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         Ramanujan Srinivasa:     more books (55)
  1. Ramanujan's notebooks by K. G Ramanathan, 1987
  2. Resonance of Ramanujan's mathematics by R. P Agarwal, 1996
  3. Lectures by Godfrey H. Hardy on the mathematical work of Ramanujan: Fall term 1936 by G. H Hardy, 1937
  4. Development of elliptic functions according to Ramanujan (Technical report / Madurai Kamaraj University. Dept. of Mathematics) by K Venkatachaliengar, 1987
  5. Mr. S. Ramanujan's mathematical work in England;: A report ... to the University of Madras by G. H Hardy, 1916
  6. Notebooks by Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar, 1957
  7. A-Z of Barbados Heritage (Macmillan Caribbean a-Z Series) by Sean Carrington, Henry Fraser, et all 2004-05
  8. Advances in Number Theory between 1900 and 1949: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by P. Andrew Karam, 2000
  9. Alternative sciences: Creativity and authenticity in two Indian scientists (Man, state, and society series) by Ashis Nandy, 1980
  10. Self Directed Learning by Kaushik Shandilya, 2010-02-03
  11. The Indian Clerk: A Novel by David Leavitt, 2007-09-04
  12. Return from Exile: Alternative Sciences, Illegitimacy of Nationalism, The Savage Freud by Ashis Nandy, 1999-04-08
  13. Lectures by Godfrey H. Hardy by G. H Hardy, 1937

61. Inforce XE - Spektrum2: Mathematik Srinivasa Ramanujan Und Die Zahl Pi
Translate this page Autor, Jonathan M. Borwein. Titel, srinivasa ramanujan und die Zahl Pi (88/ 4).Zur Gesamtliste top. Copyright ©1997-2002 SDS Software Dirk Sandhorst Agnesstr.
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62. Arch-y3k Mail [127] Srinivasa Ramanujan (var Re Mer Minnet (
Date PrevDate NextThread PrevThread NextDate IndexThread Indexsrinivasa ramanujan (var Re mer minnet (Re Star Trek og y3k)).
http://www.sublevel3.org/~arch-y3k/mail/y3k-2001-11/msg00126.html
arch-y3k: mail [127]
Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index
Srinivasa Ramanujan (var: Re: mer minnet (Re: Star Trek og y3k))
  • To Subject Srinivasa Ramanujan (var: Re: mer minnet (Re: Star Trek og y3k)) From Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2001 17:33:26 +0100
Her er mer info om Srinivasa Ramanujan: http://www.imsc.ernet.in/~rao/ramanujan.html Christian Stigen Larsen http://www.sublevel3.org mob: +4798220215

63. The New York Review Of Books: Srinivasa Ramanujan By David Levine
David Levine Gallery. srinivasa ramanujan. This drawing originally appeared with In The Jungle of the Infinite (December 5, 1991). Browse the gallery by year
http://www.nybooks.com/gallery/1321
@import "/css/default-b.css"; Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books
David Levine Gallery
Srinivasa Ramanujan This drawing originally appeared with " In The Jungle of the Infinite " (December 5, 1991) Browse the gallery by year: Search the gallery (by subject name or keyword): Home Your account Current issue Archives ... NYR Books with any questions about this site. The cover date of the next issue of The New York Review of Books will be May 1, 2003.

64. Online Books
srinivasa Aiyangar ramanujan. By Brishti Bandyopadhyay; Illustration by Shiju George.Page 1 0f 1. srinivasa ramanujan was one of India's mathematical geniuses.
http://www.pitara.com/magazine/people/online.asp?story=48

