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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoma%20Ishigami
is a Japanese footballer currently studying at the Osaka University of Economics. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2002 births Living people Sportspeople from Tottori Prefecture Association football people from Tottori Prefecture Osaka University of Economics alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players Gainare Tottori players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee%20Rae-jun
Lee Rae-jun (; born 19 March 1997) is a South Korean footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Madura United. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1997 births Living people South Korean men's footballers South Korean expatriate men's footballers Men's association football forwards K League 1 players J3 League players K League 2 players Pohang Steelers players Tochigi SC players Ansan Greeners FC players Busan IPark players South Korean expatriate sportspeople in Japan Expatriate men's footballers in Japan Footballers from Busan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vin%C3%ADcius%20Matheus
Vinícius Gonçalves Matheus (born 6 June 1994) is a Brazilian footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Nova Iguaçu. Career statistics Club Notes References External links 1994 births Living people Brazilian men's footballers Brazilian expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players J3 League players Nova Iguaçu FC players Goiânia Esporte Clube players SC Sagamihara players Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Japan Expatriate men's footballers in Japan Sportspeople from Nova Iguaçu Footballers from Rio de Janeiro (state)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humberto%20Delgado%20%28soccer%29
Humberto Delgado III (born 10 March 2000) is a United States Virgin Islands international soccer player who plays as a midfielder. Career statistics International References External links 2000 births Living people United States Virgin Islands men's soccer players United States Virgin Islands men's international soccer players Men's association football midfielders
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squatting%20in%20the%20Philippines
Urban areas in the Philippines such as Metro Manila, Metro Cebu, and Metro Davao have large informal settlements. The Philippine Statistics Authority defines a squatter, or alternatively "informal dwellers", as "One who settles on the land of another without title or right or without the owner's consent whether in urban or rural areas". Squatting is criminalized by the Urban Development and Housing Act of 1992 (RA 7279), also known as the Lina Law. There have been various attempts to regularize squatter settlements, such as the Zonal Improvement Program and the Community Mortgage Program. In 2018, the Philippine Statistics Authority estimated that out of the country's population of about 106 million, 4.5 million were homeless. Overview The Philippine Statistics Authority has defined a squatter as "One who settles on the land of another without title or right or without the owner's consent whether in urban or rural areas". Local media and journalists refer to squatters as "informal settlers." Out of the country's population of about 106 million, an estimated 4.5 million were homeless according to the Philippine Statistics Authority; of these 3 million were in the capital Manila. Causes of homelessness include poverty and destruction of homes due to natural calamities and climate change. The growth of homelessness and squatting in urban areas are linked to internal migration from poorer regions. Rural poverty, a major factor in internal migration, has been rooted on various factors, including farmer dispossession and land grabbing, violent suppression of peasant movements, decline of the agricultural sector, and the deterioration of living conditions in rural areas. Residents of informal settlements tend to experience poor living conditions and may lack access to basic services as water, sanitation, and health care. History Squatters build makeshift houses called "barong-barong" on unused land. The occupations increased after World War II as people moved from rural to urban areas. In Cebu City, colonies of squatters emerged after the city was bombed to ruin. By 1974, it was reported that Cebu City had 34 informal settlements and by 1985, it was estimated that there were 232,520 squatters, which had comprised 40% of the city's population. In Davao City, there was a scramble for land previously owned by Japanese people and these occupations were legalized in the 1950s by the government. By 1968, there were an estimated 75,000 squatters living in informal settlements and inner-city slums. At the Port of Manila, land was reclaimed in the 1950s in Tondo and quickly occupied by squatters. By 1968, there were over 20,000 households in the informal settlement. Elsewhere in Manila, parks and military land were occupied. The Zone One Tondo Organization (ZOTO) was set up in 1970 to represent squatter interests in Tondo and campaign for land rights. It inspired other groups and the Ugnayan ng Maralitang Tagalunsod (UMT) was founded in 1976 to campaign f
