Browse By Author: P - Project Gutenberg Plouffe, Simon. The First 1000 Euler Numbers (English) (as Editor); The First1001 Fibonacci Numbers (English) (as Editor); The First 498 Bernoulli Numbers http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/authors/p
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages with more than 50 books: Chinese Dutch English Finnish ... Spanish Languages with up to 50 books: Afrikaans Aleut Bulgarian Catalan ... Yiddish Categories: Audio Book, computer-generated Audio Book, human-read Data Music, recorded ... Pictures, still Recent: last 24 hours last 7 days last 30 days Pahl, Gretchen Graf
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information Authors: A B C D ... other Titles: A B C D ... other Languages with more than 50 books: Chinese Dutch English Finnish ... Spanish Languages with up to 50 books: Afrikaans Aleut Bulgarian Catalan ... Yiddish Categories: Audio Book, computer-generated Audio Book, human-read Data Music, recorded ... Pictures, still Recent: last 24 hours last 7 days last 30 days See: Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 See: Electronic Frontier Foundation Fee, Greg
Extractions: plouffe@math.uqam.ca The value of Zeta(3) to 1,000,000 decimal digits. the number is defined as sum(1/n^3,n=1..infinity), the sum of inverses of cubes and equals 1.2020569031... Computed by : Sebastian Wedeniwski (wedeniws@de.ibm.com) who computed more than 128 million digits using this more efficient formula found by Theodor Amdeberhan and Doron Zeilberger. 5 4 3 2 with A(n) := 126392 n + 412708 n + 531578 n + 336367 n + 104000 n + 12463 given by Theodor Amdeberhan and Doron Zeilberger (see [1]). References:
10,000 EBooks From BookRags The First 1001 Fibonacci Numbers Editor Plouffe, Simon. eBook. The First 498Bernoulli Numbers - Editor Plouffe, Simon. eBook. First Across The Continent; http://www.bookrags.com/ebooks/F2.html
Extractions: Alphabetically by Title A B C D ... Z F Father And Son: a study of two temperaments - Edmund Gosse eBook Essays An Father Damien Open Letter to the Reverend Dr. Hyde of Honolulu - Robert Louis Stevenson eBook Biography Father Goriot - Honore de Balzac eBook Biography The Father of British Canada: A Chronicle of Carleton - William Charles Henry Wood eBook Father Payne - Arthur Christopher Benson eBook Father Sergius - Leo Tolstoy eBook Biography Fathers Of The Constitution, The; a chronicle of the establishment of the Union - Max Farrand eBook Faust - Part 1 - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe eBook Essays Biography Favorite Dishes : A Columbian Autograph Souvenir Cookery Book - Carrie V. Shuman eBook The Fawn Gloves - Jerome K. Jerome (Jerome Klapka) eBook The Federalist Papers - Alexander Hamilton eBook Essays Biography The Federalist Papers - Alexander Hamilton eBook Essays Biography Felix O'Day - Francis Hopkinson Smith eBook The Female Gamester - A Tragedy - Gorges Edmond Howard eBook Female Suffrage: A Letter to the Christian Women of America - Susan Fenimore Cooper eBook Femmes Rêvées - Albert Ferland eBook Fenimore Cooper's Literary Offences - Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens) eBook Biography Fennel And Rue - William Dean Howells eBook Biography Fenton's Quest - M. E. Braddon
Bookshare.org - Books By Author Here is a list of our books by Simon Plouffe (Editor) . There is 1 book by thisauthor in our collection. These are books 0 through 1 of 1. http://www.bookshare.org/web/BooksByAuthor.html?author_id=2696
Bookshare.org - Books By Author Simon Plouffe (Editor) Scott Plous Harry Grant Plum Donald H. Plummer (Editor) Louise Plummer Susan Plunkett George Washington Plunkitt http://www.bookshare.org/web/BooksByAuthor.html?authorstring=P&firstlast=N
Ivars Peterson's MathLand A previous MathLand article about Simon Plouffe and the world title he once Ivars Peterson is the mathematics and physics writer and online Editor at http://www.maa.org/mathland/mathland_11_11.html
Extractions: Ivars Peterson's MathLand November 11, 1996 You happen upon the number 1.6180339887. It looks vaguely familiar, but you can't quite place it. How can you find out whether this particular number is special in some way, perhaps as the output of a specific formula or the value of a familiar mathematical function? If you have the kind of phenomenal insight and prodigious memory that mathematician Karl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855) had at his disposal to work out such problems, you might be able to figure it out on your own. Otherwise, you could consult the Inverse Symbolic Calculator, which is somewhat like a spell checker for numbers. You can find it on the World Wide Web at http://www.cecm.sfu.ca/projects/ISC/ISCmain.html . You enter the number in the blank space provided, click on "run," and await the answer. In this case, the database search produces a page of formulas and functions that could generate 1.6180339887 (rounded off). The most intriguing possibility is the expression (1 + sqrt(5))/2, which represents the golden ratio of Greek architecture and design. The Inverse Symbolic Calculator (ISC) is an ongoing project of the Center for Experimental and Constructive Mathematics at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. The work is largely that of Simon Plouffe, with help from a variety of collaborators, including the brothers Peter and Jonathan Borwein.
