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Articles 1 - 30 of 45
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Using The Taylor Center To Teach Odes, Alexander Gofen
Using The Taylor Center To Teach Odes, Alexander Gofen
CODEE Journal
This article introduces a powerful ODE solver called the Taylor Center for PCs (http://taylorcenter.org/Gofen/) as a tool for teaching and performing numeric experiments with ODEs. The Taylor Center is an All-in-One GUI-style application for integrating ODEs by applying the modern Taylor Method (Automatic Differentiation). The Taylor Center also offers dynamic graphics (including 3D stereo vision). After a brief review of the features of the Taylor Center, we consider instructive examples of ODEs in various applications and also several particular examples illustrating intricacies of numeric integration. The article therefore continues the thesis of Borrelli and Coleman (CODEE Journal, http://www.codee.org/ref/CJ09-0157) that awareness …
Spectral Clustering: An Empirical Study Of Approximation Algorithms And Its Application To The Attrition Problem, B. Cung, T Jin, J. Ramirez, A. Thompson, C. Boutsidis, Deanna Needell
Spectral Clustering: An Empirical Study Of Approximation Algorithms And Its Application To The Attrition Problem, B. Cung, T Jin, J. Ramirez, A. Thompson, C. Boutsidis, Deanna Needell
CMC Faculty Publications and Research
Clustering is the problem of separating a set of objects into groups (called clusters) so that objects within the same cluster are more similar to each other than to those in different clusters. Spectral clustering is a now well-known method for clustering which utilizes the spectrum of the data similarity matrix to perform this separation. Since the method relies on solving an eigenvector problem, it is computationally expensive for large datasets. To overcome this constraint, approximation methods have been developed which aim to reduce running time while maintaining accurate classification. In this article, we summarize and experimentally evaluate several approximation …
The Awards Project: Promoting Good Practices In Award Selection, Betty Mayfield, Francis Su
The Awards Project: Promoting Good Practices In Award Selection, Betty Mayfield, Francis Su
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
Every year the MAA honors many members of our community with a wide variety of prizes, awards, and certificates for excellence in teaching, writing, scholarship, and service (see maa.org/awards). The winners exemplify our ideals as an association; consequently, they are often viewed as role models and leaders. So it is important to ask: Do these awards, as a whole, reflect the outstanding contributions of the breadth of association membership?
Uniqueness Of Nonnegative Solutions For Semipositone Problems On Exterior Domains, Alfonso Castro, Lakshmi Sankar, Ratnasingham Shivaji
Uniqueness Of Nonnegative Solutions For Semipositone Problems On Exterior Domains, Alfonso Castro, Lakshmi Sankar, Ratnasingham Shivaji
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
We consider the problem
−Δu = λK(|x|)f(u), x∈Ω
u=0 if |x|=r0
u→0 as |x|→∞,
where λ is a positive parameter, Δu = div(∇u)is the Laplacian of u, Ω = {x ∈ Rn; n > 2,|x| > r0}, K ∈ C1([r0,∞),(0,∞)) is such that lim r→∞ K(r) = 0 and f ∈ C1([0,∞),R) is a concave function which is sublinear at ∞ and f(0) < 0. We establish the uniqueness of nonnegative radial solutions when λ is large.
A Tale Of Two Workshops: Two Workshops, Three Papers, New Ideas, Gizem Karaali
A Tale Of Two Workshops: Two Workshops, Three Papers, New Ideas, Gizem Karaali
Pomona Faculty Publications and Research
No abstract provided.
Locust Dynamics: Behavioral Phase Change And Swarming, Chad M. Topaz, Maria R. D'Orsogna, Leah Edelstein-Keshet, Andrew J. Bernoff
Locust Dynamics: Behavioral Phase Change And Swarming, Chad M. Topaz, Maria R. D'Orsogna, Leah Edelstein-Keshet, Andrew J. Bernoff
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
Locusts exhibit two interconvertible behavioral phases, solitarious and gregarious. While solitarious individuals are repelled from other locusts, gregarious insects are attracted to conspecifics and can form large aggregations such as marching hopper bands. Numerous biological experiments at the individual level have shown how crowding biases conversion towards the gregarious form. To understand the formation of marching locust hopper bands, we study phase change at the collective level, and in a quantitative framework. Specifically, we construct a partial integrodifferential equation model incorporating the interplay between phase change and spatial movement at the individual level in order to predict the dynamics of …
On The Occasion Of Your Graduation, Robert Dawson
On The Occasion Of Your Graduation, Robert Dawson
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A letter from an absent supervisor to a doctoral student about to graduate reveals a terrible secret.
