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Thinking in Problems [electronic resource] : How Mathematicians Find Creative Solutions / by Alexander A. Roytvarf.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Boston : Birkhäuser Boston : Imprint: Birkhäuser, 2013Description: XXXVII, 405 p. 14 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780817684068
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 512 23
LOC classification:
  • QA150-272
Online resources:
Contents:
Preface -- Using the Stars on Problems -- Understanding the Advanced Skill Requirements -- Acknowledgements -- Jacobi Identities and Related Combinatorial Formulas -- A Property of Recursive Sequences -- A Combinatorial Algorithm in Multiexponential Analysis -- A Frequently Encountered Determinant.- A Dynamical System with a Strange Attractor -- Polar and Singular Value Decomposition Theorems -- 2x2 Matrices Which Are Roots of Unity -- A Property of Orthogonal Matrices -- Convexity and Related Classical Inequalities -- One-Parameter Groups of Linear Transformations.- Some Problems in Combinatorics and Analysis that can be Explored using Generating Functions -- Least Squares and Chebyshev Systems -- References -- Index of Terms.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This concise, self-contained textbook gives an in-depth look at problem-solving from a mathematician’s point-of-view. Each chapter builds off the previous one, while introducing a variety of methods that could be used when approaching any given problem. Creative thinking is the key to solving mathematical problems, and this book outlines the tools necessary to improve the reader’s technique. The text is divided into twelve chapters, each providing corresponding hints, explanations, and finalization of solutions for the problems in the given chapter. For the reader’s convenience, each exercise is marked with the required background level. This book implements a variety of strategies that can be used to solve mathematical problems in fields such as analysis, calculus, linear and multilinear algebra and combinatorics. It includes applications to mathematical physics, geometry, and other branches of mathematics. Also provided within the text are real-life problems in engineering and technology. Thinking in Problems is intended for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in the classroom or as a self-study guide. Prerequisites include linear algebra and analysis.
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Preface -- Using the Stars on Problems -- Understanding the Advanced Skill Requirements -- Acknowledgements -- Jacobi Identities and Related Combinatorial Formulas -- A Property of Recursive Sequences -- A Combinatorial Algorithm in Multiexponential Analysis -- A Frequently Encountered Determinant.- A Dynamical System with a Strange Attractor -- Polar and Singular Value Decomposition Theorems -- 2x2 Matrices Which Are Roots of Unity -- A Property of Orthogonal Matrices -- Convexity and Related Classical Inequalities -- One-Parameter Groups of Linear Transformations.- Some Problems in Combinatorics and Analysis that can be Explored using Generating Functions -- Least Squares and Chebyshev Systems -- References -- Index of Terms.

This concise, self-contained textbook gives an in-depth look at problem-solving from a mathematician’s point-of-view. Each chapter builds off the previous one, while introducing a variety of methods that could be used when approaching any given problem. Creative thinking is the key to solving mathematical problems, and this book outlines the tools necessary to improve the reader’s technique. The text is divided into twelve chapters, each providing corresponding hints, explanations, and finalization of solutions for the problems in the given chapter. For the reader’s convenience, each exercise is marked with the required background level. This book implements a variety of strategies that can be used to solve mathematical problems in fields such as analysis, calculus, linear and multilinear algebra and combinatorics. It includes applications to mathematical physics, geometry, and other branches of mathematics. Also provided within the text are real-life problems in engineering and technology. Thinking in Problems is intended for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in the classroom or as a self-study guide. Prerequisites include linear algebra and analysis.

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