Biblioteca Virtual The First 1000 Euler Numbers (Plouffe, Simon, Editor) (.zip 266 Kb) The First1001 Fibonacci Numbers (Plouffe, Simon, Editor) (.zip - 61 Kb) http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br/gutenberg/tit_f.html
Biblioteca Virtual Letters Of The Younger Pliny, First Series Volume 1(.zip 145 Kb). Plouffe,Simon, Editor. The First 1000 Euler Numbers(.zip - 266 Kb) http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br/gutenberg/p.html
Journal Of Integer Sequences All submissions should be sent to the Editorin-chief, Ann Arbor, MI USA),;Simon Plouffe (Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, PQ Canada), http://www.cs.uwaterloo.ca/journals/JIS/
Extractions: Canada Electronic submission is required Please submit your paper in LaTeX format No other formats are currently acceptable. If there are accompanying style files or diagrams, please be sure to include them. The header line of your submission should read "Submission to the Journal of Integer Sequences". (Any other header is in danger of being discarded by a spam filter.) We regret that we cannot handle submissions in Microsoft Word or Word Perfect formats. In preparing your paper, please follow the guidelines in our LaTeX style guide: Editorial board: Jean-Paul Allouche (CNRS, LRI, Paris) Henry W. Gould (West Virginia Univ., Morgantown, WV USA), Richard K. Guy
Plouffe's Inverter Title, Plouffe s Inverter. Editor, Plouffe, Simon Plouffe@math.uqam.ca . Publisher,Laboratoire de combinatoire et d informatique mathématique http://www.mathguide.de/cgi-bin/ssgfi/anzeige.pl?db=math&nr=000879&ew=SSGFI
Mathematics Of Computation Author(s) David Bailey; Peter Borwein; Simon Plouffe. Journal Math. Comp.66 (1997), 903913. Received by Editor(s) in revised form February 16, 1996 http://www.ams.org/mcom/1997-66-218/S0025-5718-97-00856-9/home.html
Extractions: This article is available free of charge Abstract References Similar articles Additional information Abstract: We give algorithms for the computation of the -th digit of certain transcendental numbers in various bases. These algorithms can be easily implemented (multiple precision arithmetic is not needed), require virtually no memory, and feature run times that scale nearly linearly with the order of the digit desired. They make it feasible to compute, for example, the billionth binary digit of or on a modest work station in a few hours run time. We demonstrate this technique by computing the ten billionth hexadecimal digit of
Favorite Links Of Doron Zeilberger I also love Simon Plouffe s Inverse Symbolic Calculator. Bill Chen, Thebrilliant dynamical founding Editor of Annals of Combinatoriocs, http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~zeilberg/khaver.html
Extractions: Last Update: Aug. 12, 2005. Look up the home page of my beloved servant Shalosh B. Ekhad Explore the website of my current students Moa Apagodu Lara Pudwell Eric Rowalnd Thotsaporn Thanatipanonda ... Vince Vatter , and Xiangdong Wen , (The Computer-Renju World Champion!) and the Home Pages of my brilliant former students Tewodros Amdeberhan Anne Edlin John Majewicz John Noonan ... Akalu Tefera , and Melkamu Zeleke Take a look at the neat C++ programs to generate alphametics, play Hangman, and more by my computer-whiz REU student Sterling Stein I am very proud to be on the Editorial board of I am co-editor-in-chief (with Joseph Kung) of Advances in Applied Mathematics I am also on the Editorial boards of the paper journals I am also honored and pleased to be on the International Advisory Board of Thales+Friends I love to brouse in Eric's Treasure Troves , Eric Weisstein's monumental feat. Especially the math Treasure Trove
Feedback On Opinion 36 Of Doron Zeilberger Response from Simon Plouffe, of Sloane-Plouffe, Pi , and many other fames- But if I had been the Editor of the Forum section, I would have rejected it. http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~zeilberg/fb36.html
Extractions: Last Update: June 1, 1999. Feedback from Rabbi Professor Dror Bar Natan (Oops, I meant to say Senior Lecturer Dr. Dror Bar-Natan (added June 1, 1999: Dror just became (Assoc.) Professor, which means that in Israel he should be addressed as Professor Dror, hence Brendan McKay was prophetic when he addressed him as Prof.. Judging from this astounding prediction, we should expect Dror to become a Rabbi pretty soon, and perhaps he would even drop his hyphen)): From drorbn@math.huji.ac.il Sun Apr 4 21:08:49 1999 Shalom Doron! What a disaster it was that the French (Cauchy and his generation, and then Bourbaki) found that practically all of mathematics can be formalized! This formalization procedure seemed so powerful, that we have substituted "formal mathematics" to "mathematics", and for many of us math is ain't math until it is reduced to a sequence of theorems and proofs. Hence for example, as a group we were, and largely still are, blind to the discovery of path integrals, and we left this whole arena to the physicists, whose motivations are entirely different. Who knows how much more have we missed by requiring that the whole process, from imagination to formalization, not only be fully carried out within each mathematical context, not only be carried out in full by each generation of thinkers on each mathematical context, not only be fully carried out by each individual throughout her lifetime, but even be carried out in full within each individual submission to a journal!