Math Moment, Paige S. Orland
Math Moment, Paige S. Orland
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A short poem comparing Exponential and Logistic functions.
Confidence Interval, Ursula Whitcher
Confidence Interval, Ursula Whitcher
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A poem about estimating probabilities.
Joanne Growney's Poetry-With-Mathematics Blog -- An Appreciation, Gregory E. Coxson
Joanne Growney's Poetry-With-Mathematics Blog -- An Appreciation, Gregory E. Coxson
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Now is a good time to work on the boundaries of practice and theory, of art and science. We are seeing a rising tide of interest in these boundaries. Witness the growing Bridges movement, which has been exploring the connections between mathematics and the arts. Similarly, JoAnne Growney's blog, Intersections -- Poetry with Mathematics, explores the connections between mathematics and poetry. Through this review, I aim to give readers a taste of what can be found in Intersections as a way of encouraging others, be they mathematicians, poets, or neither, to visit the blog.
Mathematics And The Hunger Games, Michael A. Lewis
Mathematics And The Hunger Games, Michael A. Lewis
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
The Hunger Games plot features a dystopian future in which twelve outer districts are oppressed by a centralized capital. The story focuses on the heroism of a sixteen-year-old girl named Katniss and how she tries to rise above the oppression that she experiences. It also features a special lottery and other twists that are sources of mathematical interest. This essay focuses on some of the mathematical issues raised by The Hunger Games in an effort to show that this story can be used to teach students (as well as other interested parties) some important concepts from mathematics.
A Definition Of Mathematical Beauty And Its History, Viktor Blåsjö
A Definition Of Mathematical Beauty And Its History, Viktor Blåsjö
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
I define mathematical beauty as cognisability and trace the import of this notion through several episodes from the history of mathematics.
Report Supplement: Poetry Folder -- Selections From The Poetry Reading At Joint Mathematics Meetings 2012
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
No abstract provided.
For The Love Of Poetry And Mathematics: January 6, 2012, Charlotte Henderson
For The Love Of Poetry And Mathematics: January 6, 2012, Charlotte Henderson
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Together we combine to become twice what 60 could ever be.
The same ghost looked into my eyes.
Also, the center of the circle is inside the circle.
There is no way to draw a line, other than a border line,
A language as precise as poetry to delineate universe and being,
Deceptive as one over n as n goes to infinity, summed.
The world is a complex system
not defined by any voice factored out of my voicelessness,
the hypotenuse of course is the man who came between us
doubting every figured guess,
so, inductively, all of God’s natural …
Raphael's School Of Athens: A Theorem In A Painting?, Robert Haas
Raphael's School Of Athens: A Theorem In A Painting?, Robert Haas
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Raphael's famous painting The School of Athens includes a geometer, presumably Euclid himself, demonstrating a construction to his fascinated students. But what theorem are they all studying? This article first introduces the painting, and describes Raphael's lifelong friendship with the eminent mathematician Paulus of Middelburg. It then presents several conjectured explanations, notably a theorem about a hexagram (Fichtner), or alternatively that the construction may be architecturally symbolic (Valtieri). The author finally offers his own "null hypothesis": that the scene does not show any actual mathematics, but simply the fascination, excitement, and joy of mathematicians at their work.
Gromov-Witten Theory Of P^1 X P^1 X P^1, Dagan Karp, Dhruv Ranganathan
Gromov-Witten Theory Of P^1 X P^1 X P^1, Dagan Karp, Dhruv Ranganathan
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
We prove equivalences between the Gromov-Witten theories of toric blowups of P^1xP^1xP^1 and P^3. In particular, we prove that the all genus, virtual dimension zero Gromov-Witten theory of the blowup of P^3 at points precisely coincides with that of the blowup at points of P^1xP^1xP^1, for non-exceptional classes. It follows that the all-genus stationary Gromov-Witten theory of P^1xP^1xP^1 coincides with that of P^3 in low degree. We also prove there exists a toric symmetry of the Gromov-Witten theory of P^1xP^1xP^1 analogous to and intimately related to Cremona symmetry of P^3. Enumerative applications are given.
