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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worse
Worse may refer to: Worse Creek, Chattooga River, Georgia, USA; a creek worse set, in mathematics See also The Worst (disambiguation) Worser (disambiguation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Bengaluru%20FC%20records%20and%20statistics
Bengaluru Football Club is an Indian professional football club based in Bengaluru, Karnataka. The club competes in the top league of Indian football, the Indian Super League. The club was established on 20 July 2013 and began their first competitive season in the I-League a few months later on 22 September 2013. Since their inception, the club has won two I-League titles, including one in their debut season, two Federation Cup titles, one Indian Super League title, a Super Cup, and the Durand Cup championship. All time performance record As of 27 January 2021 General I-League Indian Super League AFC Champions League AFC Cup Players Appearances Record appearance maker: 259 – Sunil Chhetri Most appearances in I-League: 101 – Sunil Chhetri Most appearances in Indian Super League: 57 – Gurpreet Singh Sandhu Most appearances in Domestic Cup (Super Cup/Federation Cup): 19 - Sunil Chhetri Youngest player: Damaitphang Lyngdoh – 17 years 06 months 08 days Oldest player: Dimas Delgado – 37 years 10 months 15 days References Indian football club statistics India sport-related lists Football in Karnataka
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer%20Morse%20%28mathematician%29
Jennifer Leigh Morse is a mathematician specializing in algebraic combinatorics. She is a professor of mathematics at the University of Virginia. Research Morse's interests in algebraic combinatorics include representation theory and applications to statistical physics, symmetric functions, Young tableaux, and -Schur functions, which are a generalization of Schur polynomials. Education and career Morse earned her Ph.D. in 1999 from the University of California, San Diego. Her dissertation, Explicit Expansions for Knop-Sahi and Macdonald Polynomials, was supervised by Adriano Garsia. She has been a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania, at the University of Miami, and at Drexel University before moving to the University of Virginia in 2017. Book Morse is one of six coauthors of the book -Schur Functions and Affine Schubert Calculus (Fields Institute Monographs 33, Springer, 2014). Recognition Morse was named a Simons Fellow in Mathematics in 2012 and again in 2021. She was elected as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society in the 2021 class of fellows, "for contributions to algebraic combinatorics and representation theory and service to the mathematical community". References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Combinatorialists University of California, San Diego alumni University of Pennsylvania faculty University of Miami faculty Drexel University faculty University of Virginia faculty Fellows of the American Mathematical Society 20th-century American women 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alina%20Bucur
Alina Ioana Bucur is a Romanian-born mathematician and an associate professor of mathematics at the University of California, San Diego. Bucur's research is in analytic number theory with an emphasis on arithmetic statistics. Education and career After completing her undergraduate studies at the University of Bucharest in 2001, she pursued her graduate studies at Brown University, where she received her Ph.D. in 2006; her dissertation was supervised by Jeffrey Ezra Hoffstein.. After completion of her degree, Bucur was a member of the School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey from 2006 to 2007 and 2009–2010 and a C. L. E. Moore Instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 2006 to 2009. She came to the University of California, San Diego, in 2009 as an assistant professor and was granted tenure and promoted to associate professor in 2016. Bucur returned to the Institute for Advanced Study as a von Neumann Fellow of the School of Mathematics from 2018 to 2019. Bucur has been involved in Women in Numbers (WIN) Network, a professional network for women with research interests in number theory, since its inception. She serves on the WIN Steering Committee. and co-organized Women in Numbers Europe (2013), the European Women in Mathematics Summer School (2014), and the Association for Women in Mathematics Workshop on Women in Number Theory (2017). Bucur has been an active member of the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM). She has been AWM Meetings Coordinator and a member of the AWM Executive Committee since August 2018. Prior to becoming a member of the executive committee she served on the Mentor Network Committee (2015–2018) and the Joint Mathematics Meetings Committee (2016–2018). Recognition Bucur was named a 2012–2013 Hellman Faculty Fellow by the University of California, San Diego. The award supports junior faculty members in their research and scholarly work as they strive for tenure with the university. Bucur was recognized as a fellow of the Association of Women in Mathematics (AWM) in the class of 2021 "for supporting the research careers of women in mathematics at crucial career stages: locally, at her institution and region; nationally, through leadership in AWM and Women in Numbers; and internationally, through her impactful work in organizing conferences and workshops." Edited Collections References External links Alina Bucur's Author Profile Page on MathSciNet Living people Fellows of the Association for Women in Mathematics Brown University alumni University of California, San Diego faculty 20th-century women mathematicians 21st-century women mathematicians Year of birth missing (living people) Romanian women mathematicians Romanian emigrants to the United States Number theorists Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Science faculty Institute for Advanced Study visiting scholars University of Bucharest alumni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991%20Altun%20Kupri%20massacre
{ "type": "FeatureCollection", "features": [ { "type": "Feature", "properties": {}, "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [ 44.142761, 35.755204 ] } } ] }The 1991 Altun Kupri massacre (, ) occurred on 28 March 1991 in the Turkmen town of Altun Kupri, Kirkuk Governorate, Iraq. The massacre targeted Turkmens, in particular males, both children and adults alike, and was organized by security forces affiliated with Saddam Hussein's army. It came as a result of curbing the 1991 uprising in the dissident areas in the north and south of the country. Background Shortly after the Iraqi army retreated from Kuwait, a series of popular uprisings began in the north and south. This came as a direct result of the perception that Saddam Hussein and his leadership had become weakened by the adventurism in Kuwait and in part by the losses during the Iran–Iraq War. Saddam Hussein quickly ordered his troops and other loyalist to curb the uprising leading to a brutal crackdowns with many civilian losses. Altun Köpru in the north, was among the cities which Kurdish rebels had overrun in their quest for the oil-rich disputed city of Kirkuk, and for this reason a direct target for Iraqi security forces. The Turkmens also organized uprisings in the areas of Turkmeneli, with their own motives, and expressed their opposition to the Saddam regime, but were not as militarily active as the Kurds. Following the withdrawal of the Kurdish insurgents an authority gap was present, and forces loyal to Saddam Hussein began to target everyone they suspected of affiliation with the uprisings. Tuz Khurmatu, another Turkmen majority town south of Kirkuk, also experienced a similar massacre of Turkmens. The Kirkuk area is famed for its people knowing all three languages i.e., Arabic, Kurdish and Turkmen, and its people are not foreign to marriages between each other. The relationship between Turkmens and Kurds has historically been strong and they have lived side by side, but experienced difficulties after a three day long purge in 1959, killing an estimated 20 Turkmen residents by Kurdish Iraqi communist party members. Turkmen familiarity with the Kurds, their own uprisings, and other aspects such as being disregarded by the Baathist Iraqi government and generally disliked due to their Ottoman heritage played a central role for the reason the Saddam regime wanted to eradicate the Turkmens in his pan-Arabist Iraq. Saddam Hussein loyalist saw this as a threat they could not risk taking and decided that all males in Altun Köpru constituted a danger. People in Altun Köpru, knowing Saddam Hussein's brutal methods dealing with dissidents, started to flee but a small percentage of mostly Turkmen men decided to stay oblivious of what was waiting them. The massacre March 28, 1991 Thursday, the 9th day of Ramadan (March 28, 1991), forces loyal to Saddam Hussein began to locate all male citizens of Altun Köpru and round them up. T
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistics%20of%20the%20COVID-19%20pandemic%20in%20the%20United%20Kingdom
This article presents official statistics gathered during the . The official daily report from the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) counts those who died within 28 days of testing positive for coronavirus. It "could be the major cause, a contributory factor or simply present when they are dying of something else". From 29 April 2020, the official figures include all coronavirus-positive deaths in the UK, wherever they happened. Before then, the official daily toll included only hospital deaths in England, but included all coronavirus-positive deaths in the rest of the UK wherever they happened, if known to public health agencies. There may be a delay between a death and it entering official statistics so families can be informed; this delay is usually a few days, but can be longer. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) issues a weekly report covering the four countries, which counts all deaths where coronavirus was mentioned on the death certificate; not necessarily as the main cause of death. , the total of registered deaths mentioning COVID-19 up till 10 September was 160,374, comprising 146,380 deaths for England, 8,129 for Wales, 10,688 for Scotland and 3,306 for Northern Ireland. In addition 184 non-UK residents died in England and Wales. This incorporates data from the National Records of Scotland and Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. This figure is higher because it also counts deaths where no test was done. The ONS has analysed death certificates for England and Wales to the end of 2020 and shown that 91% of deaths which mention COVID-19 state this as the main cause of death (compared with 18% for flu and pneumonia). The end of free mass testing in April 2022 greatly reduced the number of tests taken and may affect the number of cases, although ONS statistics have continued being collected. Details the death rate across the UK from COVID-19 was 592 per million population. The death rate varied greatly by age and healthiness. More than 90% of deaths were among the most vulnerable: those with underlying illnesses and the over-60s. COVID-19 deaths are "remarkably uncommon" among the least vulnerable: those under 65 and with no underlying illnesses. There was also large regional variation in the pandemic's severity. The outbreak in London had the highest number and highest rate of infections. England was the UK country with the highest recorded death rate per capita, followed by Wales and then Scotland, while Northern Ireland has the lowest per capita. On 22 April 2020, the Financial Times estimated that 41,000 may have died by that date, by extrapolating the ONS data and counting all deaths above the average for the time of year. The World Health Organisation cautioned on 23 April that up to half of coronavirus deaths in Europe were among care home residents. The Chief Medical Officer for England warned that even the ONS figures on coronavirus deaths in care homes are likely to be "an underestimate" and sa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maggie%20Cheng
Maggie Xiaoyan Cheng is an applied mathematician and computer scientist who works as a professor of applied mathematics at the Illinois Institute of Technology, where she directs the Center for Interdisciplinary Scientific Computation. Her research interests include cyber security and Machine Learning. Education and career Cheng has a bachelor's and master's degree from the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics. She completed a Ph.D. in computer science in 2003 from the University of Minnesota. After completing her doctorate, she became an assistant professor of computer science at the Missouri University of Science and Technology. She moved to the Martin Tuchman School of Management of the New Jersey Institute of Technology in 2016, and moved to the Illinois Institute of Technology in 2018, and she was promoted to full professor in 2020. References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians American computer scientists Chinese computer scientists Chinese mathematicians Chinese women mathematicians American women computer scientists Applied mathematicians Beihang University alumni University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering alumni Missouri University of Science and Technology faculty New Jersey Institute of Technology faculty Illinois Institute of Technology faculty 21st-century American women Chinese women computer scientists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedgehog%20%28geometry%29
In differential geometry, a hedgehog or plane hedgehog is a type of plane curve, the envelope of a family of lines determined by a support function. More intuitively, sufficiently well-behaved hedgehogs are plane curves with one tangent line in each oriented direction. A projective hedgehog is a restricted type of hedgehog, defined from an anti-symmetric support function, and (again when sufficiently well-behaved) forms a curve with one tangent line in each direction, regardless of orientation. Every closed strictly convex curve, the envelope of its supporting lines. The astroid forms a non-convex hedgehog, and the deltoid curve forms a projective hedgehog. Hedgehogs can also be defined from support functions of hyperplanes in higher dimensions. Definitions Formally, a planar support function can be defined as a continuously differentiable function from the unit circle in the plane to real numbers, or equivalently as a function from angles to real numbers. For each point on the unit circle, it defines a line, the set of points for which . This line is perpendicular to vector , passes through the point , and is at distance from the origin. A support function is anti-symmetric when, for all , , or equivalently in terms of angles , so that and define the same line as each other. Given any support function , its hedgehog is denoted . In terms of the function and the angle it has the parametric equations A hedgehog is non-singular when it has a tangent line at each of its points. A projective hedgehog is defined by an anti-symmetric support function. Hedgehogs can also be defined in the same way in higher dimensions, as envelopes of hyperplanes defined by support functions. Examples The support function describing the supporting lines for a convex set is defined by . The hedgehog of the support function of any strictly convex set is its boundary, parameterized by the angle of its supporting lines. When a convex set is not strictly convex (it has a line segment in its boundary), its support function is continuous but not continuously differentiable, and the parametric equations above jump discontinuously across the line segment instead of defining a continuous curve, so it is not defined as a hedgehog. The astroid provides an example of a non-convex hedgehog. An example of a projective hedgehog, defined from an anti-symmetric support function, is given by the deltoid curve. The deltoid is a simple closed curve but other hedgehogs may self-intersect, or otherwise behave badly. In particular, there exist anti-symmetric support functions based on the Weierstrass function whose corresponding projective hedgehogs are fractal curves that are continuous but nowhere differentiable and have infinite length. Every strictly convex body in the plane defines a projective hedgehog, its middle hedgehog, the envelope of lines halfway between each pair of parallel supporting lines. Although triangles are not strictly convex, the envelope defined in th