65. Srinivasa Ramanujam
srinivasa ramanujan was born in a poor Tamil Brahmin family that resided inthe town of Kumbakonam. He attended school there and did averagely well.
http://members.tripod.com/mathsc/ramanujan/sramanujan.htm
S rinivasa Ramanujan was born in a poor Tamil Brahmin family that resided in the town of Kumbakonam. He attended school there and did averagely well. While in school he came across a book entitled A synopsis of elementary results in Pure and Applied Mathematics by George Carr. This book is just a compendium of results on integrals, infinite series and other mathematical entities found in analysis. Yet it left a lasting impression on Ramanujan; in fact it virtually determined his mathematical style. He would later write mathematics as a string of results without proof or with the barest outline of a proof. After school Ramanujan was hooked on mathematics. He spent all his time with his head over a slate working with problems in number theory that interested him and neglected everything else. The result was that he could never get through another examination. An early marriage as was usual at those times led to a frantic search for a job to earn an income. He became a clerk in the Madras Port Trust with the help of some well wishers. In the meantime Ramanujan kept showing his results to various people who he thought would be interested or would help him get a job that would give him a lot of time to do mathematics. He wrote to a couple of well known British mathematicians giving a list of some of the results he had obtained. They ignored him - thought he was a crank! Finally he wrote to one of the most distinguished English mathematicians of the time - a person who had done a lot of work on number theory - G H Hardy. Hardy arranged for Ramanujan to come to Trinity College, Cambridge where he and Ramanujan met almost daily discussing mathematics for about three years. Ramanujan died shortly after at the age of 33.

66. Bokpris.com - Collected Papers Of Srinivasa Ramanujan
Collected Papers of srinivasa ramanujan Jämför priser, frakt och leveranstidenpå böcker i svenska och utländska Internetbutiker.
http://www.bokpris.com/0821820761
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Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan
Författare:
Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar
G. H. Hardy
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67. Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Relevant Books
House, 1988. ISBN 8185198063 . ramanujan, srinivasa GH Hardy, EditorCollected Papers of srinivasa ramanujan Cambridge University Press, 1927.
http://www.wolframscience.com/reference/books/r.html

A
B C D ... Q R S T U V ... W X Y Z
R
R. V. Southwell
Relaxation Methods in Theoretical Physics
Clarendon Press, 1946 R.N. Elliott
The Major Works of R.N. Elliott
New Classics Library, 1980 Radinsky, Leonard B.
The Evolution of Vertebrate Design
University of Chicago Press, 1987. [ISBN 0226702367
Embryos, Genes, and Evolution
Indiana University Press, 1983. [ISBN 0253206421
Mathematical Methods for Digital Computers, Volume 1 Mathematical Methods for Digital Computers, Volume 2 Ramakrishnan, A Elementary Particles and Cosmic Rays Pergamon Press, 1962 Ramanujan Aiyangar, Srinivasa The Lost Notebook and Other Unpublished Papers Narosa Pub. House, 1988. [ISBN 8185198063 Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan Cambridge University Press, 1927 Ramond, Pierre Field Theory. A Modern Primer W.A. Benjamin, 1981. [ISBN 0805378928 Ramsey, Frank Plumpton The Foundations of Mathematics Harcourt Brace, 1931 Rand Corporation A Million Random Digits with 100,000 Normal Deviates Free Press, 1955 Rand McNally The Shape of the World Rand McNally, 1991. [ISBN 0528834193 Dynamical Systems and Turbulence (Lecture Notes in Mathematics Series, Volume 898)