Resonant Solutions And Turning Points In An Elliptic Problem With Oscillatory Boundary Conditions, Alfonso Castro, Rosa Pardo
Resonant Solutions And Turning Points In An Elliptic Problem With Oscillatory Boundary Conditions, Alfonso Castro, Rosa Pardo
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
We consider the elliptic equation -Δu + u = 0 with nonlinear boundary conditions ∂u/∂n = λu + g(λ,x,u), where the nonlinear term g is oscillatory and satisfies g(λ,x,s)/s→0 as |s|→0. We provide sufficient conditions on g for the existence of sequences of resonant solutions and turning points accumulating to zero.
Splitting Fields And Periods Of Fibonacci Sequences Modulo Primes, Sanjai Gupta, Parousia Rockstroh '08, Francis E. Su
Splitting Fields And Periods Of Fibonacci Sequences Modulo Primes, Sanjai Gupta, Parousia Rockstroh '08, Francis E. Su
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
We consider the period of a Fibonacci sequence modulo a prime and provide an accessible, motivated treatment of this classical topic using only ideas from linear and abstract algebra. Our methods extend to general recurrences with prime moduli and provide some new insights. And our treatment highlights a nice application of the use of splitting fields that might be suitable to present in an undergraduate course in abstract algebra or Galois theory.
R₀ Analysis Of A Spatiotemporal Model For A Stream Population, H. W. Mckenzie, Y. Jin, Jon T. Jacobsen, M. A. Lewis
R₀ Analysis Of A Spatiotemporal Model For A Stream Population, H. W. Mckenzie, Y. Jin, Jon T. Jacobsen, M. A. Lewis
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
Water resources worldwide require management to meet industrial, agricultural, and urban consumption needs. Management actions change the natural flow regime, which impacts the river ecosystem. Water managers are tasked with meeting water needs while mitigating ecosystem impacts. We develop process-oriented advection-diffusion-reaction equations that couple hydraulic flow to population growth, and we analyze them to assess the effect of water flow on population persistence. We present a new mathematical framework, based on the net reproductive rate R0 for advection-diffusion-reaction equations and on related measures. We apply the measures to population persistence in rivers under various flow regimes. This work lays …
Exploring The On-Line Partitioning Of Posets Problem, Leah F. Rosenbaum
Exploring The On-Line Partitioning Of Posets Problem, Leah F. Rosenbaum
Scripps Senior Theses
One question relating to partially ordered sets (posets) is that of partitioning or dividing the poset's elements into the fewest number of chains that span the poset. In 1950, Dilworth established that the width of the poset - the size of the largest set composed only of incomparable elements - is the minimum number of chains needed to partition that poset. Such a bound in on-line partitioning has been harder to establish, and work has evalutated classes of posets based on their width. This paper reviews the theorems that established val(2)=5 and illustrates them with examples. It also covers some …
Book Review: Philosophy Of Science After Feminism By Janet Kourany, Gizem Karaali
Book Review: Philosophy Of Science After Feminism By Janet Kourany, Gizem Karaali
Pomona Faculty Publications and Research
Janet Kourany’s book is a strange one: published by Oxford University Press (as a part of its Studies in Feminist Philosophy series), it is an academically oriented book, but reading it, you sense that this is not yet another theoretical monograph. For Kourany has her ax to grind, and more importantly she has a program to promote. The program is for philosophers of science and is motivated and encouraged by the amazing work done in the past few decades by feminist scientists and feminist scholars of science, technology, and society. In the following I will try to explain why I …
Prove It!, Kenny W. Moran
Prove It!, Kenny W. Moran
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A dialogue between a mathematics professor, Frank, and his daughter, Sarah, a mathematical savant with a powerful mathematical intuition. Sarah's intuition allows her to stumble into some famous theorems from number theory, but her lack of academic mathematical background makes it difficult for her to understand Frank's insistence on the value of proof and formality.
Logarithmic Spirals And Projective Geometry In M.C. Escher's "Path Of Life Iii", Heidi Burgiel, Matthew Salomone
Logarithmic Spirals And Projective Geometry In M.C. Escher's "Path Of Life Iii", Heidi Burgiel, Matthew Salomone
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
M.C. Escher's use of dilation symmetry in Path of Life III gives rise to a pattern of logarithmic spirals and an oddly ambiguous sense of depth.