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sota%20Kitano
is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for J1 League club Cerezo Osaka. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links Profile at Cerezo Osaka 2004 births Living people Association football people from Wakayama Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Japan men's youth international footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players J1 League players Cerezo Osaka players Cerezo Osaka U-23 players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kei%20Oshiro
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a centre back for YSCC Yokohama, on loan from Urawa Red Diamonds. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2000 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders J3 League players Urawa Red Diamonds players Gainare Tottori players YSCC Yokohama players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seita%20Murai
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for FC Imabari. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2000 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Japan Football League players J3 League players Tokyo Verdy players FC Imabari players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head%20Coach%20%28video%20game%29
Head Coach is a 1987 video game published by MicroSearch. Gameplay Head Coach is a game in which fictional football teams and players are represented in a statistics-oriented strategy game. Reception Wyatt Lee reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "Minus yardage for this program must focus on the keyboard interface which, while opening up creative possibilities on the one hand, slows down the game on the other. Minus yardage must also be applied for the lack of easily accessible files on real NFL teams." References 1987 video games American football video games Amiga games Sports management video games Video games developed in the United Kingdom Video games set in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super%20Bowl%20Sunday%20%28video%20game%29
Super Bowl Sunday is a 1985 video game published by The Avalon Hill Game Company. Gameplay Super Bowl Sunday is a game in which American football is simulated in a strategy game based on statistics. Reception Wyatt Lee reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and wrote that "the game is worth playing and offers realistic results." Reviews Computer Gamer - Feb, 1987 ASM (Aktueller Software Markt) - Feb, 1987 Tilt - Jun, 1987 Games #70 References External links Review in Family Computing Review in Compute!'s Gazette Review in Computer Play Review in Ahoy! Review in Compute!'s Gazette 1985 video games American football video games Apple II games Avalon Hill video games Commodore 64 games Turn-based strategy video games Video games developed in the United States Video games set in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant%20Replay%20%28video%20game%29
Instant Replay is a football video game published in 1987 by Software Innovations. Gameplay Instant Replay is a game in which the player can replay full NFL seasons using the entire statistics base from 1986. Reception Wyatt Lee reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "not exactly a game, but it is worthy of note for those who like to replay full seasons of NFL games using the computer vs. computer mode." References American football video games
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hicham%20El%20Majhad
Hicham El Majhad (; born 9 April 1991) is a Moroccan footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Hassania Agadir. Career statistics Honours Club Ittihad Tanger Botola: 2017–18 References 1991 births Living people Moroccan men's footballers People from Agadir Men's association football goalkeepers IR Tanger players Botola players 2020 African Nations Championship players Morocco men's A' international footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gis%C3%A8le%20Ruiz%20Goldstein
Gisèle Ruiz Goldstein is an American mathematician known for her research in partial differential equations, operator theory, and applications of mathematics to physics and finance. Goldstein has won multiple awards; in particular, one of her papers was given the Editors' Choice Award from the editors of Mathematische Nachrichten in 2010, and she was the University of Memphis Faudree Chair from 2011-2014. In December 2020, Discrete and Dynamical Systems - Series S created a special issue in honor of Goldstein's 60th birthday. Education Goldstein received her PhD from Tulane University in 1986. Her doctoral advisor was Jerome Goldstein, and the title of her dissertation was Mathematical Contributions to Thomas-Fermi Theory. References 1958 births Living people People from New Orleans Tulane University alumni University of Memphis faculty Mathematicians from Louisiana 20th-century women mathematicians 21st-century women mathematicians American women mathematicians 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free%20matroid
In mathematics, the free matroid over a given ground-set E is the matroid in which the independent sets are all subsets of E. It is a special case of a uniform matroid. The unique basis of this matroid is the ground-set itself, E. Among matroids on E, the free matroid on E has the most independent sets, the highest rank, and the fewest circuits. Free extension of a matroid The free extension of a matroid by some element , denoted , is a matroid whose elements are the elements of plus the new element , and: Its circuits are the circuits of plus the sets for all bases of . Equivalently, its independent sets are the independent sets of plus the sets for all independent sets that are not bases. Equivalently, its bases are the bases of plus the sets for all independent sets of size . References Matroid theory
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20Morar
David Cristian Morar (born 27 July 2004) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Liga I side Academica Clinceni. Career Statistics Club References External links 2004 births Living people Footballers from Cluj-Napoca Romanian men's footballers Men's association football forwards Liga I players LPS HD Clinceni players FC Steaua București players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani%20women%20in%20STEM
While STEM (Science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields all over the world are dominated by men, the number of Pakistani women in 'STEM' is low due to one of the highest gender gaps in STEM fields. However, over the time, some Pakistani women have emerged as scientists in fields like Physics, Biology and computer sciences. Gender gap in Pakistan Pakistan has one of the highest gender gaps in the world, and it is the third least performer in gender parity according to a report published by World Economic Forum in 2020. The low literacy rate of women in Pakistan, despite women making almost half the population, is one of the factors in a high gender gap in STEM fields. This literacy rate is even lower in science and technology. Facts According to UNESCO, among students enrolled in bachelor's degrees, 47% are women while 53% are men. The number of women pursuing doctoral studies is only 36%, while the percentage of men is 64%. There is also a significant gender gap in research sector, with women making only 34% of researchers. Among students in universities, the field of natural sciences is reported to have only 40% women students, while medical sciences have 45%, engineering has 21% and agricultural sciences have only 12%. Engineering gender gap According to the World Economic Forum, only 4.9% of engineering jobs are held by women in Pakistan. The numbers are particularly low in the energy sector with only 3%  female engineers in the power transmission sector. The field of artificial intelligence has also seen few numbers of women engineers, with only 22% part of the workforce. Bridging the gap Efforts have been done by the government of Pakistan as well as women who are part of STEM fields, to reduce the wide gender gap in STEM. Since 2018, the government of Pakistan has worked to improve wage equality and its position on educational attainment index. Workplace sexual harassment laws have also been made to encourage women to become part of the workforce in both STEM fields as well as non STEM fields. Many private organizations like Women in tech, Women Engineers Pakistan have been founded to encourage STEM education in women. Notable women Some notable Pakistani women contributing to STEM are: Nergis Mavalvala : is Pakistani-American physicist known for her breakthrough research in gravitational waves detection in 2015. She has also received the prestigious MacArthur Foundation Award in 2010. Nergis became the first female Dean of school of sciences at MIT in 2020. Tasneem Zehra Husain : is theoretical physicist and among the few Pakistani women to obtain a doctorate in physics. She is also the first Pakistani woman working on string theory. Husain has represented Pakistan at the Meeting of Nobel Laureates in Lindau, Germany and led the Pakistan team to the World Year of Physics (WYP) Launch Conference in Paris. Asma Zaheer : is computer scientist and the first Pakistani to receive "the best of IBM award, 2019". Azra Qu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spread%20%28projective%20geometry%29
A frequently studied problem in discrete geometry is to identify ways in which an object can be covered by other simpler objects such as points, lines, and planes. In projective geometry, a specific instance of this problem that has numerous applications is determining whether, and how, a projective space can be covered by pairwise disjoint subspaces which have the same dimension; such a partition is called a spread. Specifically, a spread of a projective space , where is an integer and a division ring, is a set of -dimensional subspaces, for some such that every point of the space lies in exactly one of the elements of the spread. Spreads are particularly well-studied in projective geometries over finite fields, though some notable results apply to infinite projective geometries as well. In the finite case, the foundational work on spreads appears in André and independently in Bruck-Bose in connection with the theory of translation planes. In these papers, it is shown that a spread of -dimensional subspaces of the finite projective space exists if and only if . Spreads and translation planes For all integers , the projective space always has a spread of -dimensional subspaces, and in this section the term spread refers to this specific type of spread; spreads of this form may (and frequently do) occur in infinite projective geometries as well. These spreads are the most widely studied in the literature, due to the fact that every such spread can be used to create a translation plane using the André/Bruck-Bose construction. Reguli and regular spreads Let be the projective space for an integer, and a division ring. A regulus in is a collection of pairwise disjoint -dimensional subspaces with the following properties: contains at least 3 elements Every line meeting three elements of , called a transversal, meets every element of Every point of a transversal to lies on some element of Any three pairwise disjoint -dimensional subspaces in lie in a unique regulus. A spread of is regular if for any three distinct -dimensional subspaces of , all the members of the unique regulus determined by them are contained in . Regular spreads are significant in the theory of translation planes, in that they generate Moufang planes in general, and Desarguesian planes in the finite case when the order of the ambient field is greater than . All spreads of are trivially regular, since a regulus only contains three elements. Constructing a regular spread Construction of a regular spread is most easily seen using an algebraic model. Letting be a -dimensional vector space over a field , one can model the -dimensional subspaces of using the -dimensional subspaces of ; this model uses homogeneous coordinates to represent points and hyperplanes. Incidence is defined by intersection, with subspaces intersecting in only the zero vector considered disjoint; in this model, the zero vector of is effectively ignored. Let be a field and an -dimens
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%20Ishihara
is a Japanese footballer who currently plays for Albirex Niigata Singapore. Career statistics Club Notes References 2001 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Singapore Premier League players Japan Soccer College players Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandru%20Oroian
Alexandru Laurențiu Oroian (born 27 January 2001) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Liga I club Hermannstadt. Career statistics Club Honours UTA Arad Liga II: 2019–20 References External links 2001 births Living people Footballers from Mediaș Romanian men's footballers Romania men's youth international footballers Men's association football midfielders Liga I players Liga II players FC UTA Arad players FC Hermannstadt players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1965%E2%80%9366%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1965–66 season saw Rochdale compete for their 7th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup Lancashire Cup Rose Bowl References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdullah%20%C5%9Eahindere
Abdullah Şahindere (born 9 June 2003) is a Turkish footballer who plays as a defender for TFF Third League club Hacettepe 1945 SK on loan from Gençlerbirliği. Career statistics Club Notes References 2003 births Living people Turkish men's footballers Turkey men's youth international footballers Men's association football defenders Gençlerbirliği S.K. footballers Süper Lig players TFF First League players TFF Third League players People from Ağrı
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gretchen%20Matthews
Gretchen L. Matthews (born 1973) is a mathematician specializing in algebraic coding theory. She is a professor of mathematics at Virginia Tech. Education and career Matthews graduated from Oklahoma State University in 1995, majoring in mathematics. She completed her Ph.D. in mathematics at Louisiana State University in 1999. Her dissertation, Weierstrass Pairs and Minimum Distance of Goppa Codes, was supervised by Robert F. Lax. After postdoctoral research at the University of Tennessee, she joined the Clemson University faculty in 2001, and was promoted to full professor in 2012. She moved to Virginia Tech in 2018. At Virginia Tech, she directs the cryptography and cybersecurity option of the Computational Modeling and Data Analytics program, is director of the Southwest Virginia Node of the Commonwealth Cyber Initiative, and is also affiliated with the Hume Center for National Security and Technology. Matthews is chair of the Committee on the Participation of Women of the Mathematical Association of America for 2020–2023. Recognition Matthews was named a Fellow of the Association for Women in Mathematics, in the 2021 class of fellows, "for contributions to and leadership of activities to encourage girls and women to study and enjoy mathematics; for service to the profession in fostering collaborative research groups with junior faculty and postdocs; and for excellence in mentoring". References External links Home page 1973 births Living people 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Coding theorists Oklahoma State University alumni Louisiana State University alumni Clemson University faculty Virginia Tech faculty Fellows of the Association for Women in Mathematics 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big%20Four%20career%20statistics
