Three high-stakes math exams (Q2574458): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 12:10, 11 June 2024
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English | Three high-stakes math exams |
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Three high-stakes math exams (English)
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21 November 2005
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Three examples are given of dramatic life situations in which to answer or of a mathematical question became decisive for the fate of some today wellknown mathematicians. Jacob David Tamarkin had to answer a question of analytic geometry raised by an American consul. Igor Tamm (co-recipient of the Nobel prize in Physics, in 1958) had to answer a question of estimation of error one makes by cutting off MacLaurin's series at the \(n\)-th term, raised by an Ataman. Gaetano Fichera had to give a sufficient condition for interchanging limit and integration, a question raised by a student of mathematics from the University of Bologna.
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analytic geometry
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MacLaurin's series
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integration
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