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benin%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Benin national football team from 2020 to present. Results Benin's score is shown first in each case. Notes Record by opponent References Benin national football team results 2020s in Benin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985%E2%80%9386%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1985–86 season saw Rochdale compete in their 12th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup (Milk Cup) Associate Members' Cup (Freight Rover Trophy) Lancashire Cup References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984%E2%80%9385%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1984–85 season saw Rochdale compete in their 11th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup (Milk Cup) Associate Members' Cup (Freight Rover Trophy) Lancashire Cup Rose Bowl References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra%20Leone%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Sierra Leone national football team from 2020 to present. Results Sierra Leone's score is shown first in each case. Notes Record by opponent References Sierra Leone national football team results 2020s in Sierra Leone
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%20Yamakawa
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Iwate Grulla Morioka. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1998 births Living people Association football people from Nara Prefecture Osaka Kyoiku University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players J2 League players Iwate Grulla Morioka players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uganda%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Uganda national football team from 2020 to present. Results Uganda's score is shown first in each case. Notes References External links Uganda » Fixtures & Results 2020 at worldfootball.net Uganda » Fixtures & Results 2021 at worldfootball.net Uganda national football team results 2020s in Uganda
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinea-Bissau%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Guinea-Bissau national football team from 2020 to present. Results Guinea-Bissau's score is shown first in each case. Notes References External links Guinea-Bissau » Fixtures & Results 2020 at worldfootball.net Guinea-Bissau » Fixtures & Results 2021 at worldfootball.net Guinea-Bissau national football team results 2020s in Guinea-Bissau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madagascar%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Madagascar national football team from 2020 to present. Results Madagascar's score is shown first in each case. Notes References External links World Football Elo Ratings: Madagascar Madagascar national football team results 2020s in Madagascar
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Henry%20Barnstead
John Henry Barnstead (June 12, 1845 – June 13, 1939), tanner, barrister, and Justice of the Peace, was the Registrar of Vital Statistics (births, deaths, and marriages) in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. In 1912, at age 67, Barnstead coordinated the retrieval, cataloguing, and burial of victims, devising a system of cataloguing mass disaster remains that is still in use. Life and family A lifelong resident of Halifax, Nova Scotia, John Henry Barnstead was born on June 12, 1845. The son of prominent Halifax merchant Charles G. Barnstead and Agnes Meek, he was married to Harriet Tupper Creelman (1847–1941) in 1872. Two of Barnstead's children, Dalhousie University graduates Arthur Stanley Barnstead (1873–1967) and Winifred Glen Barnstead (1884–1974) were also notable. Arthur was Deputy Provincial Secretary and Clerk of the Executive Council of Nova Scotia, and used his father's method in the aftermath of the Halifax Explosion. While Barnstead's daughter Winifred graduated from Princeton University, and was a tenured professor and the founding director of the University of Toronto Library School. Career Despite popular culture references after his death, there is little evidence that Barnstead obtained an advanced degree, particularly none in medicine, or ever had the title coroner. He was not a doctor. He was, instead, a tanner – accustomed to death from an early age – turned barrister in his middle age, advertised as a Justice of the Peace, and over time became appointed as the province's registrar of vital statistics – the position which provided his notability. Tanner Working with leather was the Barnstead family's trade. John Henry's grandfather, George Barnstead, was a cordwainer (shoemaker) and Vice President of the Nova Scotia Cordwainers Benevolent Society. Barnstead's namesake, his great grandfather John Henry, was also a shoemaker. Barnstead's father Charles was a successful leather merchant, whose holdings included a tannery. The tannery occupied much of what is now bordered by Spring Garden Road, Cathedral Lane, and College Street in Halifax. Additionally, Charles Barnstead operated a leather goods store at the South Ferry Wharf. John Henry Barnstead first appears in Halifax City Directories in 1866, at age 19, listed as a "bookkeeper" at his father's address on Spring Garden Road. He remains listed as a bookkeeper until 1870, when he appears along with his brother and father listed as "Barnstead & Sons, leather manufacturers" at Steamboat Wharf. The "s" in sons did not last, and in McAlpine's Halifax City Directory, 1874, Barnstead was listed separately from his father and older brother Charles. They were noted as "Charles Barnstead and Son, Tanners", while Barnstead was listed as "Barnstead, John H, leather, &c" Despite this, Barnstead remained in the leather business, noted as "tanners & curriers", and also as a "leather dealer" until at least 1884, By 1889, the Barnstead tannery operations were gone from Spring Garden Road,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Namibia%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282020%E2%80%93present%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Namibia national football team from 2020 to present. Results Namibia's score is shown first in each case. Notes References External links Namibia » Fixtures & Results 2020 at worldfootball.net Namibia » Fixtures & Results 2021 at worldfootball.net Namibia – matches at Soccerway Namibia national football team results 2020s in Namibia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryosuke%20Maeda%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201998%29