This is a list of the combined career statistics of the Big Four, the four players who have dominated men's tennis in singles for the majority of the first quarter of the 21st century. The Big Four consists of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, and Andy Murray. Overall dominance Grand Slam tournaments For two decades, from 2003 Wimbledon Championships to 2023 US Open, the Big Four have won a combined 69 Grand Slam singles titles. Djokovic with a record 24 titles including a triple Career Grand Slam, Nadal with 22 including a double Career Grand Slam, Federer with 20 including a Career Grand Slam and Murray with 3. The dominance does not just consist of winning the events, with all four members regularly making it to the latter stages of tournaments. Out of 75 majors between the 2005 Australian Open and 2023 US Open, the only four finals not to include any member of the Big Four were those of 2005 Australian Open, 2014, 2020 and 2022 US Opens. They occupied ten consecutive major finals (winner and runner-up) from the 2010 US Open to the 2013 Australian Open. Since 2008, they have occupied all four semi-final spots on four occasions, at the 2008 US Open, 2011 French Open, 2011 US Open and 2012 Australian Open, as well as taking three of the four spaces on nine other separate occasions. In 2011, they occupied 14 out of a possible 16 Grand Slam semi-final slots. In the same period, only twice did two or more not made the semi-final stage (2009 and 2010 French Open), while in 2012 they took 13 out 16 Grand Slam semi-final slots. The Big Four, along with Rod Laver, Tony Roche and Ivan Lendl, are the only men in Open Era to reach the semi-finals at all four Majors in a single year. Djokovic has achieved this a record six times in his career so far. Similarly, the Big Four make up four of the seven players (along with Andre Agassi, Ken Rosewall and Ivan Lendl) to have made the semi-finals three or more times at each of the four Majors. Additionally, the Big Four make up four of the ten players to have reached the final at each of the four Majors. Finally, prior to 2009, no man had made 20 Grand Slam singles finals, with Ivan Lendl leading the way with 19. However, since then, Djokovic with a record 36, Federer with 31, and Nadal with 30 have each surpassed Lendl's mark. Combined Grand Slam tournament performance timeline (best result) Big Four Head-to-Head Grand Slam finals: 33 ATP Masters tournaments Similarly, ATP Masters events have been dominated by the Big Four. Djokovic with a record 39 titles including a double career Golden Masters, Nadal with 36, Federer with 28 and Murray with 14. They have won a combined 117 titles. Between the 2005 Indian Wells Masters and 2017 Madrid Masters they collectively won 96 out of 112 events (85%), however their most dominant period was from the 2011 Indian Wells Masters to the 2017 Madrid Masters where they won 54 out of 58 (93%). This includes all 9 in 2011, 2013 and 2015. Moreover, from the 2014
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantile-parameterized%20distribution
A quantile-parameterized distribution (QPD) is a probability distributions that is directly parameterized by data. They were created to meet the need for easy-to-use continuous probability distributions flexible enough to represent a wide range of uncertainties, such as those commonly encountered in business, economics, engineering, and science. Because QPDs are directly parameterized by data, they have the practical advantage of avoiding the intermediate step of parameter estimation, a time-consuming process that typically requires non-linear iterative methods to estimate probability-distribution parameters from data. Some QPDs have virtually unlimited shape flexibility and closed-form moments as well. History The development of quantile-parameterized distributions was inspired by the practical need for flexible continuous probability distributions that are easy to fit to data. Historically, the Pearson and Johnson families of distributions have been used when shape flexibility is needed. That is because both families can match the first four moments (mean, variance, skewness, and kurtosis) of any data set. In many cases, however, these distributions are either difficult to fit to data or not flexible enough to fit the data appropriately. For example, the beta distribution is a flexible Pearson distribution that is frequently used to model percentages of a population. However, if the characteristics of this population are such that the desired cumulative distribution function (CDF) should run through certain specific CDF points, there may be no beta distribution that meets this need. Because the beta distribution has only two shape parameters, it cannot, in general, match even three specified CDF points. Moreover, the beta parameters that best fit such data can be found only by nonlinear iterative methods. Practitioners of decision analysis, needing distributions easily parameterized by three or more CDF points (e.g., because such points were specified as the result of an expert-elicitation process), originally invented quantile-parameterized distributions for this purpose. Keelin and Powley (2011) provided the original definition. Subsequently, Keelin (2016) developed the metalog distributions, a family of quantile-parameterized distributions that has virtually unlimited shape flexibility, simple equations, and closed-form moments. Definition Keelin and Powley define a quantile-parameterized distribution as one whose quantile function (inverse CDF) can be written in the form where and the functions are continuously differentiable and linearly independent basis functions. Here, essentially, and are the lower and upper bounds (if they exist) of a random variable with quantile function . These distributions are called quantile-parameterized because for a given set of quantile pairs , where , and a set of basis functions , the coefficients can be determined by solving a set of linear equations. If one desires to use more quant
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin%20Bolthausen
Erwin Bolthausen (born 15 October 1945 in Rohr, Aargau) is a Swiss mathematician, specializing in probability theory, statistics, and stochastic models in mathematical physics. Education and career Bolthausen received his doctorate in mathematics under Beno Eckmann in 1973 from ETH Zurich. Bolthausen's thesis was entitled Einfache Isomorphietypen in lokalisierten Kategorien und einfache Homotopietypen von Polyeder (Simple isomorphic types in localized categories and simple homotopy types of polyhedra). In 1978 he completed his habilitation at the University of Konstanz and was then an associate professor of mathematics at the Goethe University Frankfurt for the academic year 1978–1979. From 1979 to 1990 he was a full professor at the Technical University of Berlin. Since 1990 he is a full professor at the University of Zurich, where he headed the Institut für Mathematik from 1998 to 2001. In the early years of his career Bolthausen did research on martingale convergence theorems, combinatorial limit theorems, and the large deviations theory. Later in his career he dealt with stochastic models in mathematical physics, such as wandering in random media, phenomena related to random interfaces (entropic repulsion, wetting phenomena), spin glasses, and polymers in random media. Bolthausen has been a member of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina since 2007.<ref name-Leopoldina From 1995 to 2000 he was a member of the council of the Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach. He is since 2002 a member of the scientific advisory board of the École d'Eté de Probabilités de Saint-Flour and since 1994 a member of the Board of Trustees of the Swiss National Science Foundation. He was an associate editor from 1987 to 1989 for the Annals of Statistics and from 1988 to 1993 for the Annals of Probability. For the journal Probability Theory and Related Fields he was editor-in-chief from 1994 to 2000 and is an associate editor since 2000. Bolthausen was in 2002 in Beijing an invited speaker with talk Localization-delocalization phenomena for random interfaces at the International Congress of Mathematicians and in 1996 in Budapest with talk Large deviations and perturbations of random walks and random surfaces at the European Congress of Mathematicians. Selected publications Articles Books as editor with Anton Bovier: with A. Sznitman: References External links Workshop Probabilistic Techniques in Statistical Mechanics, TU Berlin 2010, in celebration of Erwin Bolthausen's 65th birthday 1945 births Living people 20th-century Swiss mathematicians ETH Zurich alumni University of Konstanz alumni Academic staff of the Technical University of Berlin Academic staff of the University of Zurich Members of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina Probability Theory and Related Fields editors Probability theorists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%E2%80%9310%20Athletic%20Bilbao%20season
The 2009–10 season was the 109th season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 79th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. Squad statistics Appearances and goals |} Competitions La Liga League table Copa del Rey Supercopa de España UEFA Europa League Group stage Round of 32 External links References Athletic Bilbao Athletic Bilbao seasons 2009 in the Basque Country (autonomous community) 2010 in the Basque Country (autonomous community)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javier%20Jim%C3%A9nez%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202000%29
Javier Alejandro Jiménez Paris (born 27 May 2000) is an Aruban international footballer who plays as a midfielder for BSC Süd. Career statistics Club Notes International References 2000 births Living people Aruban men's footballers Aruba men's international footballers Aruban expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders SV Deportivo Nacional players Rabat Ajax F.C. players Expatriate men's footballers in Malta Expatriate men's footballers in Germany Aruba men's under-20 international footballers FC Brandenburg 03 Berlin players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric%20Bocat
Eric Junior Bocat (born 16 July 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Belgian First Division A club Sint-Truiden. Career statistics References 1999 births Living people French men's footballers French expatriate men's footballers Men's association football defenders Dijon FCO players Stade Brestois 29 players Lille OSC players Royal Excel Mouscron players Sint-Truidense V.V. players Championnat National 3 players Championnat National 2 players Belgian Pro League players Challenger Pro League players French expatriate sportspeople in Belgium Expatriate men's footballers in Belgium
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahiro%20Yoshinaga
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a winger for Júbilo Iwata. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2002 births Living people Sportspeople from Tokyo Metropolis Association football people from Tokyo Metropolis Japanese men's footballers Men's association football forwards J2 League players Tokyo Verdy players Júbilo Iwata players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takuto%20Hirakawa
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Toin University. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2003 births Living people Association football people from Osaka Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders J3 League players Gamba Osaka players Gamba Osaka U-23 players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007%E2%80%9308%20Athletic%20Bilbao%20season
The 2007–08 season was the 107th season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 77th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. Squad statistics Appearances and goals |} Competitions La Liga League table Copa del Rey Quarter-finals |} External links References Athletic Bilbao Athletic Bilbao seasons 2007 in the Basque Country (autonomous community) 2008 in the Basque Country (autonomous community)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1966%E2%80%9367%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1966–67 season saw Rochdale compete for their 8th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup Lancashire Cup Rose Bowl References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006%E2%80%9307%20Athletic%20Bilbao%20season
The 2006–07 season was the 106th season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 76th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. Squad statistics Appearances and goals |} Competitions La Liga League table Copa del Rey External links References Athletic Bilbao Athletic Bilbao seasons 2006 in the Basque Country (autonomous community) 2007 in the Basque Country (autonomous community)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Western%20Sydney%20Wanderers%20FC%20players%20%281%E2%80%9324%20appearances%29
Key The list is ordered first by date of debut, and then if necessary in alphabetical order. Appearances as a substitute are included. Statistics are correct up to and including the match played on 12 August 2020. Where a player left the club permanently after this date, his statistics are updated to his date of leaving. Players References General Specific Western Sydney Wanderers FC players Western Sydney Wanderers Association football player non-biographical articles
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20Wood%20%28mathematician%29
David Ronald Wood (born in Christchurch, New Zealand in 1971) is a Professor in the School of Mathematics at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. His research area is discrete mathematics and theoretical computer science, especially structural graph theory, extremal graph theory, geometric graph theory, graph colouring, graph drawing, and combinatorial geometry. Wood received a Ph.D. in computer science from Monash University in 2000. His thesis "Three-Dimensional Orthogonal Graph Drawing", supervised by Graham Farr, was awarded a Mollie Holman Doctoral Medal. He held postdoctoral research positions at the University of Sydney, at Carleton University in Ottawa, at Charles University in Prague, at McGill University in Montreal, at Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya in Barcelona, and at the University of Melbourne. Since 2012 he has been at Monash University, where he was promoted to Professor in 2016. He has been awarded distinguished research fellowships including a Marie Curie Fellowship from the European Commission (2006–2008), a QEII Fellowship from the Australian Research Council (2008–2012), and a Future Fellowship from the Australian Research Council (2014–2017). Wood is a Fellow of the Australian Mathematics Society and life member of the Combinatorial Mathematics Society of Australasia (CMSA). He was president of the CMSA in 2015–2016 and Vice-President in 2011–2014. He is a Deputy Director of The Mathematical Research Institute MATRIX. Wood is an Editor-in-Chief of the Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, Editor-in-Chief of the MATRIX Book Series, and an Editor of the Journal of Computational Geometry, Journal of Graph Theory, and SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics. His main research contributions are in graph product structure theory, extremal graph minor theory, graph treewidth, graphs on surfaces, graph colouring, geometric graph theory, poset dimension, and graph drawing. Major publications References External links David Wood's home page at Monash University People from Christchurch Australian mathematicians 21st-century Australian mathematicians Monash University alumni Academic staff of Monash University Living people 1971 births Graph theorists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alla%20Sheffer