68. Porträt - Ramanujan
Translate this page Porträt srinivasa ramanujan. ramanujan war ein autodidaktisches mathematischesWunderkind aus einer Stadt in der Nähe von Madras
http://www.zahlenjagd.at/ramanujan.html
Porträt: Srinivasa Ramanujan Ramanujan war ein autodidaktisches mathematisches Wunderkind aus einer Stadt in der Nähe von Madras in Südindien und kam aus einer armen Familie. Madras war 1600 km von dem welt-städtischen Kalkutta entfernt. 1913 begann die Korrespondenz mit G.H. Hardy und 1914 erhielt er ein Stipendium für einen Aufenthalt am Trinity College in Cambridge, damit er dort sein Begabung in die Zusammenarbeit mit den Wissenschaftern einbringt und von Ihnen alles, was sie wußten, lernen konnte. In dieser Zeit schur er in einem für Ihn fremden und kalten England mit 21 großen Arbeiten ein dauerhaftes mathematisches Erbe. Aus gesundheitlichen Gründen kehrte er jedoch 1919 nach Indien zurück, wurde empfanges wie ein Held und starb. Erstaunlich war seine Fähigkeit der Umformung unendlicher Reihen. Ramanujan erhielt viele seiner Ergebnisse intuitiv aus einer Vielzahl von Zahlenbeispielen und hatte ein ausgezeichnetes Gedächtnis und eine Fähigkeit zur Durchführung komplizierter Rechnungen. Seine Gedankensprünge machen den Mathematikern noch heute, sieben Jahrzehnte nach seinem Tod, zu schaffen. Zahlreiche Resultate sind in Briefen an G.H. Hardy formuliert. Ihm verdanken die Zahlentheoretiker bemerkenswerte asymptotische Formeln, ferner Ergebnisse zur

69. TIME 100 Scientists Thinkers - Unsung Heroes, P. 2
terminally ill and their loved ones. srinivasa ramanujan. Painted Portraitof srinivasa ramanujan (18871920) THE GRANGER COLLECTION
http://www.time.com/time/time100/scientist/other/unsung4.html

Sigmund Freud

Leo Baekeland

Albert Einstein

Alexander Fleming
...
Tim Berners-Lee

Unsung Heroes
Alfred Wegener When he first proposed his heretical ideas early in the century, many geologists treated this German meteorologist as if he were a member of the Flat Earth Society. Convinced that the continents were anchored firmly in place, geologists dismissed as preposterous his theory that the earth's major land masses had once been huddled together in a single supercontinent, which he called Pangaea (Greek for "whole earth"), then began slowly drifting apart. Wegener had plenty of evidence, ranging from the jigsaw-like fit of the continents to the discovery of matching fossils on opposite sides of oceans, but he couldn't give a satisfactory explanation of what caused the global breakup. For years continental drift was held up to derisionuntil scientists in the 1960s found a plausible mechanism in the earth's internal motions under the ocean floor. Suddenly, Wegener's disreputable ideas became reputable. Renamed plate tectonics, they gave geology a single unifying theory, explaining everything from earthquakes and volcanoes to the formation of mountain ranges and ocean basins. Sadly, Wegener, who perished on the Greenland icecap in 1930 at age 50, didn't live to see it.
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
Srinivasa Ramanujan
A minor bureaucrat in Madras, India, Ramanujan tried twice to interest professional mathematicians in his spare-time dabbling with numbers. All too familiar with numerological crackpots, they were profoundly uninterested. But Ramanujan persisted, and his third shot was the lucky one. The eminent Cambridge don G.H. Hardy took the time to decipher the young man's idiosyncratic scrawls and realized he was corresponding with a genius. Unlike trained mathematicians, Ramanujan knew his speculations about numbers were true, so he didn't bother to prove them. That wouldn't do. Hardy brought him to England in 1914, and the pair spent four years working to prove the self-taught mathematician's intuitively brilliant conjectures. Alas, Ramanujan hated England and died of tuberculosis in 1920 at age 32with so much of his opus left unproved that mathematicians today are still working on it.