Extractions: Recently on MathTrek: The Limits of Mathematics 2/21/98 The Counterfeit Coin 2/14/98 Nine Primes in a Row 2/7/98 February Pick a Digit, Any Digit One of the most amazing mathematical results of the last few years was the discovery of a surprisingly simple formula for computing digits of the number pi. Unlike previously known methods, this one allows you to calculate isolated digitswithout computing and keeping track of all the preceding numbers. "No one had previously even conjectured that such a digit-extraction algorithm for pi was possible," says Steven Finch of MathSoft, Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. The only catch is that the formula works for hexadecimal (base 16) or binary digits but not for decimal digits. Thus, it's possible to determine that the 40 billionth binary digit of pi is 1, followed by 00100100001110. . . . However, there's no way to convert these numbers into decimal form without knowing all the binary digits that come before the given string. In hexadecimal form, the number pi is written as 3.243F6A8885A308D313198A2E0. . . , where the letters stand in for the hexadecimal equivalent of the base-10 numbers 10 (A), 11 (B), 12 (C), 13 (D), 14 (E), and 15 (F). It's straightforward to convert a hexadecimal expression into binary form but not into decimal form.
Project Gutenberg: INDEX OF AUTHORS Plouffe, Simon, Editor Plunkitt, George Washington Plutarch Poe, Edgar Allan,18091849 Polidori, John William, 1795-1821 AKA Byron, George Gordon Byron, http://worldebooklibrary.com/ProjectGuternberg.htm
Extractions: World eBook Library Consortia Collection About Project Gutenberg Project Gutenberg is the Internet's oldest producer of FREE electronic books containing over 10,000 (eBooks or eTexts). What books will I find in Project Gutenberg? Project Gutenberg is the brainchild of Michael Hart , who in 1971 decided that it would be a really good idea if lots of famous and important texts were freely available to everyone in the world. Since then, he has been joined by hundreds of volunteers who share his vision. Now, more than thirty years later, Project Gutenberg has the following figures (as of November 8th 2002): 203 New eBooks released during October 2002, 1975 New eBooks produced in 2002 (they were 1240 in 2001) for a total of 6267 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks. 119 eBooks have been posted so far by Project Gutenberg of Australia Click here for the full PG story and here for the latest
Só Páginas Sobre O Número PI A HyperCard Stack (for Mac) to ear my voice (Simon Plouffe) reciting 100000 Hours and hours of fun, the folder contains a sound Editor for mac that http://www.mat.uc.pt/~jaimecs/pipag.html
Extractions: National Pi Day is March 14th (3.14). . See the program for the 2004 celebration , and the S. Francisco Exploratorium PI Page Ideas for activities that can be used for Pi Day celebration on March 14 (3.14) PI APPROXIMATION DAY "This Pungenday (the 57th of Confusion) is Pi Approximation Day, being on the Aneristic Calendar 22/7" - Pi Approximation Day is on the 22/7 - that is, July 22. For the past few years, people at Chalmers University have celebrated it. Pi Approximation Day (March 14) e-cards Pi Approximation Day (March 14) is a day to recognise the importance of our favorite number, Pi [3.1428..]. So, let's lay back and try to memorise the value of Pi giving thought to the marvellous mysteries behind this number. While you are at it, why not celebrate by eating pies [Pi's] and send some Pi greeting cards to your friends? (123Greetings)
Favorite Links Of Doron Zeilberger I am coEditor-in-chief (with Joseph Kung and Fan Chung) of Advances in AppliedMathematics. I also love Simon Plouffe s Inverse Symbolic Calculator. http://www.math.temple.edu/~zeilberg/khaver.html
Extractions: Last Update: Aug. 20, 2001. NOTE: This page has moved to Doron Zeilberger's Favorite Links page at Rutgers but I hope to keep this page, and my whole Temple site(as is, frozen at end of Aug. 2001) indefinitely. Look up the home page of my beloved servant Shalosh B. Ekhad Explore the Home Pages of my brilliant former students Tewodros Amdeberhan Anne Edlin John Majewicz John Noonan ... Akalu Tefera , and Melkamu Zeleke I am very proud to be on the Editorial board of I am co-editor-in-chief (with Joseph Kung and Fan Chung) of Advances in Applied Mathematics I am also on the Editorial boards of the paper journals I to love to brouse in Eric's Treasure Troves , Eric Weisstein's monumental feat. Until Oct, 2000, it also contained the math Treasure Trove, that contained a lot of fascinating mathematics, including entries on
Project Gutenberg Title Index M Masterpieces Of American Wit And Humor. by Masson, Thomas L. (Editor) Miscellaneous Mathematical Constants. by Plouffe, Simon, Editor http://demo1.globule.org/gutenberg/browse/IT_M.HTM