Alla Sheffer is a Canadian researcher in computer graphics, geometric modeling, geometry processing, and mesh generation, particularly known for her research on mesh parameterization and angle-based flattening. She is currently a professor of computer science at the University of British Columbia. Education and career Sheffer was educated at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, earning a bachelor's degree in mathematics and computer science in 1991, a master's degree in computer science in 1995, and a Ph.D. in computer science in 1999. Her dissertation, Geometric Modeling and Applied Computational Geometry, was supervised by Michel Bercovier. After postdoctoral research at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, she became an assistant professor at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in 2001. She moved to the University of British Columbia in 2003, and became a full professor there in 2013. Recognition The Canadian Human–Computer Communications Society gave Sheffer their Achievement Award in 2018, "for her numerous highly impactful contributions to the field of computer graphics research". In 2020, Sheffer was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canadaand a member of the ACM SIGGRAPH Academy. In 2021, she was elected as a Fellow of IEEE. She was named a 2021 ACM Fellow "for contributions to geometry processing, mesh parameterization, and perception-driven shape analysis and modeling". References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Canadian computer scientists Canadian women computer scientists Israeli computer scientists Israeli women computer scientists Researchers in geometric algorithms Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni Academic staff of Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Academic staff of the University of British Columbia Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada Fellows of the Association for Computing Machinery
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mousumi%20Banerjee
Mousumi Banerjee is an Indian-American statistician and singer. She is the Anant M. Kshirsagar Collegiate Research Professor of Biostatistics and Director of the Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy (CHOP) at the University of Michigan. Banerjee is also the executive director of the nonprofit art foundation Tagore Beyond Boundaries. Early life and education Banerjee was born and raised in India to academic parents; her father was a professor of English literature and her mother taught Bengali language. Although she was never formally trained music and literature, she learned from her cousins and father how to write poetry and sing. She was convinced by her high school math teacher to study at the Indian Statistical Institute, where she was the only female in a class of 22. Following her Master's degree, Banerjee moved to North American and enrolled at the University of Wisconsin for her PhD in statistics. Career Upon completing her PhD, Banerjee accepted a faculty position at Wayne State University where she worked on an National Institutes of Health-funded prostate cancer project. As an associate professor in the Center for Healthcare Effectiveness Research, Banerjee received the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation Excellence in Clinical Research Award for her project, titled "Recursive Partitioning for Prognostic Grouping of Patients with Clinically Localized Prostate Carcinoma." In order to work cohesively with doctors on her prostate cancer project, Banerjee began taking biology classes and shadowing colleagues in clinics to understand the science. Banerjee eventually left Wayne State University to accept a faculty position at the University of Michigan where she continued to study cancer In 2007, she led a research project of over 630 women diagnosed with breast cancer which determined that black women were less likely to undergo cancer treatment than white women. In 2012, she was elected a Fellow of the American Statistical Association for her "outstanding and sustained research, collaboration and mentoring involving statistical methods, theory and design for clinical trials, and for service to the profession." Banerjee was also named the director of UMich's Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, during which her project Tree-Based Model for Thyroid Cancer Prognostication received the 2015 Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Michigan McDevitt Excellence in Research Award in the area of health policy research. While continuing to work at the University of Michigan, Banerjee also co-founded a nonprofit organization with Rajeeb Chakraborty called Tagore Beyond Boundaries. The aim of the nonprofit was to transcribe the songs of Rabindranath Tagore to share with the Western world. She also released two CDs, Hriday Amar Prakash Holo and Nijer Rabindranath, and published one book on poetry. In 2018, Banerjee was appointed the Anant M. Kshirsagar Collegiate Professor for a five-year term in recognition of her "work on statis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Alcoba
Jeremy Alcoba Ferrer (born 15 November 2001) is a Spanish motorcycle racer. Career statistics FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap) Grand Prix motorcycle racing By season By class Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap) Half points awarded as less than half of the race distance (but at least three full laps) was completed. Season still in progress. References External links 2001 births Living people Spanish motorcycle racers Motorcycle racers from Catalonia Moto3 World Championship riders People from Tortosa Sportspeople from the Province of Tarragona Moto2 World Championship riders
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lin%20Cai
Lin Cai is a Chinese-Canadian telecommunications engineer known for her work on topology control in wireless networks and in the applications of wireless communications to self-driving cars. She was educated at the University of Waterloo and is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Victoria. Cai should be distinguished from a younger wireless networking engineer, also an alumna of the University of Waterloo named Lin Cai, who is a member of the faculty at the Illinois Institute of Technology. The younger Cai publishes as "Lin X. Cai", and has coauthored research with Lin Cai. Education and career Cai has a bachelor's degree from the Nanjing University of Science and Technology. She completed her Ph.D. at the University of Waterloo in 2005, and in the same year joined the University of Victoria faculty. Recognition Cai became an E. W. R. Steacie Memorial Fellow of the Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council in 2019. She was named an IEEE Fellow in 2020, affiliated with the IEEE Vehicular Technology Society, "for contributions to topology control of wireless networks". She was elected to the College of New Scholars of the Royal Society of Canada in 2020. References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Canadian telecommunications engineers Canadian women engineers Chinese telecommunications engineers Chinese electrical engineers Chinese women engineers Nanjing University of Science and Technology alumni University of Waterloo alumni Academic staff of the University of Victoria Fellow Members of the IEEE
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alejandro%20Medina
Alejandro Medina Mayo (born 2 January 1997) is a Spanish motorcycle racer. In 2020 he competed in the MotoE World Cup. Career statistics CEV Moto3 Championship Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap) FIM CEV Moto2 European Championship Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap) Grand Prix motorcycle racing By season By class Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap) References External links 1997 births Living people Sportspeople from Málaga Spanish motorcycle racers Moto2 World Championship riders MotoE World Cup riders
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic%20Statistics%20Centre%20of%20Excellence
The Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence is an economics research institute in central London, established by the ONS. History ESCoE was founded by a consortium of British university business schools, including Strathclyde Business School, with the ONS in 2017. Structure It is housed at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research in central London. Its purpose is to produce added inference from the UK economic data collated by the ONS. See also Economic history of the United Kingdom UK Data Archive at the University of Essex References External links ESCoE 2017 establishments in the United Kingdom Business education in the United Kingdom College and university associations and consortia in the United Kingdom Economic data Economic history of the United Kingdom Economic research institutes Office for National Statistics Organisations based in the City of Westminster Research institutes established in 2017
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Dodds%20%28mathematician%29
Peter Sheridan Dodds is an Australian applied Mathematician. He is the director of the Vermont Complex Systems Center and Professor at the University of Vermont's Department of Mathematics and Statistics. He has collaborated in several researches related to big data problems in areas as language, stories, sociotechnical systems, Earth science, biology, and ecology. With Chris Danforth, he co-runs the Computational Story Lab, the MassMutual Center of Excellence in Complex Systems and Data Science, and together, they developed the hedonometer. Recent researches directed by Peter Dodds in the Computational Story Lab has been commented on in The New York Times, Smithsonian Magazine, and other media. In October 2020, the Hedonometor tool created by Dodds and his college Chris Danforth analyzed the sentiment of people through their tweets pointed out May 31 as the saddest day recorded. In Dodds's early career, from 2002 to 2007, he was a frequent collaborator of Duncan J. Watts. Selected works Dodds, P. S., Alshaabi, T., Fudolig, M. I., Zimmerman, J. W., Lovato, J., Beaulieu, S., Minot, J. R., Arnold, M. V., Reagan, A. J., & Danforth, C. M. (2021). Ousiometrics and Telegnomics: The essence of meaning conforms to a two-dimensional powerful-weak and dangerous-safe framework with diverse corpora presenting a safety bias. ArXiv:2110.06847 [Physics]. arxiv.org/abs/2110.06847 Dodds, P. S., Harris, K. D., Kloumann, I. M., Bliss, C. A., & Danforth, C. M. (2011). Temporal Patterns of Happiness and Information in a Global Social Network: Hedonometrics and Twitter. PLoS ONE, 6(12), e26752. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026752 Dodds, P. S., Minot, J. R., Arnold, M. V., Alshaabi, T., Adams, J. L., Dewhurst, D. R., Gray, T. J., Frank, M. R., Reagan, A. J., & Danforth, C. M. (2020). Allotaxonometry and rank-turbulence divergence: A universal instrument for comparing complex systems. ArXiv:2002.09770 [Physics]. Dodds, P. S., Minot, J. R., Arnold, M. V., Alshaabi, T., Adams, J. L., Dewhurst, D. R., Reagan, A. J., & Danforth, C. M. (2021). Fame and Ultrafame: Measuring and comparing daily levels of `being talked about’ for United States’ presidents, their rivals, God, countries, and K-pop. ArXiv:1910.00149 [Physics]. References External links 21st-century Australian mathematicians Australian computer scientists Australian emigrants to the United States Complex systems scientists Graph drawing people Information visualization experts Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni Living people University of Melbourne alumni University of Vermont faculty Year of birth missing (living people) Educational and science YouTubers Network scientists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jannik%20Sinner%20career%20statistics
This is a list of main career statistics of Italian professional tennis player Jannik Sinner. All statistics are according to the ATP World Tour and ITF websites. Performance timeline {{Performance key|short=yes}} Current through the 2023 Vienna Open. Significant finals Masters 1000 tournaments Singles: 3 (1 title, 2 runner-ups) ATP career finals Singles: 13 (10 titles, 3 runner-ups) Doubles: 1 (1 title) ATP Next Generation finals Singles: 1 (1–0) ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals Singles: 7 (5–2) Doubles: 1 (1–0) Career Grand Slam statistics Career Grand Slam tournament seedings Best Grand Slam tournament results details Grand Slam winners are in boldface, and runner-ups are in italics. Record against top 10 players Sinner's record against those who have been ranked in the top 10, with active players in boldface. Record against players ranked No. 11–20 Active players are in boldface. Alex de Minaur 5–0 Lorenzo Musetti 2–0 Philipp Kohlschreiber 2–0 Kyle Edmund 2–0 Tommy Paul 2–1 Borna Ćorić 1–0 Cristian Garín 1–0 Nick Kyrgios 1–0 Reilly Opelka 1–0 Guido Pella 1–0 Albert Ramos Viñolas 1–0 Aslan Karatsev 1–1 Benoît Paire 1–1 * Wins over top 10 players He has a record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10. ATP Tour career earnings * Statistics correct . Notable exhibitions Singles References Sinner, Jannik
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020%20Chinese%20census
The Seventh National Population Census of the People's Republic of China (), also referred to as the 2020 Chinese Census, was the seventh national census conducted by the National Bureau of Statistics of the People's Republic of China. Census work began on November 1, 2020 and continued through December 10, 2020, involving seven million census workers. The 2020 Chinese census covers all Chinese citizens living in mainland China, as well as those living abroad on temporary visas. Foreigners who live in the mainland for more than six months are also recorded in the data. The preliminary results were released on May 11, 2021, with a news conference being held on the same day. The release was originally planned to be in early April, but was delayed by a month. Census result The population of mainland China was 1,411,778,724 as of 1 November 2020. In addition, Hong Kong's population was 7,474,200 (provided by the Hong Kong SAR Government at the end of 2020) and Macau's population was 683,218 (provided by the Macau SAR Government at the end of 2020). Background In October 2015, China scrapped the one-child policy in the hope of boosting the number of births. In 2016, China set a target of increasing its population to about 1.42 billion by 2020, from 1.34 billion in 2010. After the relaxation of the one-child policy, 17.9 million babies were born in 2016, an increase of 1.3 million over the previous year, but only half of what was expected. In 2017, the birth rate fell to 17.2 million, far below the official forecast of more than 20 million. It is possible that the Chinese government will further relax its fertility policy in the future. On November 2, 2020, Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping answered census workers' questions in Beijing. The 2020 census showed that the gender ratio of mainland China has improved, with the male-to-female ratio reaching a new record low of 105.07. This is the most balanced gender ration since the People's Republic of China began conducting censuses in 1953. Revisions On April 27, 2021, the Financial Times reported that according to some sources who know the data of the seventh census, Chinese population in 2020 did not meet 1.4 billion. Chinese state media say that Chinese mainland population in 2019 was 1.40005 billion. If true, this would indicate the first population decline since the Great Leap Forward. On April 28, 2021, Bloomberg News, quoting the Chinese state media outlet the Global Times, reported that it is unlikely there would be a drop in the total population in the 2020 census, citing a comment by Lu Jiehua, a professor at Peking University. Still, it was reported that China's population may peak in 2022, which is much earlier than previously estimated. In May 2021 the National Bureau of Statistics of China released a report revising the data for the previous 10 years before the 2020 census. They announced that there were about 10 million more births between 2011 and 2019 than