70. New Page 1
Our Fiction Store Book of Esther by Esther David. srinivasa ramanujan A MathematicalGenius by K srinivasa Rao (Author ALERT), Our Price $13.25 USD.
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71. Ramanujan
Translate this page srinivasa ramanujan. ramanujan war ein autodidaktisches mathematischesWunderkind aus einer Stadt in der Nähe von Madras in Südindien
http://www.mathematik.ch/mathematiker/ramanujan.php
Home Geschichte Mathematiker Zitate ... Suche Srinivasa Ramanujan Ramanujan war ein autodidaktisches mathematisches Wunderkind aus einer Stadt in der Nähe von Madras in Südindien und kam aus einer armen Familie. Madras war 1600 km von dem welt-städtischen Kalkutta entfernt. 1913 begann die Korrespondenz mit G.H. Hardy und 1914 erhielt er ein Stipendium für einen Aufenthalt am Trinity College in Cambridge, damit er dort sein Begabung in die Zusammenarbeit mit den Wissenschaftern einbringt und von Ihnen alles, was sie wussten, lernen konnte. In dieser Zeit schuf er in einem für ihn fremden und kalten England mit 21 grossen Arbeiten ein dauerhaftes mathematisches Erbe. Aus gesundheitlichen Gründen kehrte er jedoch 1919 nach Indien zurück, wurde empfangen wie ein Held und starb. Erstaunlich war seine Fähigkeit der Umformung unendlicher Reihen. Ramanujan erhielt viele seiner Ergebnisse intuitiv aus einer Vielzahl von Zahlenbeispielen und hatte ein ausgezeichnetes Gedächtnis und eine Fähigkeit zur Durchführung komplizierter Rechnungen. Seine Gedankensprünge machen den Mathematikern noch heute, sieben Jahrzehnte nach seinem Tod, zu schaffen. Zahlreiche Resultate sind in Briefen an G.H. Hardy formuliert. Ihm verdanken die Zahlentheoretiker bemerkenswerte asymptotische Formeln, ferner Ergebnisse zur

72. The R List
ramanujan, srinivasa 1 (18871920). The Indian mathematician srinivasaRamanujuan made profound contibutions to the theory of numbers.
http://www.siue.edu/~dcollin/Rlist.html
To view the photos of your favorite mathematician, just click on the photo. This will load up the image for you to view. To Save, right click on the photo; to return, you must click the "back" feature on your browser. Download all the photo's you wish, but please give proper credit to the publisher.
Ramanujan, Srinivasa
(1887-1920). The Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujuan made profound contibutions to the theory of numbers. He was the first Indian to be elected to the Royal Society of London, and when he died he was widely recognized by mathematicians as a phenomenal genius. Ramanujuz was born on December 22, 1887, in Erode, India. When he was 15 years old, he began tutoring himself from an old mathematics manual and soon began developing his own theorems and ideas. In 1911 he published the first of his papers in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society . His genius gained recognition, leading to a special scholarship from the University of Madras and a grant from Trinity College of Cambridge University. Ramanujan traveled to England in 1914, where the British mathematician Godfrey H. Hardy tutored him privately and collaborated with him in some research. His papers were published in English and European journals. Ramanujan's knowledge of mathematics (most of which he had worked out for himself) was startling. Although almost completely ignorant of what had been developed, his mastery of certain areas of mathematics was unequaled by any living mathematician. He had only the vaguest idea, however, of what constitutes a mathematical proof. Some of his theorems on the theory of prime numbers, though brilliant, were completely wrong. In 1917 Ramanujan contracted tuberculosis. He returned in India in 1919 and died on April 26, 1920, In Kumbakonam, India.

73. Citations: Highly Composite Numbers - Ramanujan (ResearchIndex)
srinivasa ramanujan, Highly composite numbers, Proceedings of the London MathematicalSociety, vol. 14, pp. srinivasa ramanujan. Highly composite numbers.
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/context/680766/0
6 citations found. Retrieving documents...
Srinivasa Ramanujan, " Highly composite numbers ," Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, vol. 14, pp. 347409, 1915.
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This paper is cited in the following contexts: Techniques for Efficient and Scalable Video-on-Demand over.. - Janakiraman (2002) (Correct) ....and optimal, a fatal flaw renders it unusable in its original form. The number of frames scheduled for transmission at time t is the number of integers i w such that i divides t. This function is extremely spiky, varying from 2 for prime values of t to record highs for highly composite t. It is due to this spikiness that earlier research [6, 7] has advanced algorithm IDEAL as a theoretical limit rather than as a practicable scheme. Existing protocols, notably the harmonic broadcasting protocols [4, 5] have taken a stream based approach to get around this limitation. ....
Srinivasa Ramanujan, " Highly composite numbers ," Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, vol. 14, pp. 347409, 1915. Fuzzycast: Efficient Video-on-Demand over Multicast - Janakiraman, Waldvogel, Xu (2002)

