Barry Arthur Cipra
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American mathematician and writer
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Barry Arthur Cipramathematics Degrees
Mathematics
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Mathematics
Barry Arthur Cipra's Degrees
- PhD Mathematics University of California, Berkeley
- Masters Mathematics University of California, Berkeley
- Bachelors Mathematics University of California, Berkeley
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Why Is Barry Arthur Cipra Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Barry Arthur Cipra, an American mathematician and freelance writer, regularly contributes to Science magazine and SIAM News, a monthly publication of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. Along with Dana Mackenzie and Paul Zorn he is the author of several of the volumes in the American Mathematical Society series What's Happening in the Mathematical Sciences, a collection of articles about recent results in pure and applied mathematics oriented towards the undergraduate mathematics major.
Barry Arthur Cipra's Published Works
Published Works
- An introduction to the Ising model (1987) (344)
- Music of the spheres. (1991) (69)
- The Ising Model Is NP-Complete (2000) (61)
- On the Niwa-Shintani theta-kernel lifting of modular forms (1983) (47)
- You Can't Hear the Shape of a Drum. (1992) (41)
- Packing Challenge Mastered At Last (1998) (41)
- A New Theory of Turbulence Causes a Stir Among Experts (1996) (37)
- What's happening in the mathematical sciences (1998) (33)
- How Number Theory Got the Best of the Pentium Chip (1995) (30)
- Revealing Uncertainties in Computer Models (2000) (26)
- Calculus: Crisis Looms in Mathematics' Future: Researchers and educators are debating how calculus should best be taught to increasingly recalcitrant students. (1988) (24)
- Statistical Physicists Phase Out a Dream (2000) (17)
- Electronic time-stamping: the notary public goes digital. (1993) (14)
- On the Shimura lift, après Selberg (1989) (14)
- Stability of one-dimensional inelastic collision sequences of four balls (1999) (10)
- Prime Formula Weds Number Theory and Quantum Physics (1996) (10)
- Halley's Comment—Projectiles With Linear Resistance (1997) (10)
- What's Happening in the Mathematical Sciences, 1993-1994. (1993) (9)
- A New Wave in Applied Mathematics: A technique called wavelets may upstage Fourier analysis in a multitude of applications--from CAT scanning to locating subs. (1990) (8)
- Artificial Intelligence: Will a Computer Checkmate a Chess Champion at Last? (1996) (8)
- Mathematics untwists the double helix. (1990) (7)
- Misteaks: ... and how to find them before the teacher does... A Calculus Supplement (1983) (7)
- Mathematicians get an on-line fingerprint file. (1994) (7)
- Computer-Drawn Pictures Stalk the Wild Trajectory: Even simple systems can exhibit chaotic behavior, but tracking them mathematically can be tricky; computer-generated pictures can help in the pursuit. (1988) (7)
- Math Ph.D.s: Bleak Picture. (1991) (6)
- The breaking of a mathematical curse. (1991) (6)
- Fatal attractions? (1988) (6)
- Duchamp and Poincaré Renew an Old Acquaintance (1999) (6)
- Another piece of 3.14159 ... ? (1989) (5)
- An Awesome Look at Japan's Math SAT (1993) (5)
- Computer Search Solves an old Math Problem: A math problem with roots that reach back 200 years has been solved by means of a massive computer search. (1988) (5)
- How the grinch stole mathematics. (1989) (5)
- The Derivatives of the Sine and Cosine Functions (1987) (5)
- Symmetry (The Same Thing Over and Over) (2019) (4)
- Error-Correcting Code Keeps Quantum Computers on Track (1996) (4)
- Mathematicians Reach Factoring Milestone: The international fraternity of mathematicians chips in to achieve a notable first: factoring the first 100-digit number. (1988) (4)
- Knotty Problems--and Real-World Solutions. (1992) (4)
- The circle can be squared! (1989) (4)
- Packing Your n-Dimensional Marbles. (1990) (4)
- Exploring localization in nonperiodic systems (1995) (4)
- Princeton mathematician looks back on fermat proof. (1995) (4)
- Diagram Masters Cry 'Venn-i, Vidi, Vici' (2003) (4)
- Aesthetic Aspects of Venn Diagrams (2005) (4)
- How to catch a cheating computer. (1990) (3)
- Proving a Link Between Logic and Origami (1998) (3)
- At state schools, calculus reform goes mainstream. (1993) (3)
- Tribute to a Mathemagician (2005) (3)