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Liebeck
Martin Liebeck (born 23 September 1954) is a professor of Pure Mathematics at Imperial College London whose research interests include group theory and algebraic combinatorics. Career and research Martin Liebeck studied mathematics at the University of Oxford earning a First Class BA in 1976, an MSc in 1977, and a D.Phil. in 1979, with the Dissertation Finite Permutation Groups under Peter M. Neumann. In January 1991 he was appointed Professor at Imperial College London and became Head of the Pure Mathematics section there in 1997. Liebeck has published over 150 research articles and 10 books. His research interests include algebraic combinatorics, algebraic groups, permutation groups, and finite simple groups. He was elected Fellow of the American Mathematical Society (AMS) in 2019, and was awarded the London Mathematical Society’s Pólya Prize in 2020. In February of 2020 he and Colva Roney-Dougal organized a programme titled "Groups, Representations and Applications" at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences. Personal life Martin is the son of mathematician Hans Liebeck and mathematics educationalist Pamela Liebeck. His wife Ann is a professional musician, and they have two sons Jonathan and Matthew. Martin's main hobbies are playing tennis and the violin, particularly doubles and chamber music. Selected publications Papers 1990: "The maximal factorizations of the finite simple groups and their automorphism groups", Memoirs Amer. Math. Soc. 86, pp. 1–151 (with C.E. Praeger and Jan Saxl) 1995: "The probability of generating a finite simple group", Geom. Dedicata 56, 103-113 (with A. Shalev) 1998: "On the subgroup structure of classical groups", Invent. Math. 134, 427-453 (with G.M. Seitz) 1999: "Simple groups, permutation groups, and probability", J. Amer. Math. Soc. 12, 497-520 (with A. Shalev) 2001: "Diameters of finite simple groups: sharp bounds and applications", Annals of Math. 154, 383-406 (with A. Shalev) 2004: "The maximal subgroups of positive dimension in exceptional algebraic groups", Memoirs Amer. Math. Soc. 169, no. 802, pp. 1–227 (with G.M. Seitz) 2010: "The Ore Conjecture", J. European Math. Soc., 12, 939–1008 (with E. O’Brien, A. Shalev, P. Tiep) 2018: "Character bounds for finite groups of Lie type", Acta Math. 221, 1–57 (with R. Bezrukavnikov, A. Shalev and P. Tiep) 2019: "Algorithms determining finite simple images of finitely presented groups", Inventiones Math. 218, 623–648 (with M. Bridson, D.M. Evans and D. Segal) Books 1990: The Subgroup Structure of the Finite Classical Groups, London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Series No. 129, Cambridge Univ. Press, 303pp. (with P. Kleidman) 2000: A Concise Introduction to Pure Mathematics, CRC Press, 2000; Second Edition, 2005; Third Edition, 2010; Fourth Edition, 2015 2012: Unipotent and Nilpotent Classes in Simple Algebraic Groups and Lie Algebras, Math. Surveys and Monographs Series, Vol. 180, American Math. Soc., 380pp. (with G.M. Seitz) Awards and
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005%E2%80%9306%20Athletic%20Bilbao%20season
The 2005–06 season was the 105th season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 75th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football. Squad statistics Appearances and goals |} See also 2005–06 La Liga 2005–06 Copa del Rey 2005 UEFA Intertoto Cup External links References Athletic Bilbao Athletic Bilbao seasons 2005 in the Basque Country (autonomous community) 2006 in the Basque Country (autonomous community)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1967%E2%80%9368%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1967–68 season saw Rochdale compete for their 9th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup Lancashire Cup Northern Floodlit Cup Rose Bowl References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryusei%20Yamanaka
is a Japanese motorcycle racer set to compete in the 2023 Moto3 World Championship with GasGas Aspar Team. Career statistics Asia Talent Cup Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap) Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap) FIM CEV Moto3 Junior World Championship Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap) Grand Prix motorcycle racing By season By class Races by year (key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap) Season still in progress. References External links Japanese motorcycle racers 2001 births Living people Moto3 World Championship riders People from Yotsukaidō
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tadaaki%20Yazawa
is a Japanese footballer. Club career After returning from his spell with Albirex Niigata Singapore, Yazawa continued to play football in the lower leagues of Japan. Career statistics Club Notes References 1997 births Living people Sportspeople from Nagano Prefecture Association football people from Nagano Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football defenders Singapore Premier League players Japan Soccer College players Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryo%20Kurihara
is a Japanese former footballer. Career statistics Club Notes References 1996 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football defenders Japan Soccer College players Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Singapore Premier League players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daichi%20Ishiyama
is a Japanese footballer who currently plays for Hokkaido Tokachi Sky Earth. Career statistics Club Notes References 1996 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Japan Soccer College players Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Hokkaido Tokachi Sky Earth players Singapore Premier League players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yusuke%20Mukai
is a Japanese footballer. Career statistics Club Notes References 1992 births Living people Yamanashi Gakuin University alumni Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Reilac Shiga FC players Artista Asama players Singapore Premier League players Japan Football League players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shun%20Inaba
is a Japanese footballer who currently plays for the Japan Soccer College. Career statistics Club Notes References 1993 births Living people Niigata University of Management alumni Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players Japan Soccer College players Singapore Premier League players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivor%20Vivian
Ivor Francis Vivian (born 1932) is a former Australian politician. Vivian was born in Newton Abbot, Devon, England in 1932. From 1969 to 1998, he was the foundation principal lecturer in mathematics at the Canberra College of Advanced Education, renamed in 1990 as the University of Canberra. In 1995 he was awarded a 25-year service pin. In 1973, he was appointed to Australian Capital Territory Advisory Council. In 1975, he was elected to the newly created Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly as one of the nine members representing the electorate of Fraser for the centrist Australia Party. He was one of two Australia Party members elected to the Legislative Assembly, the other being Maureen Worsley, who was elected as a member for the electorate for Canberra. Gordon Walsh was a Labor member of the Assembly. In 1977 he resigned from Labor, and from the Assembly, and joined the Australia Party. Vivian and Walsh both joined the Australian Democrats on its formation later in 1977. Worsley sat out the rest of her term as an Independent. Vivian and Walsh were both elected to the renamed House of Assembly in 1979, but Vivian failed to be re-elected in 1982, leaving Walsh as the only remaining Democrat. He served as the deputy president of the Assembly and deputy chairman of committees. He also served on the ACT Interim Schools Authority, Road Safety Council, Third Party Premiums Committee and was chairman of the Police Liaison Committee. The House of Assembly was abolished in 1986, and replaced in 1989 with the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly. Neither Vivian nor Walsh stood for election to the new Legislative Assembly. Vivian is a priest of the Liberal Catholic Church, and was vicar of St Thomas' church in the Canberra suburb of Melba. He was involved in the establishment of Radio 1RPH, a radio station for people with a print disability. References 1932 births Living people Australia Party politicians Australian Democrats politicians Members of the Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly Australian Capital Territory politicians 20th-century Australian politicians Liberal Catholicism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar%20Garcia%20Prada
Oscar García-Prada (born 20 February 1960) is a Spanish mathematician working in the fields of differential geometry, algebraic geometry and mathematical physics. Career García-Prada is a research professor of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) at the Institute of Mathematical Sciences (ICMAT, Madrid). His research interests lie in the study of moduli spaces and geometric structures, including moduli spaces of vortices, moduli spaces of Higgs bundles and their relation to character varieties of surface groups and higher Teichmüller theory. He had published more than 80 research papers and books, including the appendix to Wells' Differential Analysis on Complex Manifolds. After undergraduate studies in physics and mathematics at the University of Valladolid and University of Barcelona, and a master's degree in mathematics at Rice University in Houston, Texas. García-Prada obtained a D.Phil. in mathematics at the University of Oxford in 1991 under the supervision of Simon Donaldson and Nigel Hitchin. He had postdoctoral appointments at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques (Paris), University of California at Berkeley and Université de Paris-Sud, before holding positions at Universidad Autónoma de Madrid and École Polytéchnique (Paris). In 2002 he joined the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC). In parallel with his mathematical work, he carries out a musical activity, singing as a countertenor specialised in the early music repertoire, offering recitals in several countries in Europe. References Living people 1960 births Alumni of the University of Oxford
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joubert%27s%20theorem
In polynomial algebra and field theory, Joubert's theorem states that if and are fields, is a separable field extension of of degree 6, and the characteristic of is not equal to 2, then is generated over by some element λ in , such that the minimal polynomial of λ has the form = , for some constants in . The theorem is named in honor of Charles Joubert, a French mathematician, lycée professor, and Jesuit priest. In 1867 Joubert published his theorem in his paper Sur l'équation du sixième degré in tome 64 of Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des sciences. He seems to have made the assumption that the fields involved in the theorem are subfields of the complex field. Using arithmetic properties of hypersurfaces, Daniel F. Coray gave, in 1987, a proof of Joubert's theorem (with the assumption that the characteristic of is neither 2 nor 3). In 2006 gave a proof of Joubert's theorem "based on an enhanced version of Joubert’s argument". In 2014 Zinovy Reichstein proved that the condition characteristic() ≠ 2 is necessary in general to prove the theorem, but the theorem's conclusion can be proved in the characteristic 2 case with some additional assumptions on and . References Field (mathematics) Theorems in abstract algebra
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goods%20and%20Services%20Tax%20%28India%29%20Revenue%20Statistics
From 1 May 2018 onwards Ministry of Finance of Government of India started releasing monthly GST revenue collection data via official press release through Press Information Bureau. And to further improve transparency Government of India started issuing state-wise monthly collection data from 1 January 2020. Revenue Collections Monthly National Revenue Collections Official Source State-Wise Monthly Revenue Collections States Note: Below tables does not include GST on import of goods Andhra Pradesh Arunachal Pradesh Assam Bihar Chhattisgarh Goa Gujarat Haryana Himachal Pradesh Jharkhand Karnataka Kerala Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland Odisha Punjab Rajasthan Sikkim Tamil Nadu Telangana Tripura Uttar Pradesh Uttarakhand West Bengal Union Territories Note: Below tables does not include GST on import of goods Andaman and Nicobar Islands Chandigarh Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu Jammu and Kashmir Ladakh Lakshadweep National Capital Territory of Delhi Puducherry Other Territory Note: Below table does not include GST on import of goods Center Jurisdiction Note: Below table does not include GST on import of goods Monthly GST Revenue Collections from Import Returns Around 38 lakh new taxpayers have registered under GST regime and the total count has crossed one crore if we include the 64 lakh earlier ones. Total number of taxpayers were above 1.14 crore in October 2018. GSTR1 Filling Data GSTR3B Filling Data Official Source See also The Great Hedge of India, a historic colonial-era inland customs border Goods and Services Tax (India) Notes References External links Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs Goods and Services Tax Council e-Way Bill System at ewaybill.nic.in. National Informatics Centre. Taxation in India India Economic history of India (1947–present)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star%20Rank%20Boxing%20II
Star Rank Boxing II is a sports video game published by Activision in 1988. Gameplay Star Rank Boxing II is a game in which the player creates a boxer using random statistics and chose his training regimen. Reception David M. Wilson and Johnny L. Wilson reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "All of this happens with such speed and facility that the fight takes on all the intensity of a real bout for the player(s)." References External links Review in Ahoy! Review in RUN magazine Review in Commodore Magazine Review in Zzap! (Italian edition) 1988 video games Activision games Apple II games Boxing video games Commodore 64 games DOS games Video game sequels Video games developed in the United States Video games set in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asok%20Ray
Asok Ray is a mechanical engineer, an applied mathematician, and Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Mathematics at the Pennsylvania State University. He has published in numerous academic and scientific journals. His contributions to the fields of signal processing, machine learning, and estimation were focused on anomaly detection and statistical pattern recognition based on the theories of symbolic dynamics, and statistical mechanics. References External links Asok Ray profile at Pennsylvania State University Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Pennsylvania State University faculty
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob%20Conde