74. Ramanujan
Berndt, University of Illinois (UrbanaChampaign) gave two talks for the Departmentof Mathematics on the work of the Indian mathematician srinivasa ramanujan.
http://www.public.asu.edu/~sergei/seminar/Ramanujan.html
Srinivasa Aiyangar Ramanujan lived from 1887 to 1920 Ramanujan made substantial contributions to the analytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series. Find out more at
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Ramanujan.html
Professor Bruce Berndt , University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign) gave two talks for
the Department of Mathematics on the work of the Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan.
The first, on Monday, October 5, was a colloquium titled The Problems Ramanujan submitted
to the Journal of
the Indian Mathematical Society"
. The second, on Tuesday, October 6,
was a general interest talk on Ramanujan's life and work entitled Ramanujan Notebook's
Both talks took place from 3:40 to 4:30 in Room PSF 101
Ramanujan was a remarkable mathematician, largely self taught, who influenced mathematics
profoundly by his intuitive discoveries and the large number of unsolved problems he left behind.
His intriguing and tragic life story has been the subject of books including The Man Who Knew
Infinity
by Robert Kanigal (1991).

75. Ramanujan
Math Department. In 1913, Cambridge mathematician GF Hardy received an unusualletter from a young scholar in India named srinivasa ramanujan.
http://www.codehappy.net/ramanujan.htm

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In 1913, Cambridge mathematician G. F. Hardy received an unusual letter from a young scholar in India named Srinivasa Ramanujan. In this letter Ramanujan introduced himself as a student of mathematics with little money and without a formal education. As evidence of his ability, he included in the letter over one hundred mathematical theorems that he had discovered, without justification. The letter sparked Hardy’s curiosity, and he replied asking for proofs of some of the theorems, stating, “there are some results which appear to be new and important.” Ramanujan replied with the requested work, and asked Hardy to write a letter of recommendation for him, so he could obtain a scholarship for university studies. He explained that he hardly had enough money to eat, let alone attend school. “To preserve my brains I want food,” he wrote, “and this is my first consideration.” On Hardy’s recommendation, the University of Madras accepted Ramanujan as a student, and a year later, he was offered to come to Cambridge to work directly with Hardy. Ramanujan accepted the offer, and in England, collaborating with Hardy, he produced important work in a number of areas in pure mathematics: he wrote papers on integer partitions, elliptic functions, continued fractions and hypergeometric functions.

76. SIAM AG On Orthogonal Polynomials And Special Functions
AMS publications, ramanujan Twelve Lectures on Subjects Suggested by His Life andWork, Volume 136.H, and Collected Papers of srinivasa ramanujan, Volume 159.H
http://gams.nist.gov/opsf/books/ramanujan01.html
SIAM AG on Orthogonal Polynomials and Special Functions
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SIAM AG on Orthogonal Polynomials and Special Functions Page maintained by Bonita Saunders

77. Ramanujan
Translate this page ramanujan. Fecha de primera versión 15-11-97. Fecha de últimaactualización 04-10-99. srinivasa ramanujan (1887-1920) Indio.
http://personal.redestb.es/javfuetub/Biografias/Ramanujan.htm
Ramanujan
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920): Aunque Ramanujan llegó a Cambridge para enseñar, asistió a algunas clases de Hardy y de Arthur Berry. En una de estas lecciones, Berry estaba explicando en la pizarra y le pregunto a Ramanujan si comprendía la explicación. Ramanujan asintió. Despues Berry le preguntó si quería añadir algo. Ramanujan se puso en pie, fue a la pizarra, cogió la tiza y escribió las demostraciones que Berry no habia sido capaz de probar. p . Su procedimiento forma parte de algoritmos que lo calculan con millones de cifras decimales. y 9 Retrato

