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         Russian Mathematicians:     more books (32)
  1. Russian Mathematicians in the 20th Century
  2. Russian for the Mathematician by Sydney Henry Gould, 1972-06-01
  3. Russian Mathematician Introduction: Pavel Samuilovich Urysohn, Vladimir Steklov, Solomon Mikhlin, Alexander Beilinson, Andrei Okounkov
  4. Russian Mathematicians: Andrey Markov, Aleksandr Lyapunov, Andrey Kolmogorov, Vladimir Arnold, Grigory Barenblatt, Vladimir Voevodsky
  5. Russian for the Scientist and Mathematician by Clive A. Croxton, 1984-05
  6. Pafnuty Chebyshev: Mathematician, Romanization of Russian, Borovsk, Province of Kaluga, Ivan Turgenev, Nikolai Brashman
  7. Russian for mathematicians by O. I Glazunova, 1997
  8. Leonhard Euler: Mathematician, Physicist, Asteroid 19 2002 Euler, Russian Academy of Sciences, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Visual perception, Seven ... Königsberg, Euler?Bernoulli beam equation.
  9. Proceedings of the International Congress of MathematiciansMoscow, 1966.[Text varies- Russian, English, French & German] by I G Petrovsky, 1968
  10. A Russian Childhood by S. Kovalevskaya, 1978-12-19
  11. KANTOROVICH, LEONID VITALIYEVICH: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of Russian History</i> by MARTIN C. SPECHLER, 2004
  12. KOVALEVSKAYA, SOFIA VASILIEVNA: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of Russian History</i> by MARY ZIRIN, 2004
  13. POPOV, ALEXANDER STEPANOVICH: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of Russian History</i> by JOHANNA GRANVILLE, 2004
  14. Experiences of a mathematician in Kharkov Institute of low temperature physics (Russian Research Center paper) by Mark Goldberg, 1983

61. Intas 93-0121
EMIR) adapted to the demand of mathematicians and allowing for use of cyrillics;the provision of access to a directory of russian mathematicians (with plans
http://www.intas.be/catalog/93-0121.htm
Past Projects
INTAS-93-0121
Field: Mathematics, Telecommunications, Information Technologies
Subfield: Telecommunications
INTAS Funding: 240,000 ECU Starting date: 1 September 1994 Duration: 15 months Coordinator: F. TOPSOE Universitetsparken Tel: 45-35320732 Fax: 45-35320719 Partners: J. SLATER University of Kent at Canterbury, Computing Laboratory UK - CT2 7NZ Canterbury L. BELOUS B.I. Verkin Institute for Low Temperature Physics and Engineering, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Computer Centre UA - 310164 Kharkov O. LUPANOV Moscow State University - M.V. Lomonosov, Department of Mathematics and Mechanics RU - 119899 Moscow I. SKRYPNIK Institute of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Communication Research Laboratory UA - 252601 Kiev S. ZNAMENSKII Krasnoyarsk State University, Laboratory of Mathematics and Informatics RU - 660022 Krasnoyarsk N. REPIN Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Numerical Analysis, Information and Publishing Department RU - 117334 Moscow I. KIGURADZE

62. Math Sciences, Binghamton University - Mathematics On The WWW
Directory of russian mathematicians from the Information and Publishing Departmentof the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Steklov Mathematical Institute.
http://www.math.binghamton.edu/math/
Mathematics on the Web
Selected Very Useful Resources

63. G.Mints About S.Maslov
to the English edition of the book 6 dedicated to the memory of two remarkablerussian mathematicians, Sergei Maslov and his wife Nina Maslova (see also 5)
http://www.mathsoc.spb.ru/pers/maslov/mints.html
An excerption from a foreword by G.Mints
to the English edition of the book dedicated to the memory of two remarkable Russian mathematicians,
Sergei Maslov and his wife Nina Maslova
(see also S. Maslov is known as the author of the inverse method in automated deduction which was discovered at the same time as the resolution method of J.A. Robinson and has approximately the same range of applications. In 1981 Maslov proposed an iterative algorithm for propositional satisfiability based on some general search ideas described in detail in his book published posthumously. When in 1982 Maslov was killed at the age of 43 in a car accident, a seminar was started to follow through on his ideas. The result of this collective research forms the bulk of the present book. Nina Maslova was a mathematician in her own right. She was awarded the National Prize in Mathematics, one of the highest distinctions for mathematics in the former Soviet Union. When she died in 1993 at the age of 54, the St. Petersburg Mathematical Society convened a special meeting in her honor. The intellectual influence of the Maslov family was not restricted, however, to their scientific achievements. Their home in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) was a meeting place of a

