Multiplication

Slonimski's Theorem

Slonimski's Theorem is an observation by Hayyim Selig Slonimski that the sequence of carry digits in a multiplication table is the Farey sequence. This observation allowed Slonimski to create very compact multiplication tables for use in hand calculations. He received several awards for different devices for presenting these tables. The most common format were Joffe Bars similar to Napier's Rods. Joffe Bars were popular in Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th century. (Wikipedia).

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Introduction to additive combinatorics lecture 1.8 --- Plünnecke's theorem

In this video I present a proof of Plünnecke's theorem due to George Petridis, which also uses some arguments of Imre Ruzsa. Plünnecke's theorem is a very useful tool in additive combinatorics, which implies that if A is a set of integers such that |A+A| is at most C|A|, then for any pair

From playlist Introduction to Additive Combinatorics (Cambridge Part III course)

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Introduction to additive combinatorics lecture 10.8 --- A weak form of Freiman's theorem

In this short video I explain how the proof of Freiman's theorem for subsets of Z differs from the proof given earlier for subsets of F_p^N. The answer is not very much: the main differences are due to the fact that cyclic groups of prime order do not have lots of subgroups, so one has to

From playlist Introduction to Additive Combinatorics (Cambridge Part III course)

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Norbert Mauser: The quantum Vlasov equation

Abstract: We present the Quantum Vlasov or Wigner equation as a "phase space" presentation of quantum mechanics that is close to the classical Vlasov equation, but where the "distribution function" w(x,v,t) will in general have also negative values. We discuss the relation to the classical

From playlist Mathematical Physics

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Peter PATZT - High dimensional cohomology of SL_n(Z) and its principal congruence subgroups 1

Group cohomology of arithmetic groups is ubiquitous in the study of arithmetic K-theory and algebraic number theory. Rationally, SL_n(Z) and its finite index subgroups don't have cohomology above dimension n choose 2. Using Borel-Serre duality, one has access to the high dimensions. Church

From playlist École d'Été 2022 - Cohomology Geometry and Explicit Number Theory

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Weakly Modular Functions | The Geometry of SL2,Z, Section 1.4

We provide an alternative motivation for the definition of weakly modular functions. My Twitter: https://twitter.com/KristapsBalodi3 Weakly Modular Functions (0:00) Boring Functions on Compact Riemann Surfaces (2:06) Transforming the Transformation Property (9:15)

From playlist The Geometry of SL(2,Z)

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The J function, sl(2) and the Jacobi identity | Universal Hyperbolic Geometry 19 | NJ Wildberger

We review the basic connection between hyperbolic points and matrices, and connect the J function, which computes the joins of points or the meets of lines, with the Lie bracket of 2x2 matrices. This connects with the Lie algebra called sl(2) in the projective setting. The Jacobi identity

From playlist Universal Hyperbolic Geometry

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Proof: Supremum and Infimum are Unique | Real Analysis

If a subset of the real numbers has a supremum or infimum, then they are unique! Uniqueness is a tremendously important property, so although it is almost complete trivial as far as difficulty goes in this case, we would be ill-advised to not prove these properties! In this lesson we'll be

From playlist Real Analysis

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Discrete Math - 4.1.1 Divisibility

The definition and properties of divisibility with proofs of several properties. Formulas for quotient and remainder, leading into modular arithmetic. Textbook: Rosen, Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications, 7e Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLl-gb0E4MII28GykmtuBXNU

From playlist Discrete Math I (Entire Course)

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The Campbell-Baker-Hausdorff and Dynkin formula and its finite nature

In this video explain, implement and numerically validate all the nice formulas popping up from math behind the theorem of Campbell, Baker, Hausdorff and Dynkin, usually a.k.a. Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff formula. Here's the TeX and python code: https://gist.github.com/Nikolaj-K/8e9a345e4c932

From playlist Algebra

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Calculus 1 (Stewart) Ep 22, Mean Value Theorem (Oct 28, 2021)

This is a recording of a live class for Math 1171, Calculus 1, an undergraduate course for math majors (and others) at Fairfield University, Fall 2021. The textbook is Stewart. PDF of the written notes, and a list of all episodes is at the class website. Class website: http://cstaecker.f

