The following pages link to M. Mason (Q1438926):
Displayed 21 items.
- The electromagnetic field. (Q1438927) (← links)
- The New Haven Mathematical Colloquium. Lectures delivered before members of the American Mathematical Society in connection with the Summer meeting, held September \(5^{\text{th}}\) to \(8^{\text{th}}\), 1906, under the auspices of Yale University. (Q1484652) (← links)
- The New Haven Colloquium 1906. Part III: Selected topics in the theory of boundary value problems of differential equations. (Q1486296) (← links)
- Fields of extremals in space. (Q1486471) (← links)
- The flow of energy in an interference field. (Q1487882) (← links)
- On the linear differential equations of hyperbolic type. (Q1492044) (← links)
- The properties of curves in space which minimize a definite integral. (Q1492066) (← links)
- Note on \textit{Jacobi}'s equation in the calculus of variations. (Q1492075) (← links)
- The expansion of a function in terms of normal functions. (Q1493829) (← links)
- Selected topics in the theory of boundary value problems of differential equations. (Q1493870) (← links)
- A necessary condition for an extremum of a double integral. (Q1493922) (← links)
- On the boundary value problems of linear ordinary differential equations of second order. (Q1497161) (← links)
- A problem in the calculus of variations in which the integrand is discontinuous. (Q1497181) (← links)
- Curves of minimum moment of inertia with respect to a point. (Q1498836) (← links)
- Sur l'équation différentielle \(y''+\lambda A(x)y=0\). (Q1501304) (← links)
- The doubly periodic solutions of \textit{Poisson}'s equation in two independent variables. (Q1501344) (← links)
- Proof of a lemma in the calculus of variations. (Q1501366) (← links)
- Zur Theorie der Randwertaufgaben. (Q1502843) (← links)
- Green's theorem and Green's functions for certain systems of differential equations. (Q1502870) (← links)
- Sur les solutions satisfaisant à des conditions aux limites données de l'équation différentielle \(\varDelta u + \lambda A(x,y)u = f(x,y)\). (Q1502873) (← links)
- (Q5815443) (← links)