64. ECE Archive: [kindkink@omni.voicenet.com: Human Rights In Russia (fwd)]
I should forward you a letter from three russian mathematicians I'd be wonderingwhether anyone in the States cares about what's going on in Russia.
http://www.dbai.tuwien.ac.at/marchives/ece/0172.html
[kindkink@omni.voicenet.com: Human Rights in Russia (fwd)]
Kurt Fuchs ( Kurt.Fuchs@aut.alcatel.at
Mon, 19 Jun 95 11:16:39 +0200
Original message
Forwarded message
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 1995 17:54:23 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Human Rights in Russia (fwd)
I received this and was asked for forward it. Alan
Forwarded message
Date: Sun, 16 Apr 1995 19:14:57 -0700
To: kbretsch@teleport.com
Subject: nice
I received the following from a Czech mathematician friend of mine. I should forward you a letter from three Russian mathematicians - I'd be wondering whether anyone in the States cares about what's going on in Russia. just explain you what's so important on this letter - those three guys are definitely one of the best Russian mathematicians of younger generation (between 30-40). One of them - Drinfeld is a Fields medailist and he was first who introduced quantum groups and recognized their importance in math. physics.

65. Memories About My Education And My Teachers
a lucky opportunity to communicate for a few years with and become a student ofVA.Rokhlin, one of the most brilliant russian mathematicians of this century.
http://www.math.metu.edu.tr/~serge/education.html
Some memories related to my education and my teachers
I started systematic studying of topology together with a group of friends when I was in higher school.
This school, Internat (Boarding school) No 45, known now also as the Academic Gymnasium, was established by the St. Petersburg University for talented students.
The study group consisted of my classmates, mostly the winners of mathematical olympiads (for instance, B.Solomyak, N.Netsvetaev and me entered later Soviet International Math. Olympiad Teem, which was, in turn, the best among the others on the Olympiad in Austria).
The idea of such studying was due to Igor Rubanov, a graduate student who taught us point set topology for one year and invited then O. Ya. Viro (who was at that time a young professor giving regular lectures in topology in St. Petersburg University) to continue our education.
I consider Viro as one of the best lectures and teachers that I met. Several courses in algebraic and geometric topology that he gave to us during two years in higher school and a few more years in the University were very valuable for our topological background.
I had a lucky opportunity to communicate for a few years with and become a student of V.A.Rokhlin

66. SearchUK - Finds It Fast!
Directory. Directory of russian mathematicians A searchable index.Math Reviews Author Database - Searchable requires subscription.
http://www.searchuk.co.uk/Top/Science/Math/Mathematicians/Collections/
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The MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive
- Contains concise biographies for more than 1400 mathematicians.
CML Search
- Combined Membership List for the AMS, MAA, SIAM, and the AMATYC. Includes almost all US mathematicians.

67. Directory :: Look.com
Directory of russian mathematicians A searchable index. Directory of Scholarsin Mathematics and Statistics in Taiwan Organised initially by institute.
http://www.look.com/searchroute/directorysearch.asp?p=142455

