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         Math References:     more books (109)
  1. Math Reference Grammar Reference GMAT Targeted Training by Kaplan Educational Center, 1994
  2. (BASIC MATH QUICK REFERENCE HANDBOOK) BY Mitas, Peter J. ( AUTHOR )paperback{Basic Math Quick Reference Handbook} on 17 Feb, 2009
  3. Quackenworth Reference Sheet: Math by David Hollaway, 2007-02
  4. Encyclopedia of Math Topics & References: A Resource for Projects and Explorations
  5. Maths for Advanced Chemistry (Maths for Advanced Science) by Mike Robinson, Mike Taylor, 2002-12
  6. Conquering Math Textbook Connection: A Curriculum Reference Guide : Silver Burdett & Ginn 1987 Math Series
  7. Time flies.(Grades 2-3)(Take It to Your Seat: Math Centers for Grades 2-3)(Children's review): An article from: Curriculum Review by Gale Reference Team, 2007-01-01
  8. SAT I Math Workbook with Practice Test (www.cpmath.com) (Concept Principle) by Concept Math, 2010
  9. Everyday Mathematics Student Reference Book + Student Math Journal, Volumes 1 & 2, Geometry Template by University of Chicago School Mathematics Project, 2007-03-30
  10. Maths made simple for Parents (Fun Learning, Vol. 1) (Volume 1) by Mr T. Malcolm Pugh, 2009-12-30

61. Surveys In Dynamical Systems
references to several surveys and papers of introductory character which are available online.
http://www.math.sunysb.edu/dynamics/surveys.html
Surveys in Dynamical systems available on-line
We have collected references to several surveys and papers of introductory character which are available on-line. Please tell us about other survey or introductory papers available electronically
webmaster@math.sunysb.edu

62. Preconditioned Eigensolvers By Andrew Knyazev, Math Dept CU-Denver
Software, papers, and references.
http://www-math.cudenver.edu/~aknyazev/research/eigensolvers/
Preconditioned Eigensolvers
by Andrew Knyazev
What is "preconditioned eigensolvers?" In one sentence those are matrix-free iterative methods for partial eigenvalue problems that take advantage of using preconditioners to accelerate convergence. A complete answer can be found in the papers "Preconditioned eigensolvers - an oxymoron?" and Preconditioned eigensolvers by Andrew Knyazev . See also an article Andrew Knyazev, Volker Mehrmann, and Klaus Neymeyr, Preconditioning in Eigenvalue Computations, SIAM News, v. 35, no. 10, p. 9, December 2003. about Miniworkshop: Preconditioning in Eigenvalue Computations Oberwolfach Preconditioned Eigensolvers related NSF grants Preconditioned Eigensolvers People ... Preconditioned Eigensolvers Bibliography General Software: Specialized Software: Nonoverlap Domain Decomposition Preconditioning Search Eigensolvers pages
Department of Mathematics,

63. Graphs Glossary
Short definitions with crossreferences by Bill Cherowitzo.
http://www-math.cudenver.edu/~wcherowi/courses/m4408/glossary.htm
Graph and Digraph Glossary
A B C D ... V-Z
Acyclic Digraph
A digraph is acyclic if it contains no cycles
Arc
A directed edge of a digraph. Some authors use it as a synonym for an edge of a graph. Other synonyms for arc in a digraph are arrow, directed line, directed edge, and directed link.
Arc List
A representation of a digraph using the arcs of the digraph. Can be an unordered listing of the ordered pairs, or a pair of ordered lists with the starting vertex in one list and the ending vertex in the corresponding position of the second list.
Adjacency Matrix
A 0-1 square matrix whose rows and columns are indexed by the vertices. A 1 in the ij-th position of the matrix means that there is an edge (or arc ) from vertex i to vertex j. A indicates that there is no such edge (or arc). Can be used for both graphs and digraphs.
Adjacency Structure
A representation of a graph or digraph which lists, for each vertex, all the vertices that are adjacent to the given vertex.
Adjacent
Two vertices are adjacent if they are connected by an edge . We often call these two vertices neighbors . Two adjacent vertices:
Bipartite Graph
A graph is bipartite if the vertices can be partitioned into two sets, X and Y, so that the only

