The Warwick Mathematics Society Website

User login

Upcoming events

There are 437 members of the Warwick Mathematics Society, of which 0 are new today!
We're 87% of the way toward our target of 500 members.
You can join up on the UWSU website.

Events

« November 13, 2007 - December 13, 2007 »
 
11 / 13
Start: 12:00
End: 14:00

Short notice on this one:

WMS Exec/publicity team meeting in the grad from 12 on Tuesday.

Items that are sure to appear on the agenda:

  • WMS T-Shirts
  • Euler's Birthday Celebrations.
Start: 14:00
End: 15:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

11 / 14
Start: 14:00
End: 16:00

Join us in the undergrad workroom for free tea, coffee and snacks- all washed down with a healthy dose of free assignment help. Fab.

11 / 15
Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

The exponential, Riemann's zeta, the Weierstrass $ \wp $: every now and again a function comes along that is just Special, there's no real expaination for it- it just is. Sometimes they see fit to generalize, sometimes to link- sometimes they just seem to frame a problem just right... but a little playing usually reveals that you are getting rather more than you bargained for.

11 / 16
Start: 10:00
End: 11:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

11 / 17
11 / 18
11 / 19
Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

The story started with Gauss, a young german boy who liked to factorise the numbers in his hymn books, whose conjectured approximation to the frequency of the appearance of primes sparked a treasure hunt for a proof, as mathematicians fought to make the magic happen.

Nearly half a century later, a fresh faced Bernhard Riemann thought he had found a way: simply through finding the zeroes of some complex valued function, the result would come as if from nowhere- the end seemed well in sight.

11 / 20
Start: 14:00
End: 15:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

11 / 21
Start: 14:00
End: 16:00

Join us in the undergrad workroom for free tea, coffee and snacks- all washed down with a healthy dose of free assignment help. Fab.

11 / 22
Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

Topology is the study of the fundamental structure of spaces, we disregard distance, throw geometry out of the window and exist only in a deformable world where up is down and breathing space is all that matters. This breathing space we characterise by way of open sets- subsets of our world where we can "move around" given that we are a sufficiently small person (though size matters not) of given dimension.

We thus identify spaces whose open set structure is the same, a definition conveniently attended to by a certain kind of "nice" function called a homeomorphism. Those spaces with one of these homeomorphism type bad boys between them are the same in a very subtle way, and naturally those that differ often do so in the same subtle way- and it is our job as mathematicians to point to these subtle differences with enormous algebra shaped arrows.

11 / 23
Start: 10:00
End: 11:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

11 / 24
11 / 25
11 / 26
11 / 27
Start: 14:00
End: 15:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

11 / 28
Start: 14:00
End: 16:00

Join us in the undergrad workroom for free tea, coffee and snacks- all washed down with a healthy dose of free assignment help. Fab.

11 / 29
Start: 18:00
End: 20:00

Zeta, gamma, calculus of variations, complex numbers, analytical number theory, hypergeometric series, algebraic topology, graph theory, differential equations... You name a pi(e), Leonard Euler had a finger in it. One of the most prolific and prominent mathematicians of all time turns three hundred this year and you are cordially invited to join the celebration.

Jeremy Gray, Warwick's premier mathematical historian, will be taking us on a journey through one of history's most extraordinary minds, showing us the context, triumphs and failures that made the man. The talk, which should last a bit over an hour, will be accessible to anyone with even a casual interest in maths, and will be followed swiftly with banter, beverages and birthday cake in the common room...

If you like this, be sure to come to our other discussion groups: monday and thurday MS03 7:30 every week.

11 / 30
Start: 10:00
End: 11:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

12 / 1
12 / 2
12 / 3
Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

Perhaps the one unifying feature of all civilisations, from the pre-historic, to the present day is their understanding of numbers; with the ability to count, came the desire to compute. The oldest computational relic known to us is the Ishango Bone, found in Africa circa 18,000 BCE. But what happens if we dispose of our electric calculators, abacuses, and even our dead parent’s bones? Can we still achieve complex feats of arithmetic without these tools? The answer is not simple: whilst many of us strive to be able to remember the multiplication table for numbers greater than twelve, others have forayed far deeper into the world of mental arithmetic.

This talk will start with a historic look at the varying characters that shape the story of mental arithmetic, taking us from the 18th Century, through to the present day, before discussing what it is that makes a mental calculator different to the rest of us. Finally the talk will close with some simple arithmetical tricks for every day use, and to fool other eager lightning calculators with.

Owen daniel takes an informal look at the intriguing history of computation based on a paper of the same title, which was nominated for the first Plus New Writer Award for Mathematical Journalism, in 2006.

After, we go gradwards for banter and light refreshments

P.S. No that horse picture is not a mistake… Believe it or not, he was a lightning calculator (perhaps the greatest)… More on that at the discussion group.

12 / 4
Start: 14:00
End: 15:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

12 / 5
Start: 14:00
End: 16:00

Join us in the undergrad workroom for free tea, coffee and snacks- all washed down with a healthy dose of free assignment help. Fab.

12 / 6
Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

In the days before Zermaelo, when the banach tarski paradox was but a twinkle in a mathematician's eye, and the world of sets seemed all but flawless: mathematicians began to formalise the thoughts of man. Logic, as we know and love so well, was crystallised before our very eyes from great and universal truth to a simple algebra of symbols, in which, it seemed lay all of the answers.

But it only seemed thus, a proof that all answers indeed lay with this cumbersome and perculiar beast eluded the mathematical world for some time.

Enter Godel.

12 / 7
Start: 10:00
End: 11:00

Come along to A0.01 to learn $ \LaTeX $. Genius.

Start: 16:00
End: 17:00

The Warwick Mathematics Society will be selling revision guides for the following first year modules on Friday at 4pm in the Street:

MA131A Analysis I
MA132 Foundations

They're free for members of the society and £1 each for non-members. Society will also be able to download them from the website once they're uploaded over the weekend.

12 / 8
12 / 9
12 / 10
12 / 11
12 / 12
Start: 18:00

This is the last time that an order can be placed for this years 'bulk' order.

http://warwickmaths.org/shop

12 / 13