Jacob Rafael Conde (born October 13, 1992) is a former Puerto Rican football player. He played in England, Spain and Croatia, as well as his native United States. Career statistics Club Notes International References External links Jacob Conde at the Medaille College 1992 births Living people Puerto Rican men's footballers Puerto Rican expatriate men's footballers Puerto Rico men's international footballers American men's soccer players American expatriate men's soccer players American sportspeople of Puerto Rican descent Men's association football defenders Soccer players from Connecticut Sportspeople from Hartford, Connecticut American expatriate sportspeople in England Expatriate men's footballers in England Puerto Rican expatriate sportspeople in Spain American expatriate sportspeople in Spain Expatriate men's footballers in Spain American expatriate sportspeople in Croatia Expatriate men's footballers in Croatia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norberto%20Conde
Norberto Conde (14 March 1931 – 8 September 2014) was an Argentine footballer. He was capped by the Argentina national team between 1955 and 1958, scoring three goals. Career statistics International International goals Scores and results list Argentina's goal tally first. References 1931 births 2014 deaths Argentine men's footballers Argentine expatriate men's footballers Argentina men's international footballers Men's association football midfielders Club Atlético Vélez Sarsfield footballers Club Atlético Huracán footballers Club Atlético Atlanta footballers Ferro Carril Oeste footballers América de Cali footballers Argentine expatriate sportspeople in Colombia Expatriate men's footballers in Colombia Footballers from Buenos Aires
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katrin%20Leschke
Katrin Leschke (born 1968) is a German mathematician specialising in differential geometry and known for her work on quaternionic analysis and Willmore surfaces. She works in England as a reader in mathematics at the University of Leicester, where she also heads the "Maths Meets Arts Tiger Team", an interdisciplinary group for the popularisation of mathematics, and led the "m:iv" project of international collaboration on minimal surfaces. Education and career Leschke did her undergraduate studies at the Technical University of Berlin, and continued there for a PhD, which she completed in 1997. Her dissertation, Homogeneity and Canonical Connections of Isoparametric Manifolds, was jointly supervised by Dirk Ferus and Ulrich Pinkall. She was a postdoctoral researcher at the Technical University of Berlin from 1997 to 2002, a visiting assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst from 2002 to 2005, and a researcher and temporary associate professor at the University of Augsburg from 2005 to 2007. At Augsburg, she completed her habilitation, working in the group of Katrin Wendland. She joined the University of Leicester as New Blood Lecturer in 2007 and became reader there in 2016. Book Leschke is a coauthor of the book Conformal Geometry of Surfaces in and Quaternions (Springer, 2002), developing the theory of quaternionic analysis. References External links Home page 1968 births Living people 20th-century German mathematicians German women mathematicians Differential geometers Technical University of Berlin alumni Academics of the University of Leicester 21st-century German mathematicians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varga%20K.%20Kalantarov
Varga K. Kalantarov (born 1950) is an Azerbaijani mathematician, scientist and professor of mathematics. He is a member of the Koç University Mathematics Department in İstanbul, Turkey. Education Varga Kalantarov was born in 1950. He graduated from Baku State University in 1971. He received his PhD in Differential Equations and Mathematical Physics at the Baku Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics, Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences in 1974. He received his Doctor of Sciences degree in 1988 under the supervision of Olga Ladyzhenskaya at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics, Saint Petersburg, Russia. Academic career After he received his PhD he started to hold a scientific researcher position in Baku Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics. Meanwhile, between 1975 and 1981 he was a visiting researcher in the Steklov Institute of Mathematics. From 1989 to 1993 he was the head of the Department of Partial Differential Equations at the Baku Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics. After the perestroika era he moved to Turkey with his family in 1993. Between 1993 and 2001 he was a full time professor in Hacettepe University, Mathematics Department, Ankara. Starting from 2001 he became a full time professor in Koç University. He has been an active researcher, having published more than 60 scientific manuscripts with more than 700 citations. He has had 16 PhD students. Research areas His research interests include PDEs and dynamical systems. Representative scientific publications Kalantarov, V. K.; Ladyženskaja, O. A. Formation of collapses in quasilinear equations of parabolic and hyperbolic types. (Russian) Boundary value problems of mathematical physics and related questions in the theory of functions, 10. Zap. Naučn. Sem. LOMI 69 (1977), 77-102, 274. Kalantarov, Varga K.; Titi, Edriss S. Global attractors and determining modes for the 3D Navier-Stokes-Voight equations. Chin. Ann. Math. Ser. B 30 (2009), no. 6, 697–714. Kalantarov, Varga; Zelik, Sergey Finite-dimensional attractors for the quasi-linear strongly-damped wave equation. J. Differential Equations 247 (2009), no. 4, 1120–1155. Memberships Varga Kalantarov is a member of the Azerbaijan Mathematical Society, Turkish Mathematical Society and the American Mathematical Society. References External links Varga Kalantarov's professional home page Turkish mathematicians 20th-century Azerbaijani mathematicians 1950 births Living people Scientists from Istanbul Academic staff of Koç University
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohei%20Nakano
is a Japanese footballer who plays as a midfielder. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2003 births Living people Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Cerezo Osaka players Cerezo Osaka U-23 players 1. FC Bocholt players J3 League players Oberliga (football) players Japanese expatriate men's footballers Expatriate men's footballers in Germany Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Germany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maths%20Week%20Ireland
Maths Week Ireland (MWI) is an all-island (Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland) mathematics outreach initiative founded in 2006 by Eoin Gill and Sheila Donegan, based on an idea by Eoin Gill. It is a project of the Centre for the Advancement of Learning of Maths, Science and Technology (CALMAST) the STEM outreach centre at Waterford Institute of Technology. It is run by Gill and Donegan who are the directors of CALMAST. In 2019 MWI engaged over 400,000 people on an island with a population of under 7 million and is arguably the world's largest mathematics festival. Purpose MWI is a partnership of over 50 organizations dedicated to promoting and celebrating mathematics across the island of Ireland, including universities, institutes of technology, colleges, museums, libraries, visitor centres, and other professional bodies. Maths Week Ireland is supported by the Departments of Education in both parts of the island of Ireland, Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), the ESB Group, and various technology companies such as Google and Xilinx. MWI targets school and universities, as well as hosting weekend "street fairs" in cities such as Dublin, Belfast and Cork. Events are run by the participants with materials delivered online by Maths Week Ireland. Most schools run their own special activities. Maths Week is a nine-day event (a Saturday to the Sunday of the following weekend, inclusive) which always includes the 16th of October, the day in 1843 when William R. Hamilton discovered quaternions. The idea has been so successful that it has now been replicated in England and Scotland. MWI hosts the Maths Ireland website which is home to the monthly blogs of the Annals of Irish Mathematics & Mathematicians (AIMM), authored by Colm Mulcahy. Starting in 2016, MWI has also produced the annual Irish Maths Calendars which are also archived at the Maths Ireland site. Presenters Mathematicians and mathematics popularizers who have been MWI presenters include: Rob Eastaway Marcus du Sautoy John D. Barrow Colm Mulcahy David Acheson Keith Devlin Matt Parker Eugenia Cheng James Tanton Kjartan Poskitt Bobby Seagull Maths Week Ireland Award In 2016 MWI inaugurated the annual Maths Week Ireland Award to honor outstanding work in raising public awareness of mathematics. The award is presented during Maths Week Ireland. Awardees so far are: 2016: Des MacHale 2017: Peter Lynch 2018: Anthony O’Farrell and Fiacre Ó Cairbre who founded the annual Hamilton Walk 2019: Mark McCartney 2020: Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin 2021: Dara Ó Briain 2022: Rafael de Andrade Moral References External links Maths Week Ireland Official Website Mathematics conferences Educational organizations established in 2006 Annual events in the Republic of Ireland Annual events in Northern Ireland Educational organizations established in the 2000s
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20Fino
Anna Maria Fino is an Italian mathematician specializing in differential geometry, complex geometry, and Lie groups. She is a professor of mathematics in the Giuseppe Peano Department of Mathematics at the University of Turin, and founding editor-in-chief of the journal Complex Manifolds. Education and career Fino earned a laurea in mathematics in 1992 from the University of Turin. She completed her Ph.D. in 1997 through the Genoa-Turin University Consortium, with a dissertation Geometria e topologia degli spazi omogenei [Geometry and topology of homogeneous spaces] supervised by Simon Salamon. She remained as a researcher at the University of Turin until 2005, when she became an associate professor. She earned a habilitation in 2013 and was promoted to full professor in 2015. She has been editor-in-chief of Complex Manifolds since 2014 when it first began publication, as part of De Gruyter's "Emerging Science Journals" line of open-access journals. References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Italian mathematicians Italian women mathematicians University of Turin alumni Academic staff of the University of Turin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safiul%20Rahaman
Safiul Rahaman (born 27 April 1993) is an Indian footballer who plays as a defender for Mohammedan in the I-League. He is popularly known as Ripon. Career statistics Club Honours Mohammedan Sporting Calcutta Football League: 2021 References Living people 1993 births Footballers from Kolkata Men's association football defenders Indian men's footballers Mohammedan SC (Kolkata) players I-League players I-League 2nd Division players Peerless SC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akari%20Kurishima
is a Japanese footballer who plays as a midfielder for Nadeshiko League club Urawa Red Ladies and for the Japan women's national team. Career statistics International References 1994 births Living people Japanese women's footballers Women's association football midfielders Urawa Red Diamonds Ladies players Nadeshiko League players Japan women's international footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrik%20Kirj%C3%A1k
Henrik Kirják (born 12 July 1999) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for III. Kerületi. Career statistics . References 1999 births Footballers from Szolnok Living people Hungarian men's footballers Men's association football defenders Szolnoki MÁV FC footballers Vasas SC players Győri ETO FC players Szombathelyi Haladás footballers Budafoki MTE footballers Gyirmót FC Győr players III. Kerületi TVE footballers Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players Nemzeti Bajnokság III players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korn%C3%A9l%20Khiesz
Kornél Khiesz (born 19 October 1992) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Balatonfüred. Career statistics . References 1992 births Living people Sportspeople from Veszprém Hungarian men's footballers Men's association football defenders Puskás Akadémia FC players Budafoki MTE footballers Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players Footballers from Veszprém County
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aybar%20Abdulla
Aybar Abdulla (; born 22 January 2002) is a Kazakhstani footballer currently playing as a forward for Kazakh club Shakhter Karagandy. Career statistics Club Notes References 2002 births Living people Kazakhstani men's footballers Men's association football forwards Kazakhstan First Division players Kazakhstan Premier League players FC Kairat players Kazakhstani expatriate men's footballers Expatriate men's footballers in Russia Russian Second League players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistics%20of%20the%20COVID-19%20pandemic%20in%20the%20United%20States
The CDC publishes official numbers of COVID-19 cases in the United States. The CDC estimates that, between February 2020 and September 2021, only 1 in 1.3 COVID-19 deaths were attributed to COVID-19. The true COVID-19 death toll in the United States would therefore be higher than official reports, as modeled by a paper published in The Lancet Regional Health – Americas. One way to estimate COVID-19 deaths that includes unconfirmed cases is to use the excess mortality, which is the overall number of deaths that exceed what would normally be expected. From March 1, 2020, through the end of 2020, there were 522,368 excess deaths in the United States, or 22.9% more deaths than would have been expected in that time period. In February 2020, at the beginning of the pandemic, a shortage of tests made it impossible to confirm all possible COVID-19 cases and resulting deaths, so the early numbers were likely undercounts. The following numbers are based on CDC data, which is incomplete. Measuring case and mortality rates In early 2020, deaths from all causes exceeded the seasonal average, and data from early 2020 suggest additional deaths that were not counted in official reported coronavirus mortality statistics. Until February 28, 2020, CDC testing protocols allowed tests only for people who had traveled to China. In most U.S. locations, testing for some time was performed only on symptomatic people with a history of travel to Wuhan or with close contact to such people. The numbers were reported every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and were split into categories: individual travelers, people who contracted the disease from other people within the U.S., and repatriated citizens who returned to the U.S. from crisis locations, such as Wuhan, where the disease originated, and the cruise ship Diamond Princess. By March 26, 2020, the United States, with the world's third-largest population, surpassed China and Italy as the country with the world's highest number of confirmed cases. By April 25, the U.S. had more than 905,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and nearly 52,000 deaths, giving it a mortality rate around 5.7 percent. (In comparison, Spain's mortality rate was 10.2 percent and Italy's was 13.5 percent.) In April 2020, more than 10,000 American deaths had occurred in nursing homes. Most nursing homes did not have easy access to testing, making the actual number unknown. President Trump established a Coronavirus Commission for Safety and Quality in Nursing Homes. Subsequently, a number of states including Maryland and New Jersey reported their own estimates of deaths at nursing homes, ranging from twenty to fifty percent of the states' total deaths. A PNAS report in September 2020 confirmed that the virus is much more dangerous for the elderly than the young, noting that about 70% of all U.S. COVID-19 deaths had occurred to those over the age of 70. As of early August 2020, among the 45 countries that had over 50,000 cases, the U.S. had the eighth h