- Fermat's Last Theorem Remains Unproved: When a Japanese mathematician recently offered a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, it seemed that one of mathematics' most famous open problems might at last have been solved, but the excitment proved to be premature. (1988) (3)
- Can Mathematics Map the Way Toward Less-Bizarre Elections? (2009) (3)
- They'd Rather Switch Than Fight. (1991) (3)
- If You Can't See It, Don't Believe It.. (1993) (3)
- If You're Stumped, Try Something Harder. (1993) (3)
- Calculus Reform Sparks a Backlash (1996) (3)
- Algorithmics = Has Trim Logic (2003) (2)
- Solutions to euler equation. (1988) (2)
- Science Education: Calculus Reform Sparks a Backlash (1996) (2)
- Do Mathematicians Still Do Math?: Yes, but increasingly they are turning to computers to help them with some of their trickier proofs. (1989) (2)
- Why Double Bubbles Form the Way They Do (2000) (2)
- More math means more money. (1989) (2)
- To Have and Have Knot: When Are Knots Alike?: Knots might seem like a silly toy for grown men, but these mathematicians aren't just stringing people along. Their result ties up some 80-year-old loose ends. (1988) (2)
- Quantum Computation : A New Spin On Complexity Theory (1998) (2)
- Mathematicians Open the Black Box of Turbulence (1995) (2)
- 'Self-Tuning' Software Adapts to Its Environment (1999) (2)
- Putting the pedal to the metal in a controlled chaotic laser. (1992) (2)
- The partition function of the d-dimensional Ising model: A one-variable integral formula (1982) (2)
- Joint mathematics meetings. Diagram masters cry 'Venn-i, vidi, vici'. (2003) (2)
- Sieving Prime Numbers From Thin Ore (1998) (2)
- PCs Factor a "Most Wanted" Number: Mathematicians at University of Georgia mobilize phalanx of personal computers to factor a 95-digit number. (1988) (2)
- Algebraic Geometers See Ideal Approach to Biology (2007) (2)
- In math, less is more--up to a point. (1990) (2)
- Mathematicians Gather to Play the Numbers Game (1993) (2)
- Third Time Proves Charm for Prime-Gap Theorem (2005) (2)
- The ballot problem (1986) (2)
- Nonlinear Codes Straighten Up--and Get to Work. (1993) (2)
- Cross-disciplinary artists know good math when they see it.. (1992) (2)
- Pinning down a treacherous border in logical statements. (1994) (2)
- What Comes Next (2019) (1)
- Images capture by computer. (1989) (1)
- Mathematics--Amid War--in San Francisco: Under Control. (1991) (1)
- Knowledge Is Power (2001) (1)
- The Sorcerer's Apprentice. (1989) (1)
- Doubts over fermat proof. (1988) (1)
- A Woman Who Counted (2008) (1)
- Math team vaults over prime record. (1989) (1)
- How to Play Platonic Billiards (1997) (1)
- A Visit to Asymptopia Yields Insight Into Set Structures (1995) (1)
- Catching fly balls: a new model steps up to the plate. (1995) (1)
- Reviewing Harrison's Latest Work. (1993) (1)
- At Math Meetings, Enormous Theorem Eclipses Fermat (1995) (1)
- New proof makes light work of partial latin squares. (1994) (1)
- Smart Neurons Offer Neuroscience a Math Lesson (1997) (1)
- Mathematicians Offer Answers to Everyday Conundrums (1999) (1)
- A Royal Squeeze (2008) (1)
- Eternal plague: computer viruses. (1990) (1)
- NSF to Double Number of Math Institutes (2002) (1)
- Mathematics: Fermat Prover Points to Next Challenges (1996) (1)
- AMS Celebrates--and Worries. (1988) (1)
- Proof Promises Progress in Prime Progressions (2004) (1)
- All the Hash That's Fit to Print. (1993) (1)
- Fermat's Theorem Proved? (1988) (1)
- Number Theorists' Big Cover-Up Proves Harder Than It Looks (2008) (1)
- Exact-Postage Poser Still Not Licked (2008) (1)
- That's Not Some Knot Sum! (2007) (0)
- A Do-It-Yourself Fermat Proof (1994) (0)
- One Climber Got There First (1993) (0)
- Derivatives Again, and the Fine Art of Being Crude (2019) (0)
- Readers write to right wrongs. (1989) (0)
- Joint Mathematics Meeting, 13-16 January, San Francisco, California. Perfection in a box. (2010) (0)
- Algorigami, Anyone? (1998) (0)
- Pentasia (2021) (0)
- Math Team Vaults Over Prime Record (1989) (0)
- One climber got there first. (1993) (0)
- Mathematics: A Proof to Please Pythagoras (1996) (0)
- Zeroing in on the Zeta Zeta Function: More evidence for the Riemann Hypothesis is provided by new method that speeds up the necessary calculations, also has applications to other large-scale computations. (1988) (0)
- The “What Did You Expect?” Method (2019) (0)
- Archimedes Andrews and the Ball-Bearing Missile (1991) (0)
- Is the Fix in on Fermat's Last Theorem? (1994) (0)
- Mathematics--Amid War--in San Francisco: Making Mathematics Graphic by Computer and by Hand. (1991) (0)
- Joint mathematics meetings. Algorithmics = has trim logic. (2003) (0)