64. The Theseus Homepage Of Harald Bohr
Archival material, bibliography and references.
http://www.math.ku.dk/ths/bohr_h/

65. Matroid Miscellany
references, sources and open problem, collected by Thomas Zaslavsky.
http://www.math.binghamton.edu/zaslav/Matroids/
Matroid Miscellany
by Thomas Zaslavsky
Sources
A list of places where you can get introduced to matroid theory at any level you wish.
Problems
Some open problems
Matroid Theory: Where to Find It Out
Speedy easy introduction:
Short technical introductionss:
  • Robin J. Wilson, "An introduction to matroid theory", American Mathematical Monthly Vol. 80 (1973), pp. 500-525.
  • Robin J. Wilson, "Matroid theory", Ch. 9 of Introduction to Graph Theory , Academic Press, New York-London, 1972; 2nd edn., Academic Press, New York-London, 1979; 3rd edn., Longman, London, and Wiley, New York, 1985. Translated into Russian (1977; 1st edn.) and Polish (1985; 2nd edn.).
For a thorough introduction:
  • James Oxley, Matroid Theory , Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1992.
    The best introductory book. An exceptionally fine textbook. It doesn't cover everything (which would have been impossible); see the next two items for articles that make up the major omission.
  • Theory of Matroids
    Introduces an important aspect omitted by Oxley.
  • Thomas Brylawski and James Oxley, "The Tutte polynomial and its applications", Ch. 6 in: White

66. String Theory: A Happy Marriage Of Geometry And Physics
An introductory description of this theory with references to current work being done in the Netherlands.
http://www.math.leidenuniv.nl/~stieltjes/archief/biennial9596/frame/node5.html
Next: Strings in physics and Up: No Title Previous: Research Highlights
String Theory: A Happy Marriage of Geometry and Physics
Research Programme: Algebraic and Analytic Geometry Researcher: R.H. Dijkgraaf
J.H.M.Dassen
Fri Mar 20 16:01:06 MET 1998

67. Albertus
Brief biography, with bibliographical references. From the Department of Mathematics, California State University, San Bernardino.
http://www.math.csusb.edu/history/public_html/Mathematicians/Albertus.html
Saint Albertus Magnus
Born: about 1200 in Lauingen an der Donau, Swabia (now Germany)
Died: 15 Nov 1280 in Cologne, Prussia (now Germany)
Click the picture above
to see seven larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Version for printing
Albert (or Albertus) After joining the Dominican Order, he studied and taught at Padua, Bologna, Cologne and other German convents in Hildesheim, Freiburg, Ratisbon, Strasburg, and Cologne. He was sent to the Dominican convent of Saint-Jacques at the University of Paris in about 1241 where he read the new translations, with commentaries, of the Arabic and Greek texts of Aristotle . This was a period when the writings of Arabic scholars, and through them the texts of ancient Greek philosophers, was becoming known throughout Christian Europe and it was having to come to terms with this new knowledge. Albertus would play a major role in accepting this new learning into Europe with his wide ranging scholarship over essentially the whole of knowledge. He taught for four years at Saint-Jacques, giving courses on the Bible and on the theological textbook

68. Books On Algebra
A reading list by Lee Lady, University of Hawaii.
http://www.math.hawaii.edu/~lee/algebra/references.html
Basic Books on Rings and Modules
General Theory of Rings and Modules
Lambeck, Rings and Modules
This is a very nice, small, readable book. Most of all, it is interesting . It probably represents the strongest influence on the graduate algebra course I teach.
P. M. Cohn, Algebra
3 volumes, covering undergraduate algebra, standard graduate topics, and advanced topics. Horrendously expensive.
I. M. Isaacs, Algebra, a Graduate Course
This covers many of the important topics in both commutative and non-commutative ring theory in quite a bit of detail. I've only skimmed through it, but it looks like a good alternative to Hungerford or Lang.
Classical Theory of Artinian Rings
Jacobson, The Theory of Rings (AMS Mathematical Surveys)
This is very readable and has a lot of good stuff that's too old fashioned to be included in many more modern books.
Herstein, NonCommutative Rings [Carus Monographs]
This is somewhat comparable to the Jacobson book above. It's not quite as interesting, in my opinion, but it has a good exposition of the classical theory.
Curtis and Reiner, Representations of Groups and Associative Algebras

