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Phi, pi, e, and i

Certain constants occupy precise balancing points in the cosmos of number, like habitable planets sprinkled throughout our galaxy at just the right distances from their suns. This book introduces and connects four of these constants ( \varphi, \Pi, e, and i), each of which has recently been the indi...

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Autor principal: Perkins, David
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: American Mathematical Society 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2685940
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author Perkins, David
author_facet Perkins, David
author_sort Perkins, David
collection CERN
description Certain constants occupy precise balancing points in the cosmos of number, like habitable planets sprinkled throughout our galaxy at just the right distances from their suns. This book introduces and connects four of these constants ( \varphi, \Pi, e, and i), each of which has recently been the individual subject of historical and mathematical expositions. But here we discuss their properties, as a group, at a level appropriate for an audience armed only with the tools of elementary calculus. This material offers an excellent excuse to display the power of calculus to reveal elegant truths that are not often seen in college classes. These truths are described here via the work of such luminaries as Nilakantha, Liu Hui, Hemachandra, Khayyam, Newton, Wallis, and Euler.
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spelling cern-26859402021-04-21T18:20:03Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2685940engPerkins, DavidPhi, pi, e, and iMathematical Physics and MathematicsCertain constants occupy precise balancing points in the cosmos of number, like habitable planets sprinkled throughout our galaxy at just the right distances from their suns. This book introduces and connects four of these constants ( \varphi, \Pi, e, and i), each of which has recently been the individual subject of historical and mathematical expositions. But here we discuss their properties, as a group, at a level appropriate for an audience armed only with the tools of elementary calculus. This material offers an excellent excuse to display the power of calculus to reveal elegant truths that are not often seen in college classes. These truths are described here via the work of such luminaries as Nilakantha, Liu Hui, Hemachandra, Khayyam, Newton, Wallis, and Euler.American Mathematical Societyoai:cds.cern.ch:26859402018
spellingShingle Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
Perkins, David
Phi, pi, e, and i
title Phi, pi, e, and i
title_full Phi, pi, e, and i
title_fullStr Phi, pi, e, and i
title_full_unstemmed Phi, pi, e, and i
title_short Phi, pi, e, and i
title_sort phi, pi, e, and i
topic Mathematical Physics and Mathematics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2685940
work_keys_str_mv AT perkinsdavid phipieandi