- Getting a Grip on Elliptic Curves: A combination of research by mathematicians in the United States, Canada, and the Soviet Union has made important progress with a class of equations known as elliptic curves. (1989) (0)
- The Joys of Longer Hangovers (2009) (0)
- Joint Mathematics Meeting, 13-16 January, San Francisco, California. What comes next? (2010) (0)
- A Moveable Feast: Researchers Seek Stability in Lability (2006) (0)
- Integrals: The Power of Positive Thinking (2019) (0)
- If You Can't See It, Don't Believe It... (1993) (0)
- Number 5 , June 2003 In Population Dynamics , It ’ s a Dogma Eat Dogma World (2003) (0)
- Microbial math. (1991) (0)
- Differentiating Right from Wrong (2019) (0)
- A Bicentennial for the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra (1999) (0)
- Turning higher mathematics into kids' stuff. (1993) (0)
- Nonlinear Codes Straighten Up—and Get to Work (1993) (0)
- Misteaks (2019) (0)
- Andy Rooney, Ph.D. (1988) (0)
- On a zeta function associated to ternary zero forms (1987) (0)
- Pricey Proof Keeps Gaining Support (2007) (0)
- Joint Mathematics Meeting, 13-16 January, San Francisco, California. Politics as (un)usual. (2010) (0)
- Is it prime? (1989) (0)
- Lattices May Put Security Codes on a Firmer Footing (1996) (0)
- Simple Recipe Creates Acid Test for Primes (2002) (0)
- Mathematics: NSF to double number of math institutes. (2002) (0)
- Some Common Errors (2019) (0)
- Say It Again in Plain Algebra (1989) (0)
- Archimedes Andrews a euklidovská časovaná bomba (1989) (0)
- Teoría de números contra Pentium (1995) (0)
- Geometry and the imagination. In hyperbolic space, size matters. (2007) (0)
- Mix well, then apply: math meeting in d.C.: goodbye assembly line. (1991) (0)
- In Math, Less Is More—Up to a Point (1990) (0)
- Irrationality Dominates π (1999) (0)
- Say It Again in Plain Algebra: The growing use of computer algebra systems has driven mathematicians to find ways of simplifying the horrendously complex expressions number crunchers sometimes spit out. (1989) (0)
- Taking ‘Hard’ Problems to the Limit (1997) (0)
- Control Theorists Chart New Waters for Synchronized Swimmers (2005) (0)
- Number theory. Simple recipe creates acid test for primes. (2002) (0)
- Game Theory , Population Dynamics , And the Fish that Got Away (1999) (0)
- Taking a Cue From Infinite Kinkiness (2009) (0)
- MAP launch. Shaping a universe. (2001) (0)
- Algebra: A Hotbed of Radicalism (1989) (0)
- Private Money Adds Two Institutes (1999) (0)
- Shapeshifting Made Easy (2008) (0)
- Bizarre Pool Shots Spiral to Infinity (2007) (0)
- In Hyperbolic Space, Size Matters (2007) (0)
- Shaping a Universe (2001) (0)
- Math as she is wrote (2014) (0)
- Book review (2007) (0)
- What goes around comes around. (1992) (0)
- Big number breakdown. (1990) (0)
- Archimedes Andrews and the Euclidean time bomb (1987) (0)
- Geometry and the imagination. Pricey proof keeps gaining support. (2007) (0)
- A speedier way to decompose polygons. (1991) (0)
- Math Attendees Find There's Life After Fermat Proof. (1994) (0)
- Sweet Inspiration (2008) (0)
- At State Schools, Calculus Reform Goes Mainstream (1993) (0)
- Algebra: a hotbed of radicalism. (1989) (0)
- Geometry and the imagination. Bizarre pool shots spiral to infinity. (2007) (0)
- When good proofs go bad. (1988) (0)
- Fermat Proof Hits a Stumbling Block (1993) (0)
- Lorenz System Offers Manifold Possibilities for Art (2011) (0)
- MATHEMATICS : ONE CLIMBER GOT THERE FIRST (1993) (0)
- Mathematics Gets Institutionalized--Again (1999) (0)
- Mix well, then apply: math meeting in d.C.: curse foiled--again. (1991) (0)
- ;Transparent' proofs help solve opaque problems. (1992) (0)
- Reducing to Special Cases (2019) (0)
- Turning Higher Mathematics Into Kids' Stuff (1993) (0)
- Taking the Edge Off (2008) (0)
- Readers Write to Right Wrongs (1989) (0)
- MATHEMATICIAN, HEAL THYSELF (1991) (0)
- Homology: (2021) (0)
- More Integrals (That’s About the Size of It) (2019) (0)
- Dimensions (2019) (0)
- Geometry and the imagination. That's not some knot sum! (2007) (0)
- Mix Well, Then Apply: Math Meeting in D.C.:Microbial Math (1991) (0)
- An Astrophysical Guide to the Weather on Earth: A mathematical method for modeling fluid flow in outer space has down-to-earth applications as well. (1989) (0)
- Fermat's Last Theorem Finally Yields. (1993) (0)
- Exploration of another Sol Lewitt puzzle from Barry Cipra (2019) (0)
- In Mao's China, Politically Correct Math (1997) (0)
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