From playlist Math 1171 (Calculus 1) Fall 2021

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Equidistribution of Unipotent Random Walks on Homogeneous spaces by Emmanuel Breuillard

PROGRAM : ERGODIC THEORY AND DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS (HYBRID) ORGANIZERS : C. S. Aravinda (TIFR-CAM, Bengaluru), Anish Ghosh (TIFR, Mumbai) and Riddhi Shah (JNU, New Delhi) DATE : 05 December 2022 to 16 December 2022 VENUE : Ramanujan Lecture Hall and Online The programme will have an emphasis

From playlist Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems 2022

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What is Green's theorem? Chris Tisdell UNSW

This lecture discusses Green's theorem in the plane. Green's theorem not only gives a relationship between double integrals and line integrals, but it also gives a relationship between "curl" and "circulation". In addition, Gauss' divergence theorem in the plane is also discussed, whic

From playlist Vector Calculus @ UNSW Sydney. Dr Chris Tisdell

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Real Analysis Ep 32: The Mean Value Theorem

Episode 32 of my videos for my undergraduate Real Analysis course at Fairfield University. This is a recording of a live class. This episode is more about the mean value theorem and related ideas. Class webpage: http://cstaecker.fairfield.edu/~cstaecker/courses/2020f3371/ Chris Staecker

From playlist Math 3371 (Real analysis) Fall 2020

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Pythagorean theorem - What is it?

► My Geometry course: https://www.kristakingmath.com/geometry-course Pythagorean theorem is super important in math. You will probably learn about it for the first time in Algebra, but you will literally use it in Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, Precalculus, Calculus, and beyond! That’s

From playlist Geometry

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Wolfram Physics Project: Working Session Sept. 15, 2020 [Physicalization of Metamathematics]

This is a Wolfram Physics Project working session on metamathematics and its physicalization in the Wolfram Model. Begins at 10:15 Originally livestreamed at: https://twitch.tv/stephen_wolfram Stay up-to-date on this project by visiting our website: http://wolfr.am/physics Check out the

From playlist Wolfram Physics Project Livestream Archive

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Johnathan Bush (7/8/2020): Borsuk–Ulam theorems for maps into higher-dimensional codomains

Title: Borsuk–Ulam theorems for maps into higher-dimensional codomains Abstract: I will describe Borsuk-Ulam theorems for maps of spheres into higher-dimensional codomains. Given a continuous map from a sphere to Euclidean space, we say the map is odd if it respects the standard antipodal

From playlist AATRN 2020

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Worldwide Calculus: Extrema and the Mean Value Theorem

Lecture on 'Extrema and the Mean Value Theorem' from 'Worldwide Differential Calculus' and 'Worldwide AP Calculus'. For more lecture videos and $10 digital textbooks, visit www.centerofmath.org.

From playlist Worldwide Single-Variable Calculus for AP®

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Stokes' Theorem and Green's Theorem

Stokes' theorem is an extremely powerful result in mathematical physics. It allows us to quantify how much a vector field is circulating or rotating, based on the integral of the curl. @eigensteve on Twitter eigensteve.com databookuw.com %%% CHAPTERS %%% 0:00 Stoke's Theorem Overview

From playlist Engineering Math: Vector Calculus and Partial Differential Equations

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Green's Theorem. Chris Tisdell UNSW

This is the 2nd lecture on Green's theorem and its use. In this lecture we explore some interesting applications of Green's theorem and present several examples. Also some proofs are discussed.

From playlist Vector Calculus @ UNSW Sydney. Dr Chris Tisdell

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Dimitri Zvonkine - On two ELSV formulas

The ELSV formula (discovered by Ekedahl, Lando, Shapiro and Vainshtein) is an equality between two numbers. The first one is a Hurwitz number that can be defined as the number of factorizations of a given permutation into transpositions. The second is the integral of a characteristic class

From playlist 4th Itzykson Colloquium - Moduli Spaces and Quantum Curves

Related pages

Farey sequence