78. Srinivasa Ramanujan
Translate this page srinivasa ramanujan (1887 - 1920) Gênio matemático indiano nascidoem Erode, de profundas contribuições para a teoria dos números
http://www.sobiografias.hpg.com.br/Srinivas.html
Srinivasa Ramanujan papers no Journal do Indian Mathematical Society Godfrey H. Hardy
Nova B U S C A :

79. PI - Ramanujan's Method
Pi = 3.1415926 Born 22 Dec 1887 in Erode, Tamil Nadu state, India, srinivasa Ramanujanwas selftaught but had an uncanny mathematical manipulative ability.
http://ic.net/~jnbohr/java/Ramanujan.html
Ramanujan's Method of Approximating Pi Pi = 3.1415926 Born 22 Dec 1887 in Erode, Tamil Nadu state, India, Srinivasa Ramanujan was self-taught but had an uncanny mathematical manipulative ability. Independently, he discovered results of Gauss, Kummer and others on hypergeometric series. He is known for major contributions in Number Theory and Modular Function theory. After publication of a paper on Jacob Bernoulli's numbers in 1911 in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society, Ramanujan gained recognition for his work. His papers were mailed to several English mathematicians, and his genius was recognised immediately by G H Hardy. In 1914 Hardy brought Ramanujan to Trinity College, Cambridge, to begin an extraordinary collaboration. He sailed from India on 17 March 1914. Ramanujan worked out the Riemann series, the elliptic integrals, hypergeometric series and functional equations of the zeta function on his own. On the other hand he had only a vague idea of what constitutes a mathematical proof, and occasionally did state incorrect results. Srinivasa Ramanujan was elected to the Royal Society of London in 1918.

80. Matematica Matematici Eulero Gauss Galois Ramanujan Neumann Moebius Matematico L
ramanujan (srinivasa)indiano (1887-1920). Riccati (Jacopo Francesco) italiano (1676-1754).
http://diamante.uniroma3.it/hipparcos/matematicalink.htm
LINK DI ASTRONOMIA HOME LINK SCIENTIFICI BACK A LINK DI GEOLOGIA ... Arianna.it MATEMATICA ALCUNI DEI PIU' GRANDI MATEMATICI SINO AL XX SECOLO ( a fine pagina) MATEMATICA ON THE WEB MATEMATICA VIRTUAL LIBRARY ... (370 d.C.ca. - 415 d.C.ca.) Evariste Galois Search in italiano Search I Search II Search III Search IV ... Search V Search in altre lingue Search I Search II Search III Search IV ... Search V Carl Friedrich Gauss Search in italiano Search I Search II Search III Search IV ... Search V Search in altre lingue Search I Search II Search III Search IV ... Search V Una semplice curiosità ! Sembra siano stati i Sumeri ad aver inventato:
- le quattro operazioni;
- le equazioni;
- il sistema decimale e sessagesimale. KURT GÖDEL, IL RE DELLA LOGICA ! Il Papa matematico ! Gerberto D'Aurillac (945-1003), che venne eletto Papa con il nome di Silvestro II, è stato un importante matematico del suo tempo; egli contribuì alla diffusione in Europa del sistema di numerazione indo-arabo e fece introdurre lo "zero". Leonardo Eulero o Euler SEARCH I SEARCH II SEARCH III SEARCH IV La formula di Eulero è: 1 + e i p Tale formula mette assieme i 5 simboli più importanti della matematica:
- 1 - e - i - p - Aritmetica: - 1
- Algebra i = Ö -1
- Geometria: p

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