
A Decade of the Berkeley Math Circle
The American Experience, Volume II
American Mathematical Society (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 28. February 2015
Book
Paperback/Softback
376 pages
978-0-8218-4912-5 (ISBN)
Description
Many mathematicians have been drawn to mathematics through their experience with math circles. The Berkeley Math Circle (BMC) started in 1998 as one of the very first math circles in the U.S. Over the last decade and a half, 100 instructors - university professors, business tycoons, high school teachers, and more - have shared their passion for mathematics by delivering over 800 BMC sessions on the UC Berkeley campus every week during the school year.
This second volume of the book series is based on a dozen of these sessions, encompassing a variety of enticing and stimulating mathematical topics, some new and some continuing from Volume I:
from dismantling Rubik's Cube and randomly putting it back together to solving it with the power of group theory
from raising knot-eating machines and letting Alexander the Great cut the Gordian Knot to breaking through knot theory via the Jones polynomial
from entering a seemingly hopeless infinite raffle to becoming friendly with multiplicative functions in the land of Dirichlet, Mobius, and Euler
from leading an army of jumping fleas in an old problem from the International Mathematical Olympiads to improving our own essay-writing strategies
from searching for optimal paths on a hot summer day to questioning whether Archimedes was on his way to discovering trigonometry 2000 years ago
Do some of these scenarios sound bizarre, having never before been associated with mathematics? Mathematicians love having fun while doing serious mathematics and that love is what this book intends to share with the reader. Whether at a beginner, an intermediate, or an advanced level, anyone can find a place here to be provoked to think deeply and to be inspired to create.
In the interest of fostering a greater awareness and appreciation of mathematics and its connections to other disciplines and everyday life, MSRI and the AMS are publishing books in the Mathematical Circles Library series as a service to young people, their parents and teachers, and the mathematics profession.
This second volume of the book series is based on a dozen of these sessions, encompassing a variety of enticing and stimulating mathematical topics, some new and some continuing from Volume I:
from dismantling Rubik's Cube and randomly putting it back together to solving it with the power of group theory
from raising knot-eating machines and letting Alexander the Great cut the Gordian Knot to breaking through knot theory via the Jones polynomial
from entering a seemingly hopeless infinite raffle to becoming friendly with multiplicative functions in the land of Dirichlet, Mobius, and Euler
from leading an army of jumping fleas in an old problem from the International Mathematical Olympiads to improving our own essay-writing strategies
from searching for optimal paths on a hot summer day to questioning whether Archimedes was on his way to discovering trigonometry 2000 years ago
Do some of these scenarios sound bizarre, having never before been associated with mathematics? Mathematicians love having fun while doing serious mathematics and that love is what this book intends to share with the reader. Whether at a beginner, an intermediate, or an advanced level, anyone can find a place here to be provoked to think deeply and to be inspired to create.
In the interest of fostering a greater awareness and appreciation of mathematics and its connections to other disciplines and everyday life, MSRI and the AMS are publishing books in the Mathematical Circles Library series as a service to young people, their parents and teachers, and the mathematics profession.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Providence
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 254 mm
Width: 178 mm
Weight
654 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8218-4912-5 (9780821849125)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Zvezdelina Stankova, Mills College, Oakland, CA, USA.
Tom Rike, Oakland High School, CA, USA.
Tom Rike, Oakland High School, CA, USA.
Content
Foreword by David Eisenbud
Introduction by Zvezdelina Stankova
Geometric re-constructions. Part I Along optimal paths and integer grids
Rubik's cube. Part II by Tom Davis
Knotty mathematics by Maia Averett
Multiplicative functions. Part I The infinite-raffle challenge
Introduction to group theory
Monovariants. Part II Jumping fleas and Conway's checkers
Geometric re-constructions. Part II Bits of geometry, physics & trigonometry
Complex numbers. Part II
Introduction to inequalities. Part I Arithmetic, geometric, and power means
Multiplicative functions. Part II Dirichlet product and Moebius inversion
Monovariants. Part III Smoothing inequalities
Geometric re-constructions. Part III Optimal bridges and infinitely many squares
Epilogue
Symbols and notation
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
Introduction by Zvezdelina Stankova
Geometric re-constructions. Part I Along optimal paths and integer grids
Rubik's cube. Part II by Tom Davis
Knotty mathematics by Maia Averett
Multiplicative functions. Part I The infinite-raffle challenge
Introduction to group theory
Monovariants. Part II Jumping fleas and Conway's checkers
Geometric re-constructions. Part II Bits of geometry, physics & trigonometry
Complex numbers. Part II
Introduction to inequalities. Part I Arithmetic, geometric, and power means
Multiplicative functions. Part II Dirichlet product and Moebius inversion
Monovariants. Part III Smoothing inequalities
Geometric re-constructions. Part III Optimal bridges and infinitely many squares
Epilogue
Symbols and notation
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index