Graph theorists | Number theorists

Paul A. Catlin

Paul Allen Catlin (June 25, 1948 – April 20, 1995) was a mathematician, professor of mathematics who worked in graph theory and number theory. He wrote a significant paper on the series of chromatic numbers and Brooks' theorem, titled Hajós graph coloring conjecture: variations and counterexamples. (Wikipedia).

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INTERVIEW AT CIRM : MICHAEL ARTIN

Michael ARTIN participated in the "Artin Approximation and Infinite dimensional Geometry" event organized at CIRM in March 2015, which was part of the Jean-Morlet semester held by Herwig Hauser. Michael Artin is an American mathematician and a professor emeritus in the Massachusetts Ins

From playlist Jean-Morlet Chair's guests - Interviews

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Lagrange Bicentenary - Cédric Villani's conference

From the stability of the Solar system to the stability of plasmas

From playlist Bicentenaire Joseph-Louis Lagrange

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Interview at Cirm: Howard Masur

Howard Masur is an American mathematician who works on topology, geometry and combinatorial group theory. Masur was an invited speaker at the 1994 International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich. and is a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. Along with Yair Minsky, Masur is one

From playlist English interviews - Interviews en anglais

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Can you find me? (Streetview on the Great Barrier Reef) - Smarter Every Day 114

Click to Find me on the Reef! http://bit.ly/FindDestin Share via Twitter: http://bit.ly/TwtReef FB: http://bit.ly/FBReef Look at the Data http://globalreefrecord.org/maps Official Comment Thread: http://bit.ly/1m39Zh9 Find me? Tweet me & Catlin SeaView or download music here ⇊⇊ facebook.c

From playlist Great Barrier Reef - Deep Dive

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Google Street View in the Great Barrier Reef

Subscribe to the Catlin Seaview Survey here: http://www.youtube.com/catlinseaviewsurvey The Catlin Seaview Survey will be taking thousands of 360 degree panoramas of the Great Barrier Reef, not just for science, but so that every person with an internet connection can experience the world

From playlist Biology

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Q&A: Black Holes, Symmetries and Impossible Triangles - In Conversation with Roger Penrose

Sir Roger Penrose Kt OM FRS is Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor at Oxford. He won the Nobel Prize in Physics and the Wolf Prize in Physics and was appointed to the Order of Merit. His work spans general relativity, black holes, cosmology, tiling theory and the theory of mind. Thomas Fink is

From playlist Black holes

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Madison Ruby 2012 - Your User: The Animal

Your User: The Animal by: Hampton Catlin Being programmers, we think of our users like we think of our code. That is: rationally. However, our users are emotional, irrational, and specifically evolved animals. The study of Sociobiology has some really interesting insights for software dev

From playlist Madison Ruby 2012

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The Future of Sass by Hampton Catlin

A glimpse of some of the features coming to Sass in the pending 3.2 release. Plus, a huge announcement about the project that's been months in the making as we have secretly toiled away on something that we think will be awesome. Hear it first at this talk. Repositories will be made public

From playlist Rails Conf 2012

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Partial Proof of L'Hopital's Rule (Only Form 0/0)

This video provides a proof to L'Hopitals Rule using the alternative definition of a derivative for the indeterminate form 0/0. http://mathispower4u.com

From playlist Newton’s Method and L’Hopital’s Rule

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Coral Bleaching in the Great Barrier Reef | Years of Living Dangerously

Joshua Jackson is in the Great Barrier Reef experiencing the effect climate change is having on the world’s coral reefs. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe ➡ Watch all clips of Years of Living Dangerously here: http://bit.ly/WatchYearsofLivingDangerously ➡ Get More Years of Living

From playlist Nature & Environment | National Geographic

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Astronomy Cast Ep. 448: Prepping for the Eclipse

Join +Fraser Cain and +Pamela Gay for a live episode of Astronomy Cast. We'll record our 30-minute show, and then stay tuned for them to answer questions! Ep. 448: Prepping for the Eclipse

From playlist Great American Solar Eclipse Playlist

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Antonín Dvořák: Symphony No. 9 "From the New World", a commentary by Joseph Horowitz | Khan Academy

Created by All-Star Orchestra. Missed the previous lesson? https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/music/music-masterpieces-old-new/antonin-dvorak-music/v/dvorak-four Music on Khan Academy: Music has sometimes reflected, and at other times challenged repressive ideologies. Dmitri Shostako

From playlist Masterpieces old and new | Music | Khan Academy

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How to Make a Dress: Domestic Labor, Internationalism, and the Radical Pedagogy of Elizabeth Catlett

In “How to Make a Dress,” Christina Heatherton examines the early life of legendary artist, Elizabeth Catlett. Tracing her lesser known path through Chicago's South Side Community Arts Center and Harlem's Washington Carver School during the Great Depression, and later, the Taller de Gráphi

From playlist Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration (RITM)

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Celebrating Michael Levitt's Nobel Prize

Three past Nobel Prize winners were in attendance when Stanford's newest laureate spoke to the press. They share their reflections on a man President John Hennessy calls "a leader in the field that he helped start." For news and conversation about the award, visit: http://stanford.io/nobe

From playlist Stanford 2013 Nobel Prize Winners

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New U.S. Administration’s Policy Towards Eastern and Central Europe

David Cameron, Professor of Political Science; Director of European Union Studies Program (relations with Central European states) Thomas Graham, Senior Fellow, Jackson Institute (relations with Russia) Yuriy Sergeyev, Rice Faculty Fellow, Yale (relations with Ukraine) Sponsored by the Eur

From playlist The MacMillan Center

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Interview at Cirm: Konstantin Khanin

Chaire Jean-Morlet - First Semester 2017: 'KPZ Universality and Directed Polymers' Konstantin "Kostya" Mikhailovich Khanin is a Russian mathematician and physicist. Khanin received his PhD from the Landau Institute of Theoretical Physics in Moscow and continued working there as a research

From playlist Jean-Morlet Chair - Khanin/Shlosman - 1st Semester 2017

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Exigencies: From Impermanent Emergencies to Enduring Exceptions: Dahl’s Nightmare

Professor Katznelson is Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History at Columbia University. He is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society. Katznelson is a former president both of the American Political Science Association an

From playlist The MacMillan Center

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Michael Levitt: 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Press Conference (Livestream Version)

Michael Levitt, professor of structural biology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, has won the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He shares the prize with Martin Karplus of Université de Strasbourg, France, and Harvard University, and Arieh Warshel of the University of Southern Cal

From playlist Stanford 2013 Nobel Prize Winners

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Protein evolution (Lecture - 01) by Lucy Colwell

Winter School on Quantitative Systems Biology DATE:04 December 2017 to 22 December 2017 VENUE:Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bengaluru The International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS) and the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), are organizing a Winter S

From playlist Winter School on Quantitative Systems Biology

Related pages

Brooks' theorem | Journal of Number Theory | Graph theory | Mathematics | Hugo Hadwiger | Paul Erdős | Discrete Mathematics (journal) | Number theory | Graph coloring