is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Mito HollyHock. Career statistics References External links 1998 births Living people Miyazaki Sangyo-keiei University alumni Association football people from Miyazaki Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players Fukushima United FC players Tegevajaro Miyazaki players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aiki%20Miyahara
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a forward for Roasso Kumamoto. Career statistics Club . Notes References 2002 births Living people Association football people from Kumamoto Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football forwards J2 League players J3 League players Roasso Kumamoto players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryuya%20Ohata
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Kataller Toyama. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1997 births Living people Association football people from Gunma Prefecture Nippon Sport Science University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Japan Football League players J3 League players Tegevajaro Miyazaki players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsushi%20Kikutani
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for YSCC Yokohama. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1997 births Living people Association football people from Chiba Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Japanese expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Regionalliga players J3 League players YSCC Yokohama players Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Germany Expatriate men's footballers in Germany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junya%20Kurose
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a left-back for Tegevajaro Miyazaki. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1994 births Living people Association football people from Kagoshima Prefecture Fukuoka University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Japan Football League players J3 League players Tegevajaro Miyazaki players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonella%20Cupillari
Antonella Cupillari (born 1955) is an Italian-American mathematician interested in the history of mathematics and mathematics education. She is an associate professor of mathematics at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College. Education and career Cupillari earned a laurea at the University of L'Aquila in 1978, and completed her Ph.D. at the University at Albany, SUNY in 1984. Her dissertation, A Small Boundary for on a Strictly Pseudoconvex Domain, concerned functional analysis, and was supervised by R. Michael (Rolf) Range; she also published it in the Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. Cupillari joined the faculty at Penn State Erie in 1984 and was promoted to associate professor in 1992. Books Cupillari is the author of books on mathematics and the history of mathematics including: The Nuts and Bolts of Proofs (Wadsworth, 1989; 2nd & 3rd eds., Harcourt/Academic Press, 2000 & 2005; 4th ed., Academic Press, 2011) Intermediate Algebra in Action (PWS Publishing, 1995) A Biography of Maria Gaetana Agnesi, an Eighteenth-Century Woman Mathematician: With Translations of Some of Her Work from Italian into English (Edwin Mellen Press, 2007) Recognition Cupillari was the 2008 winner of the Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics of the Allegheny Mountain Section of the Mathematical Association of America. References External links Home page 1955 births Living people Italian mathematicians Italian women mathematicians 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Mathematics educators American historians of mathematics University at Albany, SUNY alumni Pennsylvania State University faculty Penn State Erie, The Behrend College 20th-century American women 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luke%20Tierney
