Strongly Connected Components Episode 16: David Richeson

via twitter.com/divbyzero
via twitter.com/divbyzero

Today’s episode of Strongly Connected Components features a conversation between Samuel Hansen and Professor David Richeson from Dickinson College. They talk about everything from why exactly Richeson uses twitter, to why his faculty website is awesome, and exactly how to write mathematics. To find out more about Professor Richeson check out his amazing faculty website, regularly read his blog, follow him on twitter, or read his fantastic(and award winning) new book just click on any of those links.

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[wpaudio url=”http://feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/190991784-acmescience-scc-16-david-richeson.mp3″]

Combinations and Permutations Episode 41: Harmonic Plosives

This week on Combinations and Permutations your host Samuel Hansen managed to convince three guests, Christopher Bates, Brandon Metz, and Cody Palmer, to join him in his home office/studio to talk about the wonderful world of analysis. Here are some links to what they talked about:

Mathematical Analysis

Cauchy Sequences

A Pernicious Idea(C&P Episode 15)

Real Analysis(as opposed to Fake(Oops, I mean Complex)) Analysis

Analytic Functions

Harmonic Analysis

Download the Episode

Download the Episode
[wpaudio url=”https://www.acmescience.com/Podcasts/CP/cp41.mp3″]

So We Missed Some

Way, way back in the early days of Combinations and Permutations, epsiode 2 particularly, we discussed mathematics and its appearences in popular culture. I knew at the time we would miss whole swaths of instances and now thanks to Oliver Knill from Harvard I have proof. Knill has put together an amazing collection of Math in Movies, which I swear I will link to at least one more time before this is over, complete with clips from many movies. Here is an example of Math in Movies, there is that last link, from Monty Python’s Flying Circus we have Leibniz in Goal and Archimedes as Striker:

Make sure to check out the rest of the videos on Knill’s site, got even one more link in right here, to see just what we missed.

We are all One Big Happy Family

The Mathematics Genealogy Project, Mitch Keller Managing Director, has long been one of the favorite time wasters for mathematicians on the internet. Just type in the name of your teacher, advisor, or yourself, if you are a PhD, and you will be able to track back, through the advisor-student relationship, all the way until the records run out and probably find yourself admist such luminaries as Gauss, Bernoulli, and Leibniz. Well over at thatismathematics they have used the data from the Mathematics Genealogy Project to put together a brand new service: Mathematical Relationship Search. Just input the names of two mathematicians and voila, you could find out, like I did, that your advisor is the sixth cousin six times removed of Carl Frederich Gauss.

salehigauss