https://amzn.to/3HqGozy Digital version of System Design Interview books: https://bit.ly/3mlDSk9 ABOUT US: Covering
From playlist Computer Science Fundamentals
Optimal transport for machine learning - Gabriel Peyre, Ecole Normale Superieure
This workshop - organised under the auspices of the Isaac Newton Institute on “Approximation, sampling and compression in data science” — brings together leading researchers in the general fields of mathematics, statistics, computer science and engineering. About the event The workshop ai
From playlist Mathematics of data: Structured representations for sensing, approximation and learning
Seminar on Applied Geometry and Algebra (SIAM SAGA): Bernd Sturmfels
Date: Tuesday, February 9 at 11:00am EST (5:00pm CET) Speaker: Bernd Sturmfels, MPI MiS Leipzig / UC Berkeley Title: Linear Spaces of Symmetric Matrices. Abstract: Real symmetric matrices appear ubiquitously across the mathematical sciences, and so do linear spaces of such matrices. We
From playlist Seminar on Applied Geometry and Algebra (SIAM SAGA)