Luke Tierney is an American statistician and computer scientist. A fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics since 1988 and of the American Statistical Association since 1991, Tierney is currently a professor of statistics at the University of Iowa. Through his past work on programming languages such as R and Lisp, Tierney now holds a position on the developing team known as the R Core. Education Tierney earned his BA and MA in mathematical sciences from Johns Hopkins University in 1977 and later his PhD in operations research from Cornell University in 1980. Formerly a statistics faculty member at Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Minnesota, he now serves as the Ralph E. Wareham Professor of Mathematical Sciences at the University of Iowa, a position he has held since 2002. Work In 1990, Tierney wrote the XLispStat package using C and Lisp and has since published works such as LISP-STAT: An Object-Oriented Environment for Statistical Computing and Dynamic Graphics (Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics) describing its design and use. Tierney has also made contributions in areas such as reference counting, vectors, and compilation for the R programming language and environment. During his time working with R, he has also become part of the R Core, a team of developers with write access to the R source. His work on Markov chains, Bioconductor, Lisp-stat and the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm have all been highly cited. Positions, awards and recognition Current member of the R Core Team Former editor of the Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics from 2004 to 2006 American Statistical Association Fellow since 1991 Recipient of the 2019 Statistical Computing and Graphics Award Institute of Mathematical Statistics Fellow since 1988 Former elected council member from 1995 to 1998 University of Iowa Ralph E. Wareham Professor since 2002 Former chair of the statistics department from 2004 to 2014 References Place of birth missing (living people) Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Johns Hopkins University alumni Cornell University alumni American statisticians American computer scientists Fellows of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics Fellows of the American Statistical Association University of Iowa faculty Carnegie Mellon University faculty University of Minnesota faculty R (programming language) people Computational statisticians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean%20Mawhin
Jean L. Mawhin (born 11 December 1942 in Verviers) is a Belgian mathematician and historian of mathematics. Mawhin received his PhD in 1969 (Le problème des solutions périodiques en mécanique non linéaire) under Paul Ledoux at the University of Liège, where he had studied since 1962 and received his licentiate in mathematics in 1964. He was assistant professor at Liège from 1964 and maitre de conferences (lecturer) from 1969 to 1973. From 1970 he was assistant professor (chargé de cours) and from 1974 professor of mathematics at the Université catholique de Louvain (with full professorship from 1977). In 2008 he retired. He was a visiting professor at various US and Canadian universities (University of Michigan, Brown University, University of Utah, Colorado State University, University of Alberta, Centre de Recherches Mathématiques in Montreal, Rutgers University), at the University of Paris, in Strasbourg, Rome, Turin, Trieste, Brisbane, Graz, Brazil, Florence, Darmstadt, Karlsruhe and Würzburg. He worked on (nonlinear) ordinary differential equations and the topological methods used there (fixed-point theorems, Leray-Schauder theory) and methods of nonlinear functional analysis. As a historian of mathematics, he dealt with Henri Poincaré, among others. He received the Bolzano Medal of the Czech Academy of Sciences. In 2012, he was awarded the first Juliusz Schauder Prize. In 1986 he became a corresponding member and in 1992 a full member of the Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium, of which he was president in 2002, and director of the Class of Sciences. In 1992 he became an honorary member of the Grand Ducal Institute. He has been married since 1966 and has three children. Selected works with Michel Willem, Critical point theory and hamiltonian systems, Springer 1989 with Robert E. Gaines, Coincidence degree and nonlinear differential equations, Springer 1977 Topological degree methods in nonlinear boundary value problems, American Mathematical Society 1979 Points fixes, points critiques et problèmes aux limites, Presses de l’Université de Montreal, 1985 with , Equations differentielles ordinaires, Paris, Masson 1973 (english translation Ordinary differential equations: stability and periodic solutions, Boston, Pitman, 1980) Boundary value problems for nonlinear ordinary differential equations: from successive approximations to topology, in Jean-Paul Pier Development of Mathematics 1900-1950, Birkhäuser 1994 Topological fixed point theory and nonlinear differential equations, in R. F. Brown et.al. (eds.) Handbook of Topological Fixed Point Theory, Springer 2005, p. 867–904 Leray-Schauder degree, a half century of extensions and applications, Topological Methods in Nonlinear Analysis, Journal of the Juliusz Schauder Center, Vol. 14, 1999, p. 195–228 The centennial legacy of Poincaré and Lyapunov in ordinary differential equations, Rend. Circolo Math. Palermo, Suppl. 34, 1994, S. 9–46 Poincaré’s early use of Analys
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick%20Percin
Patrick Gilles Percin (born 18 December 1976), is a Martiniquais former footballer. Career statistics Club Notes International International goals Scores and results list Martinique's goal tally first. References 1976 births Living people Men's association football forwards Martiniquais men's footballers Martinique men's international footballers 2002 CONCACAF Gold Cup players 2003 CONCACAF Gold Cup players Ligue 2 players La Gauloise de Trinité (football) players AJ Auxerre players Amiens SC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Alerte