69. ìÉÔÅÒÁÔÕÒÁ ÐÏ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÅ
Лекции и книги по математической физике.
http://ns.math.rsu.ru/mexmat/kvm/MME/courses/mathph/references.htm
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  • á. î. ôÉÈÏÎÏ×, á. á. óÁÍÁÒÓËÉÊ. õÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: îÁÕËÁ, 1966. — 724 Ó.
    ÷. ó. ÷ÌÁÄÉÍÉÒÏ×. õÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: îÁÕËÁ, 1988. — 512 Ó.
    ó. ì. óÏÂÏÌÅ×. õÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: çéôôì, 1966. — 444 Ó., ÉÚÄ. 4-ÏÅ.
    é. ç. ðÅÔÒÏ×ÓËÉÊ. ìÅËÉÉ Ï ÕÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑÈ Ó ÞÁÓÔÎÙÍÉ ÐÒÏÉÚ×ÏÄÎÙÍÉ. — M.: çéôôì, 1953.
    î. ó. ëÏÛÌÑËÏ×, ü. â. çÌÉÎÅÒ, í. í. óÍÉÒÎÏ× äÉÆÆÅÒÅÎÉÁÌØÎÙÅ ÕÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: çÏÓ. ÉÚÄ. Æ.-Í. ÌÉÔÅÒ., 1962. — 767 Ó.

  • II. äÏÐÏÌÎÉÔÅÌØÎÙÅ ÕÞÅÂÎÉËÉ
  • ó. ë. çÏÄÕÎÏ×. õÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: îÁÕËÁ, 1979. — 352 Ó.
    ó. ç. íÉÈÌÉÎ. õÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ ÍÁÔÅÍÁÔÉÞÅÓËÏÊ ÆÉÚÉËÉ. — M.: îÁÕËÁ, 1968. — 576 Ó. æ. ôÒÉËÏÍÉ. ìÅËÉÉ ÐÏ ÕÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑÍ × ÞÁÓÔÎÙÈ ÐÒÏÉÚ×ÏÄÎÙÈ. — M.: éÚÄ-×Ï ÉÎÏÓÔÒ. ÌÉÔ., 1957. — 444 Ó. á. úÏÍÍÅÒÆÅÌØÄ. äÉÆÆÅÒÅÎÉÁÌØÎÙÅ ÕÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ × ÞÁÓÔÎÙÈ ÐÒÏÉÚ×ÏÄÎÙÈ. — M.: éÚÄ-×Ï ÉÎÏÓÔÒ. ÌÉÔ., 1950. ÷. î. íÁÓÌÅÎÎÉËÏ×Á. äÉÆÆÅÒÅÎÉÁÌØÎÙÅ ÕÒÁ×ÎÅÎÉÑ × ÞÁÓÔÎÙÈ ÐÒÏÉÚ×ÏÄÎÙÈ. — M.: éÚÄ-×Ï òÏÓ. ÕÎ-ÔÁ ÄÒÕÖÂÙ ÎÁÒÏÄÏ×, 1997. — 447 Ó.
  • 70. Math Trek: Conquering Catalan’s Conjecture, Science News Online, June 22, 2002
    News article explains that Preda Mihailescu of the University of Paderborn in Germany may finally have the key to solving venerable problem. Features bibliographic references and links.
    http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20020622/mathtrek.asp

    Science News
    Books.
    Subscribe to
    Science News ...
    Science News for Kids
    Math Trek
    Conquering Catalan’s Conjecture
    Food for Thought
    The Buzz over Coffee
    Science Safari
    Super Conductors
    TimeLine
    70 Years Ago in
    Science News
    Science News
    e-LETTER. ...
    Week of June 22, 2002; Vol. 161, No. 25
    Conquering Catalan’s Conjecture
    Ivars Peterson Innocent-looking problems involving whole numbers can stymie even the most astute mathematicians. As in the case of Fermat’s last theorem, centuries of effort may go into proving such tantalizing, deceptively simple conjectures in number theory. Now, Preda Mihailescu of the University of Paderborn in Germany finally may have the key to a venerable problem known as Catalan’s conjecture, which concerns the powers of whole numbers. Consider the sequence of all squares and cubes of whole numbers greater than 1, a sequence that begins with the integers 4, 8, 9, 16, 25, 27, and 36. In this sequence, 8 (the cube of 2) and 9 (the square of 3) are not only powers of integers but also consecutive whole numbers. In 1844, Belgian mathematician Eugène Charles Catalan (1814–1894) asserted that, among all powers of whole numbers, the only pair of consecutive integers is 8 and 9. Solving Catalan’s problem amounts to a search for whole-number solutions to the equation