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decision%20curve%20analysis
Decision curve analysis evaluates a predictor for an event as a probability threshold is varied, typically by showing a graphical plot of net benefit against threshold probability. By convention, the default strategies of assuming that all or no observations are positive are also plotted. Decision curve analysis is distinguished from other statistical methods like receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves by the ability to assess the clinical value of a predictor. Applying decision curve analysis can determine whether using a predictor to make clinical decisions like performing biopsy will provide benefit over alternative decision criteria, given a specified threshold probability. Threshold probability is defined as the minimum probability of an event at which a decision-maker would take a given action, for instance, the probability of cancer at which a doctor would order a biopsy. A lower threshold probability implies a greater concern about the event (e.g. a patient worried about cancer), while a higher threshold implies greater concern about the action to be taken (e.g. a patient averse to the biopsy procedure). Net benefit is a weighted combination of true and false positives, where the weight is derived from the threshold probability. The predictor could be a binary classifier, or a percentage risk from a prediction model, in which case a positive classification is defined by whether predicted probability is at least as great as the threshold probability. Theory The threshold probability compares the relative harm of unnecessary treatment (false positives) to the benefit of indicated treatment (true positives). The use of threshold probability to weight true and false positives derives from decision theory, in which the expected value of a decision can be calculated from the utilities and probabilities associated with decision outcomes. In the case of predicting an event, there are four possible outcomes: true positive, true negative, false positive and false negative. This means that to conduct a decision analysis, the analyst must specify four different utilities, which is often challenging. In decision curve analysis, the strategy of considering all observations as negative is defined as having a value of zero. This means that only true positives (event identified and appropriately managed) and false positives (unnecessary action) are considered. Furthermore, it is easily shown that the ratio of the utility of a true positive vs. the utility of avoiding a false positive is the odds at the threshold probability. For instance, a doctor whose threshold probability to order a biopsy for cancer is 10% believes that the utility of finding cancer early is 9 times greater than that of avoiding the harm of unnecessary biopsy. Similarly to the calculation of expected value, weighting false positive outcomes by the threshold probability yields an estimate of net benefit that incorporates decision consequences and preferences. Interpretati
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franc%20Paiva
Franc Santana Paiva (born 22 August 1992) is a Brazilian Forward footballer who plays for a Cambodian club Boeung Ket Angkor. Career statistics Club References 1992 births Living people Brazilian men's footballers Brazilian expatriate men's footballers Men's association football forwards Campeonato de Portugal (league) players Kategoria e Parë players Sport Club Corinthians Paulista players Esporte Clube Noroeste players Associação Esportiva Santacruzense players Associação Atlética Portuguesa (Santos) players Ypiranga Futebol Clube players Casa Pia A.C. players Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Portugal Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Albania Expatriate men's footballers in Albania Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Cambodia Expatriate men's footballers in Cambodia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldayr%20Hern%C3%A1ndez
Aldayr Hernández Basanta (born 4 August 1995) is a Colombian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Honka. Club career In January 2021, he joined HIFK. Career statistics Club Notes References 1995 births Living people Colombian men's footballers Colombian expatriate men's footballers Colombia men's under-20 international footballers Colombia men's youth international footballers Men's association football defenders Categoría Primera B players Lebanese Premier League players Ykkönen players Veikkausliiga players Rocha F.C. players Bekaa SC players Turun Palloseura footballers HIFK Fotboll players FC Honka players Colombian expatriate sportspeople in Lebanon Expatriate men's footballers in Lebanon Colombian expatriate sportspeople in Uruguay Expatriate men's footballers in Uruguay Colombian expatriate sportspeople in Finland Expatriate men's footballers in Finland People from Bolívar Department
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitinho%20%28footballer%2C%20born%20September%201998%29
João Victor Souza dos Santos (born 8 September 1998), commonly known as Vitinho, is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays as a forward for Vejle Boldklub. Career statistics Club References 1998 births Living people Brazilian men's footballers Brazilian expatriate men's footballers Men's association football forwards Danish 1st Division players Ykkönen players Veikkausliiga players Sport Club Internacional players Vejle Boldklub players Myllykosken Pallo −47 players HIFK Fotboll players Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Denmark Expatriate men's footballers in Denmark Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Finland Expatriate men's footballers in Finland
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno%20Rodrigues%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201996%29
Bruno Miguel Brás Rodrigues (born 3 October 1996) is a Portuguese professional footballer. Career statistics Club Notes References 1996 births Living people Portuguese men's footballers Men's association football forwards Campeonato de Portugal (league) players Kakkonen players Veikkausliiga players U.D. Leiria players A.C. Alcanenense players S.L. Benfica B players Real S.C. players C.D. Aves players Salon Palloilijat players SC Kuopio Futis-98 players Kuopion Palloseura players Portuguese expatriate men's footballers Portuguese expatriate sportspeople in Finland People from Tomar Footballers from Santarém District
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney%20Lokale
Sydney Simale Lokale (born 19 September 2000) is a Kenyan footballer who currently plays as a forward for KCB. Career statistics Club Notes International References 2000 births Living people Kenyan men's footballers Kenya men's international footballers Men's association football forwards Ulinzi Stars F.C. players F.C. Kariobangi Sharks players HIFK Fotboll players Kenya Commercial Bank S.C. players Kenyan expatriate men's footballers Kenyan expatriate sportspeople in Finland Expatriate men's footballers in Finland People from Nakuru Sportspeople from Rift Valley Province
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sujit%20Sahu
Sujit K Sahu is an Indian statistician who is a Professor of Statistics, Mathematics and S3RI at the University of Southampton. Professor Sujit Sahu research makes significant contribution to practical Bayesian modelling. Early life and education Sujit K Sahu received a BSc in statistics from Presidency College, University of Calcutta (1984-1989) and a Master of Statistics from the Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta (1987-1989). He has a PhD in statistics from the University of Connecticut and previously worked at the University of Cambridge (1994-1996) and Cardiff University (1997-1999) before joining the University of Southampton in 1999. Current work Sujit Sahu currently is involved on an EPSRC funded research project with Dr Duncan Lee, Glasgow University and the Met Office to develop methodology in both air pollution and health outcome data modelling and their integration. In addition, Sahu works as co-investigator on NERC funded research grant to develop statistical models to study nutrient dynamics in annual and seasonal periods. Professor Sujit Sahu has collaborated on methodological spatial statistics projects with Professor Alan Gelfand, Duke University and Dr David Holland, US Environmental Protection Agency. He has also worked on an EPSRC funded (2010-2012), cross-disciplinary research project titled "MetSim: A Hospital Simulation Support Tool" with Prof Paul Harper, Cardiff University, the Met Office, and the Southampton University Hospital Trust. His statistical work as part of this project included a Bayesian model for forecasting the number of hospital admissions and is being currently piloted by the Met Office for use by several UK hospitals. Publications His full list of google citations can be found here . References Indian statisticians Academics of the University of Southampton Living people Year of birth missing (living people)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%BCnd%C3%BCz%20Kele%C5%9F
Sündüz Keleş is a Turkish statistician specializing in statistical methods in genomics. She is a professor of statistics and of biostatistics and medical informatics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Her research has included the development of the FreeHi-C system for generating synthetic Hi-C (all-versus-all chromosome conformation capture) data. Keleş studied industrial engineering at Bilkent University, but became interested in statistics after working there on a project involving survival analysis. She then moved to the University of California, Berkeley for graduate study, working with Mark van der Laan on biostatistics. She completed her Ph.D. there in 2003, and took her faculty position at Wisconsin after completing her doctorate, with a delay of a year to do postdoctoral research on microarray analysis techniques with van der Laan and Sandrine Dudoit. Keleş was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2023. References External links Home page Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Turkish statisticians Women statisticians Bilkent University alumni University of Wisconsin–Madison faculty Fellows of the American Statistical Association
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgy%20Rykovanov
Georgy Nikolaevich Rykovanov (born February 9, 1954, in Vologda) – is a Soviet and Russian nuclear physicist, an organizer of science, a Doctor of Physics and Mathematics (1998), an Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences (2011), and a Hero of Labor of the Russian Federation (2020). Biography In 1969, Rykovanov entered the specialized boarding school # 45 at Leningrad State University, and in 1971 he graduated. In 1977 he graduated from Moscow Engineering Physics Institute. In 1977, he began working at the All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Technical Physics (now RFNC-VNIITF named after Academician E. I. Zababakhin). In 1995, he became the head of the theoretical department; in 1996 – deputy scientific advisor and head of the theoretical department; in 1998 – first deputy director, first deputy scientific supervisor and head of the theoretical department. From 1998 to 2012 he was Director of RFNC-VNIITF (dismissed at his own request.) Beginning May 31, 2012, his title was Scientific Director of RFNC-VNIITF. He is the author of over 350 scientific papers. His scientific interests are in the field of nuclear energy and the development of nuclear weapons, proceedings on hydrodynamics, turbulence, detonation, physics of thermonuclear fusion, physics of high energy densities, extreme states of matter, and the development of laser and optoelectronic systems. He proposed an empirical model of the kinetics of detonation of low-sensitivity explosives. He is a participant in the development of nuclear production prototypes in service with the Russian Armed Forces. In 2003, he was elected a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences in the Department of Energy, Mechanical Engineering, Mechanics and Control Processes of RAS. In 2011, he was elected a full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Awards 2020 – Hero of Labour of the Russian Federation 2005 – Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" IV class 2015 – Order of Alexander Nevsky 1985 – Order of the Badge of Honour 2002, 2009 – State Prize of the Russian Federation 2018 – Honorary Citizen of the Chelyabinsk Region References External links Tea Party at the Academy: Keepers of the Nuclear Shield — interview with G. N. Rykovanov on the site "Pravda.ru" Georgy Nikolaevich Rykovanov- Heroes of the country. Georgy Nikolaevich Rykovanov – The Great Russian Encyclopedia. 1954 births Full Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences Recipients of the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland", 4th class State Prize of the Russian Federation laureates Soviet physicists Russian physicists Moscow Engineering Physics Institute alumni Living people
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex%20Szab%C3%B3%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202002%29
Alex Szabó (born 15 May 2002) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Budapest Honvéd. Club career In July 2021, Szabó joined Szolnok on loan for the season. Career statistics . References External links 2002 births People from Gyöngyös Footballers from Heves County Living people Hungarian men's footballers Hungary men's youth international footballers Hungary men's under-21 international footballers Men's association football defenders Budapest Honvéd FC players Budapest Honvéd FC II players Szolnoki MÁV FC footballers Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players Nemzeti Bajnokság III players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A1niel%20N%C3%A9meth%20%28footballer%29
Dániel Németh (born 9 October 2003) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Zalaegerszeg and their affiliate club Mosonmagyaróvár. Career statistics . References 2003 births People from Gyöngyös Footballers from Heves County Living people Hungarian men's footballers Hungary men's youth international footballers Hungary men's under-21 international footballers Men's association football forwards Budapest Honvéd FC players NK Nafta Lendava players Zalaegerszegi TE players Mosonmagyaróvári TE footballers Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players Slovenian Second League players Hungarian expatriate men's footballers Expatriate men's footballers in Slovenia Hungarian expatriate sportspeople in Slovenia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zal%C3%A1n%20Kerezsi
Zalán Kerezsi (born 17 July 2003) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Budapest Honvéd. Career statistics . References 2003 births Living people Footballers from Nyíregyháza Hungarian men's footballers Men's association football forwards Budapest Honvéd FC players BFC Siófok players Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noel%20Keresztes
Noel Keresztes (born 16 September 2004) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Budapest Honvéd. Career statistics . References 2004 births Living people Footballers from Pécs Hungarian men's footballers Hungary men's youth international footballers Men's association football midfielders Budapest Honvéd FC players BFC Siófok players Nemzeti Bajnokság I players Nemzeti Bajnokság II players Nemzeti Bajnokság III players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir%20Neuvazhaev