Charles Alerte (born 22 July 1982) is a Haitian former footballer. Career statistics International International goals Scores and results list Haiti's goal tally first. References 1982 births Living people Haitian men's footballers Haiti men's international footballers 2002 CONCACAF Gold Cup players Men's association football forwards Aigle Noir AC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludovic%20Mirande
Ludovic Mirande (born 6 January 1977), is a Martiniquais former footballer. Career statistics Club Notes International References 1977 births Living people Men's association football defenders Martiniquais men's footballers Martinique men's international footballers 2002 CONCACAF Gold Cup players 2003 CONCACAF Gold Cup players] AS Muret players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolando%20Cede%C3%B1o
Rolando José Cedeño Morales (born 4 June 1971) is a Guatemalan former footballer. Career statistics International References 1971 births Living people Sportspeople from Managua Guatemalan men's footballers Guatemalan expatriate men's footballers Guatemala men's international footballers Men's association football defenders C.S.D. Municipal players Deportivo Marquense players Antigua GFC players Guatemalan expatriate sportspeople in Mexico Expatriate men's footballers in Mexico Ascenso MX players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordana%20Todorov
Gordana Todorov (born July 24, 1949) is a mathematician working in noncommutative algebra, representation theory, Artin algebras, and cluster algebras. She is a professor of mathematics at Northeastern University. Biography Todorov earned her Ph.D. in 1978, at Brandeis University. Her dissertation, Almost Split Sequences in the Representation Theory of Certain Classes of Artin Algebras, was supervised by Maurice Auslander. Todorov is married to mathematician Kiyoshi Igusa, with whom she is a frequent co-author. The Igusa–Todorov functions and Igusa–Todorov endomorphism algebras are named for their joint work. Todorov is also the namesake of Todorov's theorem on preprojective partitions, and the Gentle–Todorov theorem on abelian categories. References External links Home page 1949 births Living people 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Brandeis University alumni Northeastern University faculty Algebraists 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas%20Horton
Nicholas (Nick) Horton is an American statistics professor and author. He is the Beitzel Professor in Technology and Society at Amherst College. In 2022, he began a 3-year term as the vice president of the American Statistical Association. Education Horton completed his A.B. at Harvard College and his Sc.D. at the Harvard School of Public Health. Work Horton has written multiple books focusing on R and SAS. He is also an author in the fields of statistics education and missing data. He is one of the authors of the GAISE guidelines. With Ben Baumer and Daniel Kaplan, he is the author of Modern Data Science with R. Other notable works include: Normal Sexual Dimorphism of the Adult Human Brain Assessed by In Vivo Magnetic Resonance Imaging Much ado about nothing: A comparison of missing data methods and software to fit incomplete data regression models He is an editor for the Journal of Statistics and Data Science Education (JSDSE). Awards Fellow of the American Statistical Association. Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Personal life Horton resides in Northampton, Massachusetts with his wife, Julia Riseman. The two are advocates for bicycle trails. References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Harvard College alumni Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health alumni Fellows of the American Statistical Association Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Amherst College faculty R (programming language) people
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas%20Lumley%20%28statistician%29
Thomas Lumley is an Australian statistician who serves as the chair of biostatistics at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Lumley is also a member of the "R Core Team." He was elected as a fellow of the ASA (American Statistical Association) in 2012. Lumley was also elected a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2015. Education Lumley received his Bachelors of Science at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia in 1991, a Masters of Science in Applied Statistics at the University of Oxford in Oxford, United Kingdom in 1993, and his Ph.D. in Biostatistics at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington in 1998. Work Lumley is a professor of statistics at the University of Auckland where he researches regression modelling, clinical trials, semiparametric inference, statistical computing, foundations, and genomics. His statistics publications are commonly cited in the statistics and biostatistics fields. He makes contributions to R as a member of the R Core Team and contributes to the StatsChat blog. Awards Howard Hughes Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellowship from 1995 to 1998 Donovan J Thompson Award for Academic Excellence in Biostatistics in 1996 Best Oral Presentation at Biometric Society Student Paper Competition in 1997 Gertrude Cox Award for contributions to Statistical Practice in 2008 Elected as an ASA Fellow in 2012 Elected as a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 2015 Notable works Some of Lumley's notable publications from 2019 include: Estimating prediction error for complex samples Numerical evaluation of methods approximating the distribution of a large quadratic form in normal variables Fast Generalized Linear Models by Database Sampling and One-Step Polishing References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Australian statisticians Academic staff of the University of Auckland