68. A.N. Krylov: A Short Biography
information There are at least two other russian mathematicians namedKrylov who made important contributions to Numerical Analysis. One
http://www.math.ruu.nl/people/vorst/kryl.html
A.N. Krylov: a short biography
A.N.Krylov Alexei Nikolaevich Krylov was born on August 3, 1863 in a village of the Simbirsk Region in Russia. The name A.N. Krylov is probably one of the most widely known and recognized in Russia among outstanding scientists in the 20th century. Although his research interests were incredibly broad (at least for a scientist of the 20th century), his professional activity could apparently be best characterized by saying that he was a very good Maritime Engineer. This should necessarily mean that he was a very good Applied Mathematician too. Note that in the word "Krylov" the second syllable is stressed and that "y" should be pronounced in the same way as in "Chebyshev". Another possible spelling of "Krylov" is "Kriloff". At the age of 15, Krylov entered a Naval College in 1878 and finished it with distinction in 1884. After spending several years at the Main Hydrographic Administration and at a shipbuilding plant, in 1888 he continued his study in the Naval Academy in Saint-Petersburg. He was a talented and promising student and after ahead-of-schedule graduation from the Academy in 1890 he could stay there as Mathematics and Ship-theory lecturer. The fame came to him in the 1890s, when his pioneering "Theory of oscillating motions of the ship", significantly extending R.E. Froude's rolling theory, became internationally known. This was the first comprehensive theoretical study in the field. In 1898 Krylov received a Gold Medal from

69. Online Resource Center | 404 Not Found
Thus, during a short period of time the range of vision of russian mathematiciansbroadened, which allowed to pave the way for foundation of the Academy of
http://nolcos.nm.ru/maths.htm
Dial-Up IP-òåëåôîíèÿ Êîìïàíèÿ ORC IP-òåëåôîíèÿ newmail.ru var loc = '';
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70. SOC.CULTURE.RUSSIAN FAQ: Monthly Repost
Great russian mathematicians Lobachevsky, Markov, Lyapunov, Voronoy, Fedorov, Pontriagin,Alexandrov, Kolmogorov, Vinogradov, Ostrogradsky, Vladimirov, Gonchar
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/cultures/russian/info/
SOC.CULTURE.RUSSIAN FAQ: Monthly repost
From: 74642.3600@compuserve.com (Alex Iatskovski) Newsgroups: soc.culture.russian soc.answers news.answers 36da78d6.1938136@news.brainlink.com ... http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/russian_club SOC.CULTURE.RUSSIAN FAQ Monthly repost Below is a monthly repost of some important SOC.CULTURE.RUSSIAN NEWSGROUP materials. Maintained by Alex Iatskovski. Entire content of this document is public domain and can be freely distributed, no permission needed. If you have any questions, suggestions or additions, please e-mail Alex Iatskovski at 74642.3600@compuserve.com . Table of Contents: 1. What is this document and why should I read it? 2. What is soc.culture.russian (the charter)? 3. What is soc.culture.russian.moderated ? 4. Our position toward crospostings. 5. What is Russian contribution in human endeavor? 6. What languages are used on soc.culture.russian soc.culture.russian , and the usual answers to these questions. Please read this FAQ before posting any requests for information to soc.culture.russian

71. Great Threat From Unguarded N-weapons -DAWN - International; 02 February, 2003
The report offers a solution. The huge pool of underemployed russian mathematiciansand physicists, it suggests, could be turned into highend computer
http://www.dawn.com/2003/02/02/int16.htm
02 February 2003 Sunday 29 Ziqa'ad 1423
Please Visit our Sponsor (Ads open in separate window)
Great threat from unguarded N-weapons
By Richard Norton-Taylor

LONDON: As George Bush and Tony Blair prepare for war against Iraq with the declared intention of ridding that country of weapons of mass destruction, a much greater threat lies elsewhere.
UN inspectors are on the ground in Iraq looking for hidden nuclear, biological and chemical weapons, yet huge quantities are piling up in Russia, out in the open, without any effective supervision.
This was the message from a recent conference in London entitled "Preventing catastrophic terrorism". Sam Nunn, former Democrat senator and one of the conference chairmen, described the threat from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons as the gravest danger in the world today. Preventing their spread, he said, should be the "central organising security principle for the 21st century".
Such weapons are more likely to be used by terrorists than so-called "rogue states", he warned. "If terrorists gain access to nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, they can destroy lives, destabilise economies and change history."
Yet terrorists are more likely to get their hands on them, not by being given them by states or governments, but by stealing them or buying them on the open market. The real danger, said Nunn, came from what he called the "private sector", including the US. He pointed out that most laboratories contain dangerous material, yet they are not subjected to any rules or standards.

