https://www.ted.com/talks/cedric_villani_what_s_so_sexy_about_math
Cedric Villani's talk.
@infinitymath
Cedric Villani's talk.
@infinitymath
Ted
What's so sexy about math?
Hidden truths permeate our world; they're inaccessible to our senses, but math allows us to go beyond our intuition to uncover their mysteries. In this survey of mathematical breakthroughs, Fields Medal winner Cédric Villani speaks to the thrill of discovery…
✍🏻 وقتی فردی درگیر یادگیری و حل مسائل ریاضی است، ذهن او به طور همزمان درگیر تولید سیناپس های عصبی متعدد است.
🤔 هر بار که او اشتباهی می کند و متوجه اشتباه خود می شود، سیناپس های عصبی جدیدتری در مغزش ایجاد می شود.
💡 تمرین ریاضی ولو پر از اشتباه باشد، در درازمدت، ذهن فرد را برای آموختن ریاضی مستعدتر می سازد.
@infinitymath
🤔 هر بار که او اشتباهی می کند و متوجه اشتباه خود می شود، سیناپس های عصبی جدیدتری در مغزش ایجاد می شود.
💡 تمرین ریاضی ولو پر از اشتباه باشد، در درازمدت، ذهن فرد را برای آموختن ریاضی مستعدتر می سازد.
@infinitymath
Forwarded from دستیار زیر نویس و هایپر لینک
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تیزر چهل و هشتمین کنفرانس ریاضی ایران که شهریور 96 در دانشگاه بوعلی سینای همدان برگزار خواهد شد.
@infinitymath
@infinitymath
@infinitymath
📣📣📣 چهل و یکمین مسابقه ریاضی دانشجویی کشور از تاریخ 14 تا 17 شهریور 1396 در دانشگاه شهرکرد برگزار می گردد. ورود تیم ها بعد از ظهر 13 شهریور می باشد. نامه و فراخوان مسابقات به گروههای ریاضی دانشگاههای سراسر کشور ارسال شده است. لینک مسابقات در سایت انجمن👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻 http://fa.ims.ir/index.php/competitions/220-41th-comp
@infinitymath
📣📣📣 چهل و یکمین مسابقه ریاضی دانشجویی کشور از تاریخ 14 تا 17 شهریور 1396 در دانشگاه شهرکرد برگزار می گردد. ورود تیم ها بعد از ظهر 13 شهریور می باشد. نامه و فراخوان مسابقات به گروههای ریاضی دانشگاههای سراسر کشور ارسال شده است. لینک مسابقات در سایت انجمن👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻 http://fa.ims.ir/index.php/competitions/220-41th-comp
@infinitymath
fa.ims.ir
چهل و یکمین دورهی مسابقهی ریاضی دانشجویی ایران
انجمن ریاضی ایران
Forwarded from دستیار زیر نویس و هایپر لینک
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@infinitymath
🎬تکنیک خطای دید
🎬تکنیک خطای دید
اين يه سوال از يه كتابه كه بابام كلاس پنجم ابتدايي برام خريد 😂
الانم میخونمش هنگ میکنم😶
مسیله بالا در تلگرام به عنوان جک دست به دست شده. کمی بهش فکر کنید. جالبه!!!!
@infinitymath
الانم میخونمش هنگ میکنم😶
مسیله بالا در تلگرام به عنوان جک دست به دست شده. کمی بهش فکر کنید. جالبه!!!!
@infinitymath
امروز در حال گشت زنی در پایگاه Mathscienet بودم, که به یک مقاله جدید از لطفی زاده برخوردم. عنوان مقاله نظرم را جلب کرد و چند صفحه ای خوندم و به نظرم جالب آمد. مقاله غیر تکنیکی, تاریخی و مبسوط میباشد.
@infinitymath
Fuzzy logic- a personal perspective
by Lotfi A. Zade
👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
@infinitymath
Fuzzy logic- a personal perspective
by Lotfi A. Zade
👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
1-s2.0-S0165011415002377-main.pdf
378.6 KB
@infinitymath _Fuzzy logic- Zade
The Abel Prize Laureate 2017 Yves Meyer (Photo:B. Eymann/Académie des sciences)
@infinitymath
@infinitymath
👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆👆
@infinitymath
From www.abelprize.no:
The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters has decided to award the Abel Prize for 2017 to Yves Meyer (77) of the École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay, France “for his pivotal role in the development of the mathematical theory of wavelets”. The President of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, Ole M. Sejersted, announced the winner of the 2017 Abel Prize at the Academy in Oslo today, 21 March.
Yves Meyer was the visionary leader in the modern development of this theory, at the intersection of mathematics, information technology and computational science.
Wavelet analysis has been applied in a wide variety of arenas as diverse as applied and computational harmonic analysis, data compression, noise reduction, medical imaging, archiving, digital cinema, deconvolution of the Hubble space telescope images, and the recent LIGO detection of gravitational waves created by the collision of two black holes.
Yves Meyer will receive the Abel Prize from His Majesty King Harald V at an award ceremony in Oslo on 23 May.
The Abel Prize recognizes contributions of extraordinary depth and influence to the mathematical sciences and has been awarded annually since 2003. It carries a cash award of 6 million NOK (about 675,000 Euro or 715,000 USD).