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Besicovitch%20inequality
In mathematics, the Besicovitch inequality is a geometric inequality relating volume of a set and distances between certain subsets of its boundary. The inequality was first formulated by Abram Besicovitch. Consider the n-dimensional cube with a Riemannian metric . Let denote the distance between opposite faces of the cube. The Besicovitch inequality asserts that The inequality can be generalized in the following way. Given an n-dimensional Riemannian manifold M with connected boundary and a smooth map , such that the restriction of f to the boundary of M is a degree 1 map onto , define Then . The Besicovitch inequality was used to prove systolic inequalities on surfaces. Notes References Burago, Dmitri & Burago, Yuri & Ivanov, Sergei. (2001). A Course in Metric Geometry. Graduate Studies in Mathematics 33. Burago Yu. & Zalgaller, V. A. Geometric inequalities. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften [Fundamental Principles of Mathematical Sciences], 285. Springer Series in Soviet Mathematics. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1988. Misha Gromov. Metric structures for Riemannian and non-Riemannian spaces. Based on the 1981 French original. With appendices by M. Katz, P. Pansu and S. Semmes. Translated from the French by Sean Michael Bates. Progress in Mathematics, 152. Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1999. xx+585 pp. . Burago, D., & Ivanov, S. (2002). On Asymptotic Volume of Finsler Tori, Minimal Surfaces in Normed Spaces, and Symplectic Filling Volume. Annals of Mathematics, 156(3), second series, 891-914. doi:10.2307/3597285 Geometric inequalities
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Geometry%20of%20an%20Art
The Geometry of an Art: The History of the Mathematical Theory of Perspective from Alberti to Monge is a book in the history of mathematics, on the mathematics of graphical perspective. It was written by Kirsti Andersen, and published in 2007 by Springer-Verlag in their book series Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences. Topics This book covers a wide span of mathematical history, from 1435 to 1800, and a wide field of "around 250 publications by more than 200 authors". After three introductory chapters on the beginnings of perspective with the works of Leon Battista Alberti, Piero della Francesca, Leonardo da Vinci, and others from their time, the remainder of the book is organized geographically rather than chronologically, in order to set the works it discusses into their local context. Thus, Chapter 4 covers the spread of perspective among the artists and artisans of 15th-century Italy, including the works of Luca Pacioli and Daniele Barbaro, while Chapter 5 concerns developments in Northern Europe in the same timeframe by Albrecht Dürer, Wenzel Jamnitzer, and Paul Vredeman de Vries, among others. In what reviewer Riccardo Bellé calls "the core of the book", chapters 6 through 12 cover the developments of the theory by Guidobaldo del Monte, Simon Stevin, Willem 's Gravesande, and Brook Taylor. Again, after an initial chapter on del Monte's discovery of the vanishing point and Stevin's mathematical explication of del Monte's work, these chapters are divided geographically. Chapter 7 concerns the Netherlands, including the Dutch painters of the 17th century, the book on perspective by Samuel Marolois, and the work of 's Gravesande. Chapter 8 returns to Italy, and the work of architects and stage designers there, including Andrea Pozzo among the Jesuits. Chapter 9 covers over 40 works from France and Belgium, including the anonymously-published work of Jean Du Breuil, who brought the Jesuit knowledge of architecture from Italy to France, and the work on anamorphosis by Jean François Niceron. This chapter also covers Girard Desargues, although it disagrees with the widely-held opinion that Desargues was the inventor of projective geometry. Chapter 10, the longest of the book, concerns Britain, including Taylor, and his followers. Chapters 11 and 12 both concern the German-speaking countries, with Chapter 12 focusing on Johann Heinrich Lambert, who "concluded the process of understanding the geometry behind perspective by creating perspectival geometry". A penultimate chapter concerns Gaspard Monge, the development of descriptive geometry, and its relation to the earlier perspective geometry and projective geometry. After a final summary chapter, the book includes four appendices and two bibliographies. The book is illustrated with over 600 black and white images, some from the works described and others new-created visualizations of their mathematical concepts, with older diagrams consistently relabeled to make
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane%20Pendergast