72. WirelessWeek.com
I'm sorry that russian mathematicians work everywhere, but Russian companies arenot represented at this show, Gorbachev said, adding he hoped that would
http://www.wirelessweek.com/esec/Article_202812.htm
Search Wireless Week Entire Site Articles Web-Exclusive Archives Companies Products Directories Events Archive Map Tips Advertise Archives ... Subscribe You Are Here > Home Issues
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Sound Off How much did you spend on your last mobile phone? Less than $100 Between $100-$200 More than $200 View Previous Polls Inside Wireless Advertise - Web Editorial Planner Print Subscription Reprint Requests ... Subscribe Gorbachev Focuses On The Big Picture By Kristy Bassuener March 25, 2002 ORLANDO, Fla. Speaking through an interpreter, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sat down for an animated chat with CTIA President and CEO Tom Wheeler. At times serious and at times humorous, Gorbachev helped bring home the big picture for people living, working and playing in a much-changed world. Following the chat, Gorbachev appeared at a private reception at the ArrayComm Inc. booth on the show floor, during which he made a strong plea for the U.S. wireless industry to do more business directly with Russian companies. Gorbachev noted that a large number of Russian-trained technologists now work for foreign software and technology businesses, causing a significant brain drain on their home country. "I'm sorry that Russian mathematicians work everywhere, but Russian companies are not represented at this show," Gorbachev said, adding he hoped that would change for next year's show.

73. UCL: Mathematics - Library Resources
OnLine Mathematical Dictionary; Directory of russian mathematicians;Mathematical Programming Glossary. Mathematical Plug-Ins and software.
http://www.lib.uconn.edu/subjectareas/mathnet.html
Resources for MATHEMATICS
Contents:
RETURN TO Resources for other subjects
UConn Library Collections, Services, and Databases:

74. Stealth Secrets Feared Stolen
The bigger issue is that these guys (russian mathematicians) had access toa lot of computers and computer networks, the former employee said.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/spy301.shtml
Jump to Weather Traffic Mariners Seahawks ... Forums NEWS Local Neighborhoods Sports Nation/World ... Special Reports COMMENTARY Opinion Columnists Letters David Horsey ... Forums COFFEE BREAK Mike Mailway TV Listings SHOPPING Archives NWclassifieds Jobs Autos ... Online Shop P-I ANYWHERE E-mail Newsletters News Alerts PDA Cell Phones ... Desktop OUR AFFILIATES
Stealth secrets feared stolen U.S. is investigating Russian mathematician employed by Bothell software company Monday, October 30, 2000 By PAUL SHUKOVSKY
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER © Seattle Post-Intelligencer A Russian mathematician who was given access to an American supercomputer loaded with stealth warplane design software is under investigation for espionage. Federal agents suspect that Aleksey Yeremin, who logged on to the supercomputer from Moscow, took advantage of Lockheed Martin and military security lapses to steal stealth technology secrets. This is the visa issued to Aleksey Yeremin, a Russian mathematician and partner in a Bothell software company that did work for Lockheed Martin. U.S. officials now say he has ties to the Russian military and now-defunct KGB. The 3 1/2-year investigation stretches from the heart of the old Soviet empire to Lockheed's secretive Skunk Works plant in Southern California to a quiet suburb north of Seattle.

75. AriadNe/Culture & Recreation/Russia - Other Interesting WWW Pages In Russia
Beer is supplied directly from Germany. (possible unreachable); http//www.ras.ru/cgibin/wld/Directory of russian mathematicians - data about over 5000
http://ariadne.iief.de/index.php3/Culture & Recreation/Russia
The European and Mediterranean link resource for
R esearch, S cience and C ulture Search Submit News Help
Other interesting WWW pages in Russia
Russia Find: Match: Any of the words All the words Search within this section only

76. Midagi Kasulikku
WWWservers Contents of Relcom WWW Information and Publishing Department, MathematicalBranch RAS Directory of russian mathematicians Cyrillic characters
http://www.ut.ee/~uba/URL.html
Peep Uba
Euromath Center, University of Copenhagen
Universitetsparken 5, Copenhagen
DK-2100 Denmark
Phone:+45 35 32 07 20 ; Fax: +45 35 32 07 19
e-mail: uba@emc.dk