@infinitymath
From www.abelprize.no:
The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters has decided to award the Abel Prize for 2017 to Yves Meyer (77) of the École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay, France “for his pivotal role in the development of the mathematical theory of wavelets”. The President of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, Ole M. Sejersted, announced the winner of the 2017 Abel Prize at the Academy in Oslo today, 21 March.
Yves Meyer was the visionary leader in the modern development of this theory, at the intersection of mathematics, information technology and computational science.
Wavelet analysis has been applied in a wide variety of arenas as diverse as applied and computational harmonic analysis, data compression, noise reduction, medical imaging, archiving, digital cinema, deconvolution of the Hubble space telescope images, and the recent LIGO detection of gravitational waves created by the collision of two black holes.
Yves Meyer will receive the Abel Prize from His Majesty King Harald V at an award ceremony in Oslo on 23 May.
The Abel Prize recognizes contributions of extraordinary depth and influence to the mathematical sciences and has been awarded annually since 2003. It carries a cash award of 6 million NOK (about 675,000 Euro or 715,000 USD).
👆👆👆👆👆
About :
@infinitymath
Having made important contributions to the field of number theory early in his career, Meyer’s boundless energy and curiosity prompted him to work on methods for breaking down complex mathematical objects into simpler wavelike components – a topic called harmonic analysis. This led him in turn to help construct a theory for analysing complicated signals, with important ramifications for computer and information technologies. Then he moved on again to tackle fundamental problems in the mathematics of fluid flow. “During my professional life I obsessively tried to cross the frontiers,” he says.
Meyer’s work has a relevance extending from theoretical areas of mathematics to the development of practical tools in computer and information science. As such it is a perfect example of the claim that work in pure mathematics often turns out to have important and useful real-world applications.
Yves Meyer has inspired a generation of mathematicians who have gone on to make contributions in their own right. His collaborator on wavelet theory Stéphane Mallat calls him a “visionary” whose work cannot be labelled either pure or applied mathematics, nor computer science either, but simply “amazing”.
Biography
Yves Meyer, born 19 July 1939 of French nationality, grew up in Tunis on the North African coast. He entered the élite École normale supérieure de la rue d’Ulm in Paris in 1957, coming first in the entrance examination. After graduating, Meyer completed his military service as a teacher in a military school. He obtained his PhD in 1966 from the University of Strasbourg.
He became a professor of mathematics first at the Université Paris-Sud, as it is now known, (1966-1980), then the École Polytechnique (1980-1986), and the Université Paris-Dauphine (1986-1995). He moved to the École normale supérieure Cachan (recently renamed the ENS Paris-Saclay) in 1995, where he worked at the Centre of Mathematics and its Applications (CMLA) until formally retiring in 2008. But he is still an associate member of the research centre.
Awards and recognitions
Yves Meyer has been a member of the French Académie des Sciences since 1993. In 1994 he was elected foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and became a foreign associate of the US National Academy of Sciences in 2014.
Yves Meyer became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012. He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1970 (Nice), in 1983 (Warsaw), and in 1990 (Kyoto). He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematical Physics in 1988 (Swansea).
His prizes include the Salem (1970) and Gauss (2010) prizes, the latter awarded jointly by the International Mathematical Union and the German Mathematical Society for advances in mathematics that have had an impact outside the field.
About :
@infinitymath
Having made important contributions to the field of number theory early in his career, Meyer’s boundless energy and curiosity prompted him to work on methods for breaking down complex mathematical objects into simpler wavelike components – a topic called harmonic analysis. This led him in turn to help construct a theory for analysing complicated signals, with important ramifications for computer and information technologies. Then he moved on again to tackle fundamental problems in the mathematics of fluid flow. “During my professional life I obsessively tried to cross the frontiers,” he says.
Meyer’s work has a relevance extending from theoretical areas of mathematics to the development of practical tools in computer and information science. As such it is a perfect example of the claim that work in pure mathematics often turns out to have important and useful real-world applications.
Yves Meyer has inspired a generation of mathematicians who have gone on to make contributions in their own right. His collaborator on wavelet theory Stéphane Mallat calls him a “visionary” whose work cannot be labelled either pure or applied mathematics, nor computer science either, but simply “amazing”.
Biography
Yves Meyer, born 19 July 1939 of French nationality, grew up in Tunis on the North African coast. He entered the élite École normale supérieure de la rue d’Ulm in Paris in 1957, coming first in the entrance examination. After graduating, Meyer completed his military service as a teacher in a military school. He obtained his PhD in 1966 from the University of Strasbourg.
He became a professor of mathematics first at the Université Paris-Sud, as it is now known, (1966-1980), then the École Polytechnique (1980-1986), and the Université Paris-Dauphine (1986-1995). He moved to the École normale supérieure Cachan (recently renamed the ENS Paris-Saclay) in 1995, where he worked at the Centre of Mathematics and its Applications (CMLA) until formally retiring in 2008. But he is still an associate member of the research centre.
Awards and recognitions
Yves Meyer has been a member of the French Académie des Sciences since 1993. In 1994 he was elected foreign honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and became a foreign associate of the US National Academy of Sciences in 2014.
Yves Meyer became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012. He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1970 (Nice), in 1983 (Warsaw), and in 1990 (Kyoto). He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematical Physics in 1988 (Swansea).
His prizes include the Salem (1970) and Gauss (2010) prizes, the latter awarded jointly by the International Mathematical Union and the German Mathematical Society for advances in mathematics that have had an impact outside the field.