Copiale Cipher; scaled page 16/17 2011 Source
Kevin Knight,
[1] Author 18th century
maps
Detalle do noroeste da peninsula ibérica na Tábula Rogeriana de Al Idrisi, na transcripción latina de Konrad Miller de 1928. Pódese obter un mapa de detalle da Tábula Rogeriana na seguinte dirección á web da Libraría do Congreso dos EEUU.
... that Ioana Dumitriu began taking graduate mathematics courses as a college freshman, and became the first female
Putnam Fellow the following year? (
15.01)
... that mathematician Andrew Gleason liked to say that
proofs "really aren't there to convince you that something is true—they're there to show you why it is true"? (
13.04)
... that Pieter Nieuwland(pictured), an 18th-century child prodigy and
polymath who died a year after becoming a professor, has been called the Dutch
Isaac Newton? (
12.09)
... that
Nicolas de Bruijn was inspired to prove De Bruijn's theorem on packing
bricks into boxes by his seven-year-old son's inability to pack some bricks into a box without wasted space? (
12.09)
... that the number of ways to place n diagonally symmetric
rooks on an n × nchessboard in such a way that no two rooks attack each other is a telephone number? (
12.04)
... that the Latvian mathematician Emanuels Grīnbergs lost his job and his doctoral degree for serving in the
German Army during World War II, but then regained both by writing a new thesis? (
12.04)
... that despite leaving school at age 14, Thomas Kirkman became one of 19th-century England's leading mathematicians and helped found
combinatorial design theory? (
11.10)
... that the Malfatti circles, three
tangent circles inside a triangle, are named after
Malfatti because of an incorrect conjecture he made, and were studied earlier by
Ajima and di Cecco? (
11.06)
... that Charles Fletcher, the first European settler in what is now Navarro River Redwoods State Park, built an inn in 1865 that remained open until the 1970s? (
11.02)
... that an equitable coloring of a
graph(pictured), in which the numbers of vertices of each color are as nearly equal as possible, may require far more colors than a
graph coloring without this constraint? (
09.03)
... that there are 115,200 solutions to the ménage problem of
permuting six couples at a twelve-person table so that men and women alternate and are seated away from their partners? (
09.01)
...that in
graph theory, a pseudoforest can contain
trees and pseudotrees, but cannot contain any butterflies, diamonds, handcuffs, or bicycles? (
07.10)
...that a cyclic cellular automaton(pictured) is a system of simple mathematical rules that can generate complex patterns mixing random chaos, blocks of color, and spirals? (
07.04)
Copiale Cipher; scaled page 16/17 2011 Source
Kevin Knight,
[1] Author 18th century
maps
Detalle do noroeste da peninsula ibérica na Tábula Rogeriana de Al Idrisi, na transcripción latina de Konrad Miller de 1928. Pódese obter un mapa de detalle da Tábula Rogeriana na seguinte dirección á web da Libraría do Congreso dos EEUU.
... that Ioana Dumitriu began taking graduate mathematics courses as a college freshman, and became the first female
Putnam Fellow the following year? (
15.01)
... that mathematician Andrew Gleason liked to say that
proofs "really aren't there to convince you that something is true—they're there to show you why it is true"? (
13.04)
... that Pieter Nieuwland(pictured), an 18th-century child prodigy and
polymath who died a year after becoming a professor, has been called the Dutch
Isaac Newton? (
12.09)
... that
Nicolas de Bruijn was inspired to prove De Bruijn's theorem on packing
bricks into boxes by his seven-year-old son's inability to pack some bricks into a box without wasted space? (
12.09)
... that the number of ways to place n diagonally symmetric
rooks on an n × nchessboard in such a way that no two rooks attack each other is a telephone number? (
12.04)
... that the Latvian mathematician Emanuels Grīnbergs lost his job and his doctoral degree for serving in the
German Army during World War II, but then regained both by writing a new thesis? (
12.04)
... that despite leaving school at age 14, Thomas Kirkman became one of 19th-century England's leading mathematicians and helped found
combinatorial design theory? (
11.10)
... that the Malfatti circles, three
tangent circles inside a triangle, are named after
Malfatti because of an incorrect conjecture he made, and were studied earlier by
Ajima and di Cecco? (
11.06)
... that Charles Fletcher, the first European settler in what is now Navarro River Redwoods State Park, built an inn in 1865 that remained open until the 1970s? (
11.02)
... that an equitable coloring of a
graph(pictured), in which the numbers of vertices of each color are as nearly equal as possible, may require far more colors than a
graph coloring without this constraint? (
09.03)
... that there are 115,200 solutions to the ménage problem of
permuting six couples at a twelve-person table so that men and women alternate and are seated away from their partners? (
09.01)
...that in
graph theory, a pseudoforest can contain
trees and pseudotrees, but cannot contain any butterflies, diamonds, handcuffs, or bicycles? (
07.10)
...that a cyclic cellular automaton(pictured) is a system of simple mathematical rules that can generate complex patterns mixing random chaos, blocks of color, and spirals? (
07.04)