Vladimir Emelyanovich Neuvazhaev was born in 1935. He is a Soviet and Russian specialist in the field of computational mathematics, Doctor of Physics and Mathematics (1972), professor (1989), USSR State Prize Laureate (1972), and Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation (2006). Biography Neuvazhaev was born on June 30, 1935, in the village of Novodzherelievskaya, Bryukhovetsky District, of Krasnodar territory. In 1956, after graduating from the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics at Rostov State University, he worked in the system of the USSR MSM. In 1956, he was sent to the closed city Chelyabinsk-70 to the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute Of Technical Physics with the appointment of engineer. In 1959, he became senior engineer and group leader, since 1965 - head of department. In 1971, he became Deputy Head of the Mathematical Department for Science at VNIITF. In 1963, he defended his academic degree Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences; in 1986 - Doctor of Physics and Mathematics. In 1996, Chief Researcher of VNIITF, Neuvazhaev's main scientific interests were related to the development of new numerical methods for solving complex problems in continuum mechanics, mathematical modeling processes of occurrence and development of hydrodynamic stability and turbulence in flows of stratified gases and liquids. In 1993, he was a professor at the Department of Computational Mathematics at Chelyabinsk State University and at the Snezhinsk Academy of Physics and Technology. In 1995, he became Academician of the International Informatization Academy. In 1979, he became a member of the editorial board of the Scientific and Technical Collection "Problems of Atomic Science and Technology" (VANT) from the series "Mathematical Modeling of Physical Processes." Publications V. E. Neuvazhaev, Gas vacuum exhaustion under power supply law, Academy of Sciences, USSR, 141:5 (1961), 1058–1060 V. E. Neuvazhaev, On the theory of turbulent mixing, Academy of Sciences, USSR, 222:5 (1975), 1053–1056 V. E. Neuvazhaev, V. G. Yakovlev, “Turbulent mixing of the interface in the numerical gas-dynamic calculation,” 440–450 mathnet zmath; U.S.S.R. Comput. Math. Math. Phys., 16:2 (1976), 154–165 V. E. Neuvazhaev, Features of a turbulent mixing model based on the two-component model with different velocities of each component. Separation addition to diffusion models, 7:7 (1995), 3–18 Awards Order of Friendship of Peoples (1985) USSR State Prize (1972) Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation (2006) References Further reading 1935 births Recipients of the Order of Friendship of Peoples Recipients of the USSR State Prize Honoured Scientists of the Russian Federation Soviet mathematicians Russian mathematicians Southern Federal University alumni Living people
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20World%20Aquatics%20Championships%20men%27s%20water%20polo%20tournament%20records%20and%20statistics
This is a list of records and statistics of the men's water polo tournament at the World Aquatics Championships since the inaugural official edition in 1973. Confederation statistics Best performances by tournament All-time best performances This is a summary of the best performances of each confederation at the World Aquatics Championships. Legend * – Host team † – Defunct team Team statistics Debut of teams Legend * – Host team † – Defunct team Results of host teams and defending finalists Legend † – Defunct team Comprehensive team results by tournament Finishes in the top four Medal table Champions Team records Teams having equal quantities in the tables below are ordered by the tournament the quantity was attained in (the teams that attained the quantity first are listed first). If the quantity was attained by more than one team in the same tournament, these teams are ordered alphabetically. Tournament positions Most titles won 4, (1978, 1994, 2011, 2019); (1973, 2003, 2013, 2023). Most finishes in the top two 11, (1973, 1975, 1978, 1982, 1998, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2013, 2017, 2023). Most finishes in the top three 12, (1973, 1975, 1978, 1982, 1991, 1998, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2013, 2017, 2023). Most finishes in the top four 14, (1973, 1975, 1978, 1982, 1991, 1998, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2017, 2019, 2023). Most appearances 20, , , , (have participated in every tournament). Consecutive Most consecutive medals 7, (2007–2009–2011–2013–2015–2017–2019). Most consecutive golds 2, (1998–2001); (1986–1991). Most consecutive silvers 3, (1975–1978–1982). Most consecutive bronzes 3, (2009–2011–2013). Most consecutive finishes in the top four 9, (2005–2007–2009–2011–2013–2015–2017–2019–2022). Most consecutive appearances 20, , , , (have participated in every tournament). Gaps Longest gap between successive titles 30 years, (1973–2003). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two 16 years, (1982–1998). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top three 10 years, (2005–2015); (2009–2019). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four 18 years, (1991–2009). Longest gap between successive appearances 26 years, (1991–2017). Host team Best finish by host team Champion: (1994). Other Most finishes in the top two without ever being champion 1, (2013); (2023). Most finishes in the top three without ever being champion 4, (2005, 2015, 2022, 2023). Most finishes in the top four without ever being champion 6, (2003, 2005, 2015, 2017, 2022, 2023). Most finishes in the top four without ever being medaled 3, (1986, 1991, 2009). Player statistics Multiple gold medalists Multiple medalists See also Water polo at the World Aquatics Championships List of World Aquatics Championships women's water polo tournament records and statistics List of world champions in men's water polo List of world champions in women's water polo List of World Aquatics Championships med
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20World%20Aquatics%20Championships%20women%27s%20water%20polo%20tournament%20records%20and%20statistics
This is a list of records and statistics of the women's water polo tournament at the World Aquatics Championships since the inaugural official edition in 1986. Confederation statistics Best performances by tournament All-time best performances This is a summary of the best performances of each confederation at the World Aquatics Championships. Legend * – Host team Team statistics Debut of teams Legend * – Host team † – Defunct team Results of host teams and defending finalists Comprehensive team results by tournament Finishes in the top four Medal table Champions Team records Teams having equal quantities in the tables below are ordered by the tournament the quantity was attained in (the teams that attained the quantity first are listed first). If the quantity was attained by more than one team in the same tournament, these teams are ordered alphabetically. Tournament positions Most titles won 7, (2003, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022). Most finishes in the top two 8, (2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022). Most finishes in the top three 10, (1986, 1991, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022). Most finishes in the top four 12, (1986, 1991, 1994, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022). Most appearances 15, , , , , (have participated in every tournament). Consecutive Most consecutive medals 4, (1994–1998–2001–2003); (2003–2005–2007–2009 and 2015–2017–2019–2022). Most consecutive golds 4, (2015–2017–2019–2022). Most consecutive silvers 2, (1994–1998); (2017–2019). Most consecutive bronzes 3, (2007–2009–2011). Most consecutive finishes in the top four 6, (2003–2005–2007–2009–2011–2013). Most consecutive appearances 16, , , , , (have participated in every tournament). Gaps Longest gap between successive titles 32 years, (1991–2023). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two 18 years, (1991–2009). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top three 17 years, (1998–2015). Longest gap between successive appearances in the top four 17 years, (1998–2015). Longest gap between successive appearances 17 years, (1986–2003). Host team Best finish by host team Champion: (2013). Other Most finishes in the top two without ever being champion 2, (1991, 2009). Most finishes in the top three without ever being champion 5, (2003, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2017). Most finishes in the top four without ever being champion 8, (1998, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2017). Most finishes in the top four without ever being medaled None. Player statistics Multiple gold medalists Multiple medalists See also Water polo at the World Aquatics Championships List of World Aquatics Championships men's water polo tournament records and statistics List of world champions in women's water polo List of world champions in men's water polo List of World Aquatics Championships medalists in water polo List of women's Olympic water polo tournament records and stati
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesia%20national%20football%20team%20records%20and%20statistics
This is a list of Indonesia national football team's competitive record in playing association football. Honours Continental Asian Games Bronze Medal: 1958 Fourth place: 1954, 1986 Far Eastern Games Silver Medal: 1934 Regional AFF Championship Runners-up: 2000, 2002, 2004, 2010, 2016,2020 Third place: 1998 Semi-finals: 2008 Southeast Asian Games Gold Medal (2): 1987, 1991 Silver Medal: 1979, 1997 Bronze Medal: 1981, 1989, 1999 Fourth place: 1977, 1985, 1993 Friendly Merdeka Tournament Winners (3): 1961, 1962,1969 Aga Khan Gold Cup Winners (1): 1961 King's Cup Winners (1): 1968 Pesta Sukan Cup 1972 Winners (1): 1972 Jakarta Anniversary Tournament Winners (1): 1972 Indonesian Independence Cup Winners (3; record): 1987, 2000, 2008 Individual records Player records Players in bold are still active with Indonesia Most capped players Top goalscorers Captain Manager records List of Managers Team records Competitive record References National association football team records and statistics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaspi%20%28surname%29
Kaspi () is a Jewish surname. People with the surname include: Haya Kaspi (born 1948), Israeli operations researcher, statistician, and probability theorist Matti Kaspi (born 1949), Israeli composer, and musician Omri Kaspi (born 1988), Israeli basketball player Victoria Kaspi (born 1967), American-Canadian astrophysicist Werner Kaspi (born 1917), Israeli footballer See also Caspi (disambiguation) Surnames of Jewish origin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanuatu%20national%20football%20team%20results
This page details the match results and statistics of the Vanuatu national football team from 1981 to present. Key Key to matches Att.=Match attendance (H)=Home ground (A)=Away ground (N)=Neutral ground Key to record by opponent Pld=Games played W=Games won D=Games drawn L=Games lost GF=Goals for GA=Goals against Results Vanuatu's score is shown first in each case. Notes Record by opponent References Vanuatu national football team results
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play%20Like%20a%20Girl
Play Like a Girl is a nonprofit organization that encourages girls to play sports and empowers them to choose careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). The organization is headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, and offers services in the United States and Canada. It was founded in 2004 by Kimberly Clay. All of their staff are volunteers. In November 2020, Sarah Fuller had "Play Like a Girl" printed on the back of her helmet when she kicked off for the Vanderbilt Commodores and became the first woman to play a regular season college football game in a Power Five conference. The following day, Play Like a Girl reported that they had received $13,000 in donations and an increase in people inquiring about volunteering since her game. References External links Organizations established in 2004 Nonprofit youth organizations based in the United States 2004 establishments in Tennessee Organizations based in Nashville, Tennessee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehmet%20Burak%20Erdo%C4%9Fan
Mehmet Burak Erdoğan (born 1972) is a Turkish mathematician, scientist, and professor of mathematics. He is a member of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) Mathematics Department. Education Burak Erdoğan was born in 1972. He attended the high school Kayseri Fen Lisesi in Kayseri, Turkey, for two years before moving to İzmir, Turkey where he finished the high school Atatürk Lisesi in 1989. He ranked third in the country-wide university entrance exams. He graduated from Bilkent University Electrical and Electronics Engineering in Ankara in 1994. He finished his MSc in Mathematics department of the same university under the supervision of Iossif Vladimirovich Ostrovskii in 1996. He received his PhD in Mathematics under the supervision of Thomas Wolff at Caltech in 2001. He was the last PhD student of Wolff, who died in the last year of Erdoğan's PhD work. Academic career He was a postdoc at the Institute for Advanced Study between 2001-2002 and a visiting assistant professor at University of California, Berkeley between 2002-2004. Since then he is a faculty member in UIUC Mathematics Department. He has been an active researcher, having published more than 50 scientific manuscripts with more than 800 citations. He raised 6 PhD students. Research areas His research interests include Harmonic Analysis and Dispersive PDE. Representative scientific publications References External links Turkish mathematicians 1972 births Living people University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign faculty People from Kayseri People from İzmir Bilkent University alumni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hughen%20Riley
Hughen William Riley (born 12 June 1947) is an English former footballer who played for Rochdale, Crewe Alexandra, Bury and Bournemouth. Career Statistics References Rochdale A.F.C. players Crewe Alexandra F.C. players Bury F.C. players Bournemouth F.C. players Living people 1947 births English men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Footballers from Accrington
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HALE
HALE may refer to: Healthy life expectancy, statistics defined as the average number of years that a person can expect to live in "full health" High-altitude long endurance, a description of an air-borne vehicle which functions optimally at high-altitude See also Hale (disambiguation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1969%E2%80%9370%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1969–70 season saw Rochdale compete in the Football League Third Division, following promotion the previous season. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Third Division F.A. Cup League Cup Lancashire Cup Rose Bowl Notes References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center%20for%20Near-Earth%20Object%20Studies
The Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) is the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) center for computing asteroid and comet orbits and their probability of Earth impact. CNEOS is located at Caltech in Pasadena, California. CNEOS computes high-precision orbits for Near-Earth Objects (NEOs). These orbit solutions calculate NEO close approaches to Earth, and produce assessments of NEO impact probabilities over the next century or more. CNEOS is the home of JPL's Sentry impact monitoring system, which performs analyses of possible future orbits of hazardous asteroids, searching for impact possibilities over the next century. Similarly, its Scout system monitors new potential asteroid discoveries and computes the possible range of future motions. In the event of a potential impact (known as a virtual impactor), impact time and probability are estimated. CNEOS also provides the NEO Deflection App, which computes how far a hypothetical asteroid would move if deflected by a known amount at an earlier time. References NASA groups, organizations, and centers Near-Earth object tracking