    71. Math Miscellany - Department Of Mathematics & Statistics At The University Of Pr
    math has a shared history math has common cultural references Simpson s mathEvery reference to mathematics in any episode of the Simpson s is noted
    http://www.math.upei.ca/html/miscellany.html
    MATH MISCELLANY
    by Gordon MacDonald Math has its own language
    Math has its in-jokes

    Math has puzzles and games

    Math has a shared history
    ...
    Math appears in popular culture
    THE SUBCULTURE OF MATHEMATICS Mathematics has existed as a discipline since the dawn of civilization, and yet a very small percentage of humanity actually is engaged in doing any mathematics beyond basic addition and subtraction. The group of people who do engage in mathematics is often referred to as "the mathematics community". The definition of community being applied here is "the body of people in a learned occupation" (from Cambrige International Dictionary), however, this group of mathematicians is in many ways might be more accurately described as a subculture. DEFINITION OF SUBCULTURE (from Cambridge International Dictionary) The way of life, customs and ideas of a particular group of people within a society, which are different from the rest of society. It is fair to say that the large majority of the population views mathematics with apathy, suspicion, or perhaps even antipathy. I'm sure you had the experience of being in a conversation with non-mathematicians where the topic of mathematics comes up and someone proudly announces: " I was not good at math in High School", or "I hate math". Can you think of any other area where people are proud to declare their ignorance? Only occasionally do you get: "I loved math in High School." As much as mathematicians try to reach across and communicate mathematics to the world, it seems there is a clear line separating the math subculture from the rest of the world. This math subculture is kept alive and vibrant by working mathematicians but is also enriched by the amateurs who enjoy mathematics and want to participate in the mathematics community.

    72. Problems In Graph Theory And Combinatorics"
    A collection maintained by Douglas B. West, of the University of Illinois. Features brief introductions, along with references cited. Topics include matching and independence, connectivity, graph homomorphism and circular coloring.
    http://www.math.uiuc.edu/~west/openp/
    Open Problems - Graph Theory and Combinatorics
    collected and maintained by Douglas B. West
    Number of problem pages now posted: 38
    This site is a resource for research in graph theory and combinatorics. Open problems are listed along with what is known about them, updated as time permits. Individual pages contain such material as title, originator, date, statement of problem, background, partial results, comments, references. Also available is a Glossary of Terms Most pages in this directory have not yet been created; so far this is mostly a list of some well-known problems for which more detailed pages will be written later. Its accessibility at this early stage is a plea for contributed material to accelerate its development. The organization of topics roughly follows the four volumes of The Art of Combinatorics under development by D.B. West. Thus the four main headings are Extremal Graph Theory Structure of Graphs Order and Optimization , and Arrangements and Methods
    Alternatively, below is a direct search, courtesy of Google. On this page, the search will only take you right here, but it will also find problem pages under this that contain your search term.
    Contributions!