Wireless Channel Equalization In Digital Communication Systems, Sammuel Jalali
Wireless Channel Equalization In Digital Communication Systems, Sammuel Jalali
CGU Theses & Dissertations
Our modern society has transformed to an information-demanding system, seeking voice, video, and data in quantities that could not be imagined even a decade ago. The mobility of communicators has added more challenges. One of the new challenges is to conceive highly reliable and fast communication system unaffected by the problems caused in the multipath fading wireless channels. Our quest is to remove one of the obstacles in the way of achieving ultimately fast and reliable wireless digital communication, namely Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI), the intensity of which makes the channel noise inconsequential.
The theoretical background for wireless channels modeling and …
Adventures In Teaching: A Professor Goes To High School To Learn About Teaching Math, Darryl H. Yong
Adventures In Teaching: A Professor Goes To High School To Learn About Teaching Math, Darryl H. Yong
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
During the 2009–2010 academic year I did something unusual for a university mathematician on sabbatical: I taught high school mathematics in a large urban school district. This might not be so strange except that my school does not have a teacher preparation program and only graduates a few students per year who intend to be teachers. Why did I do this? I, like many of you, am deeply concerned about mathematics education and I wanted to see what a typical high school in my city is like. Because I regularly work with high school mathematics teachers, I wanted to experience …
On The Hardness Of Counting And Sampling Center Strings, Christina Boucher, Mohamed Omar
On The Hardness Of Counting And Sampling Center Strings, Christina Boucher, Mohamed Omar
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
Given a set S of n strings, each of length ℓ, and a nonnegative value d, we define a center string as a string of length ` that has Hamming distance at most d from each string in S. The #CLOSEST STRING problem aims to determine the number of center strings for a given set of strings S and input parameters n, ℓ, and d. We show #CLOSEST STRING is impossible to solve exactly or even approximately in polynomial time, and that restricting #CLOSEST STRING so that any one of the parameters n, ℓ, or d is fixed leads to …
Squaring, Cubing, And Cube Rooting, Arthur T. Benjamin
Squaring, Cubing, And Cube Rooting, Arthur T. Benjamin
All HMC Faculty Publications and Research
I still recall my thrill and disappointment when I read Mathematical Carnival, by Martin Gardner. I was thrilled because, as my high school teacher had recommended, mathematics was presented in a playful way that I had never seen before. I was disappointed because it contained a formula that I thought I had "invented" a few years earlier. I have always had a passion for mental calculation, and the following formula appears in Gardner's chapter on "Lightning Calculators." It was used by the mathematician A. C. Aitken to mentally square large numbers.
On The Quantization Of Zero-Weight Super Dynamical R-Matrices, Gizem Karaali
On The Quantization Of Zero-Weight Super Dynamical R-Matrices, Gizem Karaali
Pomona Faculty Publications and Research
Solutions of the classical dynamical Yang-Baxter equation on a Lie superalgebra are called super dynamical r-matrices. A super dynamical r-matrix r satisfies the zero weight condition if
[h ⊗ 1 + 1 ⊗ h, r(λ)] = 0 for all h ∈ ɧ, λ ∈ ɧ ∗ .
In this paper we explicitly quantize zero-weight super dynamical r-matrices with zero coupling constant for the Lie superalgebra gl(m, n) . We also answer some questions about super dynamical R-matrices. In particular, we prove a classification theorem and offer some support for one particular …
What Does It Take To Teach Nonmajors Effectively?, Feryal Alayont, Gizem Karaali, Lerna Pehlivan
What Does It Take To Teach Nonmajors Effectively?, Feryal Alayont, Gizem Karaali, Lerna Pehlivan
Pomona Faculty Publications and Research
Most MAA members teach mathematics at the college level, and many often teach courses intended for nonmajors. Indeed this is one of the main responsibilities of a mathematics department: offering service courses for client departments and general education courses for nonmajors. The three of us have been thinking about the question of how to teach nonmajors successfully for a while now. Finally we decided on a time-tested method of figuring things out: if you don't know what to do, ask the experts. We organized a panel titled "Effective Strategies for Teaching Classes for Nonmajors" for MAA MathFest 2012 and invited …