77. Belfer Center For Science And International Affairs Newsletter - Spring 1999 - I
One Western participant in the session said she was amazed by the quality of thework that russian mathematicians and software specialists are doing for Intel
http://bcsia.ksg.harvard.edu/article.cfm?item_id=189

78. The Hilbert Problems 1900-2000
russian mathematicians have recently shown that in two cases the original `solutions'were flawed, and have given different and rigorous accounts.
http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/~kersten/hilbert/gray.html
The Hilbert problems 1900-2000
Jeremy Gray In 1900 David Hilbert went to the second International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris to give an invited paper. He spoke on The Problems of Mathematics , to such effect that Hermann Weyl later referred to anyone who solved one of the 23 problems that Hilbert presented as entering the honours class of mathematicians. Throughout the 20th century the solution of a problem was the occasion for praise and celebration.
David Hilbert around 1900 Hilbert in 1900
By 1900 Hilbert had emerged as the leading mathematician in Germany. He was famous for his solution of the major problems of invariant theory, and for his great Zahlbericht , or Report on the theory of numbers , published in 1896. In 1899, at Klein's request, Hilbert published The foundations of geometry You have opened up an immeasurable field of mathematical investigation which can be called the "mathematics of axioms" and which goes far beyond the domain of geometry.
Hermann Minkowski
Hilbert was therefore poised to lead the international community of mathematicians. He consulted with his friends Minkowski and Hurwitz, and Minkowski advised him to seize the moment, writing:

79. Maksim E. Moshkow
Network administration and system integration. Building of heterogeneousLAN. Administrating of the Directory of russian mathematicians.
http://lib.ru/~moshkow/
Maksim Eugenievich Moshkow
(Date of birth: 13.X.1966) Email: moshkow@ipsun.ras.ru
Phone: (095)274-6329
Fax: 274-6108, 719-7681
ICQ: 96361784
Database Informix and Unix system administrator.
Research Inst. of System Studies of RAS
109280, Moscow, Tufeleva roshcha, 12
    My library
Mirrors of Maksim Moshkow's library Additional Mirrors of library
Here is my UNIX collection:
Bestix V.3.1, ISC V.3.2, SCO XENIX, SCO 3.2.4.2, SCO ODT 2.0, SunOS 4.1.1,3, Solaris 2.2,3,4,5 AIX 3.4a.0(CETIA), AIX 4.1, 386bsd, Linux 0.99.14-2.2.10, FreeBSD 1.1.5, 2.0, BSD/OS 2.0, Unixware 1.0,1,2.0, SVR3.2/88, SVR4.0/88, OSF/1, r3000 Lynxos TC/IX, HP-UX/9,10.20,11.0
(to be continued)
Here is my collection of programming languages:
Perl, Bourne Shell, awk, SQL, Informix-4GL, C, HTML, Lisp, Fortran-IV, Fortran-77, Basic, Pascal, Assembler PDP-11, Assembler IBM/360, Algol-60, APL, PL/I

80. Landau_Lev
The russian physicist considered one of the top theorists of all time
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Landau_Lev.html
Lev Davidovich Landau
Born: 22 Jan 1908 in Baku, Azerbaijan, Russian Empire
Died: 1 April 1968 in Moscow, USSR
Click the picture above
to see six larger pictures Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Lev Landau studied physics and chemistry at Baku University and then went in 1924 to the Leningrad State University, graduating in 1927. He continued research at the Leningrad Physico- Technical Institute. Niels Bohr 's Institute for Theoretical Physics. From that time he considered himself a pupil of Bohr's whose influence was to dictate the direction of Landau's work. In 1932 Landau become the head of the Theory Division of the Ukrainian Technical Institute in Kharkov. In addition, in 1935, he was made head Physics at the Kharkov Gorky State University. Landau soon made his School in Kharkov the centre of theoretical physics in the USSR. In 1937 Landau went to Moscow to become Head of the Theory Division of the Physical Institute of the Academy of Sciences. Landau worked on low-temperature physics, atomic and nuclear physics and plasma physics. The work he did on the theory to explain why liquid helium was super-fluid earned him the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physics.

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