    73. Mayan Mathematics References
    references for Mayan mathematics. Version for printing GD Salyers, The numbersystem of the Mayas, math. Mag. 28 (1954), 4448.
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/References/Mayan_mathemat
    References for: Mayan mathematics
    Version for printing Books
  • R Calinger, A conceptual history of mathematics (Upper Straddle River, N. J., 1999).
  • M D Coe, Breaking the Maya code (London, 1992).
  • P T Culbert and J A Sabloff, Maya civilisation (New York, 1995).
  • G Ifrah, A universal history of numbers : From prehistory to the invention of the computer (London, 1998).
  • G G Joseph, The crest of the peacock (London, 1991).
  • M W Makemson, The Maya correlation problem (Poughkeepsie, N. Y., 1946).
  • G I Sanchez, Arithmetic in Maya (Texas, 1961).
  • J A Sabloff, The new archaeology and the ancient Maya (London, 1990). Articles:
  • A F Aveni, Archaeoastronomy in the Maya region : a review of the past decade, Archaeoastronomy No. 3, J. Hist Astronom.
  • A F Aveni and L D Hotaling, Monumental inscriptions and the observational basis of Maya planetary astronomy, Archaeoastronomy No. 19, J. Hist. Astronom.
  • A F Aveni, S J Morandi, and P A Peterson, The Maya number of time : intervalic time reckoning in the Maya codices. I, Archaeoastronomy No. 20, J. Hist. Astronom.
  • 74. Babylonian Mathematics References
    references for An overview of Babylonian mathematics JK Bidwell, A Babyloniangeometrical algebra, College math. J. 17 (1) (1986), 2231.
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/References/Babylonian_mat
    References for: An overview of Babylonian mathematics
    Version for printing Books
  • A Aaboe, Episodes from the Early History of Mathematics
  • R Calinger, A conceptual history of mathematics (Upper Straddle River, N. J., 1999).
  • J Friberg, The third millenium roots of Babylonian mathematics. I. A method for the decipherment, through mathematical and metrological analysis, of proto-Sumerian and proto-Elamite semipictographic inscriptions,
  • G Ifrah, A universal history of numbers : From prehistory to the invention of the computer (London, 1998).
  • G G Joseph, The crest of the peacock (London, 1991).
  • O Neugebauer and A Sachs, Mathematical Cuneiform Texts (New Haven, CT., 1945).
  • B L van der Waerden, Science Awakening (Groningen, 1954).
  • B L van der Waerden, Geometry and Algebra in Ancient Civilizations (New York, 1983). Articles:
  • S K Adhikari, Babylonian mathematics, Indian J. Hist. Sci.
  • A E Berriman, The Babylonian quadratic equation, Math. Gaz.
  • J K Bidwell, A Babylonian geometrical algebra, College Math. J.
  • 75. IEEE-754 References
    This page provides some reference material for the IEEE754 format isused internally by the Intel 80x87 floating-point math co-processor in order
    http://babbage.cs.qc.edu/courses/cs341/IEEE-754references.html
    IEEE-754 References
    This page provides some reference material for the IEEE-754 floating-point standard. It is a companion page to the three calculator pages:
    What's Here
    History of the Calculators
    These calculators came into being in the fall semester of 1997 when I assigned my Computer Organization course an optional project to write a program that would print the values of the fields of IEEE-754 floating point numbers. One student, Quanfei Wen, decided to do the program as an interactive web page, using Javascript to do the calculations. I put Quanfei's pages up on my web site as a resource for other students taking my Computer Organization course, where it was found by Keven Brewer, who was working for Delco Electronics at the time. Kevin noticed some special cases that Quanfei's calculators didn't handle, and volunteered to work up the precise versions of the code that the calculators now use. Kevin also did a web search for information on the IEEE-754 standard, which is included in the

    76. Kathy Schrock's Guide For Educators - Mathematics Resources
    math.com references a handy list of links including formulas, the history ofmath, and online problemsolving tools
    http://school.discovery.com/schrockguide/math.html
    postionList = "compscreen,hedthick,admedia,tower,nuiad,interstitial"; OAS_RICH("interstitial"); OAS_RICH("admedia");
    OAS_RICH("hedthick");
    AAA Math

    ...over 200 pages of math lessons (K-8) which feature interactive practice, challenge games and an explanation of the topic
    Abacus : The Art of Calculating with Beads

    ...a site containing a Java-abacus, the history of the abacus, and instructions for use
    Academic Info: Mathematics

    ...a directory of mathematics sites chosen for the university level; provides great background information for teachers and secondary students
    Algebra.help

    ...a site of lessons, resources, and calculators to aid in the learning/teaching of algebra
    Ask Dr. Math
    ...an archive of math questions, searchable and arranged by grade level; you can also submit your own questions AskERIC Lesson Plans : Mathematics Calculators On-line ...over 5000 types of online calculators to use Click on Bricks ...an interactive mathematics site for learning basic multiplication skills Cornell Theory Center Math and Science Gateway ...great links to resources in mathematics and science for educators and students in grades 9-12 Discovery Channel School : Math Lesson Plans ...curriculum tie-ins with the programs, vocabulary, and great activities to support the metric system, length, probability, numbers in nature, and much more

