Mathematical analysts | Number theorists

Marvin Knopp

Marvin Isadore Knopp (January 4, 1933 – December 24, 2011) was an American mathematician who worked primarily in number theory. He madenotable contributions to the theory of modular forms. (Wikipedia).

Marvin Knopp
Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Dancing Links" (February 22, 2000)

February 22, 2000 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Donald Knuth - "Integer Partitions and Set Partitions: A Marvelous Connection" (May 6, 2005)

May 6, 2005 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Sand Piles and Spanning Trees" (2004)

Don Knuth's 11th Annual Christmas Lecture December 13, 2004 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writ

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Hooray for Probability Theory" (October 29, 2004)

October 29, 2004 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Niebur Integrals and Mock Automorphic Forms - Wladimir de Azevedo Pribitkin

Wladimir de Azevedo Pribitkin College of Staten Island, CUNY March 17, 2011 Among the bounty of brilliancies bequeathed to humanity by Srinivasa Ramanujan, the circle method and the notion of mock theta functions strike wonder and spark intrigue in number theorists fresh and seasoned alike

From playlist Mathematics

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "The Joy of Asymptotics" (May 30, 2000)

May 30, 2000 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Notation" (October 17, 2003)

October 17, 2003 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Sideways Heaps" (2007)

Don Knuth's 13th Annual Christmas Tree Lecture December 3, 2007 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

Ramanujan: Making sense of 1+2+3+... = -1/12 and Co.

The Mathologer sets out to make sense of 1+2+3+ ... = -1/12 and some of those other notorious, crazy-looking infinite sum identities. The starting point for this video is the famous letter that led to the discovery of self-taught mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan in 1913 (Ramanujan i

From playlist Recent videos

Video thumbnail

RubyConf 2016 - Building HAL: Running Ruby with Your Voice by Jonan Scheffler

RubyConf 2016 - Building HAL: Running Ruby with Your Voice by Jonan Scheffler We’ve been living in the future for a full 15 years already and developers are still using antiquated technology like “keyboards” and “mice” to run their applications. We’re going to learn to use voice recognit

From playlist RubyConf 2016

Video thumbnail

Marvin Minsky: A Society of Minds | Episode 1613 | Closer To Truth

One of artificial intelligence’s pioneers, Marvin Minsky, died in 2016. With this episode, we examine his penetrating analysis of brains, minds, AI, religion, and God. Season 16, Episode 13 - #CloserToTruth ▶Register for free at CTT.com for subscriber-only exclusives: http://bit.ly/2GX

From playlist Closer To Truth | Season 16

Video thumbnail

Numberphile v. Math: the truth about 1+2+3+...=-1/12

Confused 1+2+3+…=-1/12 comments originating from that infamous Numberphile video keep flooding the comment sections of my and other math YouTubers videos. And so I think it’s time to have another serious go at setting the record straight by having a really close look at the bizarre calcula

From playlist Recent videos

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Fun With Binary Decision Diagrams (BDDs)" (June 5, 2008)

June 5, 2008 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific writings of the century.

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

History of Science and Technology Q&A for Kids and Others (Jan. 14, 2021)

Stephen Wolfram hosts a live and unscripted Ask Me Anything about the history of science and technology for all ages. Originally livestreamed at: https://twitch.tv/stephen_wolfram Outline of Q&A: 0:00 Stream starting 2:33 Stephen begins the Q&A 3:33 Begin discussing the history of LISP 8

From playlist Stephen Wolfram Ask Me Anything About Science & Technology

Video thumbnail

Ep 041: If Freud is the Butt of the Jokes, What Does it Mean? What About Bob (1991) w/ Jordan Wagge

Join Alex and returning guest host Dr. Jordan Wagge (Twitter: @jorowags) as they take a closer look at the goofy Bill Murray comedy What About Bob? (1991). This Frank Oz classic that also stars Richard Dreyfuss as Dr. Leo Marvin is a wild ride in anxiety, therapy, and Freud jokes! Alex and

From playlist CinemaPsych Podcast

Video thumbnail

The Fiancée of Danger, Marie Marvingt

Marie Marvingt was the most accomplished woman athlete her era, but so much more. The History Guy recalls the life of perhaps the most amazing person you've never heard of. This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected a

From playlist Extraordinary people and personalities

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Don Knuth—"A Conjecture That Had To Be True" (2017)

Donald Knuth's 23rd Annual Christmas Tree Lecture: A Conjecture That Had To Be True Speaker: Donald Knuth 2017 A few months ago, the speaker did some extensive calculations relating to a curious problem in combinatorial geometry; and the resulting numbers satisfied an amazing formula. Al

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

The Haircut (Canadian Immigrant Story) | Real Stories Indie Docs

Marvin is 65. He hates to get his hair cut. With a modest (but expanding) grey afro on his head, Marvin's hair isn't what you might expect on a senior executive who lives in suburbia. Marvin immigrated from Jamaica to Ottawa in the 1950s, when Black immigrants were rare and often unwelco

From playlist Real Stories Indie Docs

Video thumbnail

Stanford Lecture: Donald Knuth - "Spanning Trees and Aspects" (2009)

Don Knuth's 15th Annual Christmas Tree Lecture December 8, 2009 Professor Knuth is the Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. Dr. Knuth's classic programming texts include his seminal work The Art of Computer Programming, Volumes 1-3, widely considered to be among the best scientific

From playlist Donald Knuth Lectures

Video thumbnail

ASTOUNDING: 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + ... = -1/12

Read this too: http://www.bradyharanblog.com/blog/2015/1/11/this-blog-probably-wont-help More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ EXTRA ARTICLE BY TONY: http://bit.ly/TonyResponse The sum of all natural numbers (from 1 to infinity) produces an "astounding" result. ANOTHER PROOF &

From playlist Tony Padilla on Numberphile

Related pages

Modular form | Mathematics | Emil Grosswald | Paul T. Bateman | Number theory