Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious फिगुरेस in Math (Read 169 times)

Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures in Math

Book Details
Author: David Wells
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Wiley (May 18, 2005)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0471462349
ISBN-13: 978-0471462347

Book Description
A fascinating journey into the mind-bending world of prime numbers
Cicadas of the genus Magicicada appear once every 7, 13, or 17 years. Is it just a coincidence that these are all prime numbers? How do twin primes differ from cousin primes, and what on earth (or in the mind of a mathematician) could be sexy about prime numbers? What did Albert Wilansky find so fascinating about his brother-in-law’s phone number?
Mathematicians have been asking questions about prime numbers for more than twenty-five centuries, and every answer seems to generate a new rash of questions. In Prime Numbers: The Most Mysterious Figures in Math, you’ll meet the world’s most gifted mathematicians, from Pythagoras and Euclid to Fermat, Gauss, and Erd¿o¿s, and you’ll discover a host of unique insights and inventive conjectures that have both enlarged our understanding and deepened the mystique of prime numbers. This comprehensive, A-to-Z guide covers everything you ever wanted to know—and much more that you never suspected—about prime numbers, including:
* The unproven Riemann hypothesis and the power of the zeta function
* The “Primes is in P” algorithm
* The sieve of Eratosthenes of Cyrene
* Fermat and Fibonacci numbers
* The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search
* And much, much more





कमेंट्स For More

No comments:

Contact Us

banjararuler@yahoo.com