    77. Hands-on Math: Activities For The Elementary Classroom
    About HandsOn math; references; Acknowledgement; Getting in touch with Janine.math Lessons. Topology. The Mobius Band (All grade levels); The Euler Number
    http://www.dpgraph.com/janine/mathpage/handson.html
    Hands-on Math:
    Activities for the Elementary Classroom
    This page describes activities in geometry, number patterns and topology that have been extensively tested on students in a public elementary school.
    Contents
    • Contents of this page
    • Math Lessons
      • Topology
        • The Mobius Band (All grade levels)
        • The Euler Number of Solids (Grades 5 and up)
      • Number Patterns
        • Integer sequences (Grades 2 and 3)
        • Combinatorics (Grades 3 and 4)
        • Pascal's Triangle (Grades 4 and up)
        • Generalized Fibonacci Sequences and the Golden Mean (Grades 5 and up)
        • Data Compression (Grades 5 and up) (not yet in)
      • Geometry
        • Building symmetric solids with toothpicks and gumdrops (All grade levels)
        • What's my angle?
          • What's my angle? (Grades 1 through 3)
          • Making an astrolabe. (Grades 3 and up)
          • Adding polygon angles. (Grades 5 and up)
          • The Pythagorean theorem. (Grades 5 and up)
          Back to Janine's Home Page Top of this page
          About Hands-On Math
          These pages describe activities I've developed as part of a math enrichment program for grades one through six at the West Kearns Elementary School in Utah. The program is now in its third year, and has been well received by teachers, students, and parents. The purposes of the program are to show children that mathematics can be fun, and to help them build confidence in their mathematical abilities.

    78. Several Requests For References To Connections Between Math And
    Several requests for references to connections between math and music have yieldedthese responses. I have not looked at many of these myself.
    http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/papers/uses-math/music/bibliog
    Pierre Csillag writes: > A lot of time ago I read, in an computer-made-music review, a paper > about musical intervals considered as a group, where the group > operation was the addition (concatenation) of the intervals. But I > cannot find now this paper. Could you give me a pointer to books, > papers, www or ftp sites about a group-theoretical approach of the > musical intervals? I'm sure you'll get a lot of answers to this. But you might also look at the book of David Lewin, Generalized Musical Intervals and Transformations which takes things a lot further. Allan Adler adler@pulsar.cs.wku.edu ============================================================================== From: John Soward Bayne

    79. Math On The Web: References
    AMS Website math on the Web mathematics Departments Reference Materials mathematical Reviews Reference Resources
    http://www.ams.org/mathweb/mi-reference.html
    Mathematics
    on the
    Web Reference Materials AMS Website Math on the Web Mathematics Departments Reference Materials Dictionaries and Thesauri English English-Other Handbooks ... Other Collections
    Dictionaries and Thesauri
    English Language Materials

    80. MCOM - Recently Posted Articles
    Homotopic residual correction processes; VY Pan; M. Kunin; RE Rosholt; H.Kodal math. Comp. Abstract, references and article information
    http://www.ams.org/journals/mcom/0000-000-00/

    ISSN 1088-6842(e) ISSN 0025-5718(p) Articles in press Most recent issue All issues Recently posted articles AMS policy on making changes to articles after posting
    Articles are posted to the AMS website individually soon after proof is returned from authors and before appearing in an issue (most recently posted article listed first).
    Citing articles before they appear in a journal issue
    Global optimization of explicit strong-stability-preserving Runge-Kutta methods
    Steven J. Ruuth
    Math. Comp.
    Abstract, references and article information

    Retrieve article in: PDF DVI TeX PostScript
    Stability analysis for delay differential equations with multidelays and numerical examples
    Leping Sun
    Math. Comp.
    Abstract, references and article information

    Retrieve article in: PDF DVI TeX PostScript
    Notes on some new kinds of pseudoprimes
    Zhenxiang Zhang
    Math. Comp.

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