Jane Pendergast is an American biostatistician specializing in multivariate statistics and longitudinal data. She is a professor in the Department of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics at Duke University. Education and career Pendergast majored in mathematics at the University of Dayton, graduating in 1974, and went to the University of Iowa for graduate study, earning a master's degree in 1976 and completing her Ph.D. in 1979. Her dissertation was Robust Estimation in Growth Curve Models. After working as research faculty at the University of Florida beginning in 1980, she moved to the University of Iowa as an associate professor in 1999, and was promoted to full professor there in 2005. She moved to her present position at Duke University in 2015. She was regional president for the Eastern North American Region of the International Biometric Society in 2006, and chair of the Committee of Presidents of Statistical Societies for 2013–2015. Recognition Pendergast was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1998, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2016 "for advancing statistics within public health and for her skilled, creative and dedicated service to the profession, including effectively advocating for improved recognition of AAAS Sections". She was a recipient of the Founders Award of the American Statistical Association in 2017, for her service to the association. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people American statisticians Women statisticians University of Dayton alumni University of Iowa alumni University of Iowa faculty Duke University faculty Fellows of the American Statistical Association Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denis%20Auroux
Denis Auroux (born April 1977 in Lyon) is a French mathematician working in geometry and topology. Education and career Auroux was admitted in 1993 to the École normale supérieure. In 1994, he received a licentiate and maîtrise in mathematics from Paris Diderot University (Paris 7). In 1995, he received a licentiate in physics from Pierre and Marie Curie University (Paris 6) and passed the agrégation. In 1995, he received a master's degree in mathematics from Paris-Sud University with a thesis on Seiberg-Witten invariants of symplectic manifolds. In 1999, he received his doctorate from the École polytechnique with supervisors Jean-Pierre Bourguignon and Mikhael Gromov for a thesis on structure theorems for compact symplectic manifolds via almost-complex techniques. In 2003, he completed his habilitation at Paris-Sud University with a thesis on approximately holomorphic techniques and monodromy invariants in symplectic topology. As a postdoc, he was a C. L. E. Moore Instructor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1999 to 2002, where he became an assistant professor in 2002, an associate professor in 2004 (tenured in 2006), and a professor in 2009 (on leave from 2009 to 2011). From 2009 to 2018, he was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Since Fall 2018, he has been at Harvard University, where he taught Math 55, two-semester honors undergraduate course on algebra and analysis. His research deals with symplectic geometry, low-dimensional topology, and mirror symmetry. In 2002, he received the Prix Peccot from the Collège de France. In 2005, he received a Sloan Research Fellowship. He was an invited speaker in 2010 with talk Fukaya Categories and bordered Heegaard-Floer Homology at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Hyderabad and in 2004 at the European Congress of Mathematicians in Stockholm. Selected publications References External links 1977 births Living people 20th-century French mathematicians 21st-century French mathematicians Paris Diderot University alumni École Polytechnique alumni Pierre and Marie Curie University alumni University of California, Berkeley faculty Harvard University Department of Mathematics faculty Harvard University faculty
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emille%20D.%20Lawrence
Emille Davie Lawrence is a mathematician specializing in topological graph theory. She is Term Associate Professor and Chair of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of San Francisco. Education and career Lawrence received her BS in Mathematics from Spelman College and her PhD in Mathematics from the University of Georgia in 2007. Her dissertation was jointly supervised by Clint McCrory and Will Kazez. She is a low-dimensional topologist with mathematical interests that include braid groups, geometric group theory, and spatial graphs. She is also an advocate for broadening participation in the mathematical sciences through outreach and mentoring. She is Editor-In-Chief for the American Mathematical Society's blog Math Mamas. Awards and honors In 2021, Lawrence received the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) Service Award "for her service as Chair of the 50th Anniversary Committee and her leadership role as Chair, since 2016, of the Mentor Network Committee and for her mentorship as Founding Faculty Sponsor of the AWM Student Chapter at the University of San Francisco. In all of these roles, Emille has worked to increase participation in the AWM by a diverse population of mathematicians at all stages of their careers." In 2021, Lawrence was awarded a Karen Edge Fellowship and was featured on the AWM website Women Do Math. References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Spelman College alumni University of Georgia alumni University of San Francisco faculty American mathematicians American women mathematicians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cristina%20Manolache
Cristina Manolache is a mathematician and Senior Lecturer in the School of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Sheffield. Education and career Manolache received her PhD in Mathematics from SISSA in 2009. Her dissertation, Virtual Intersections, was supervised by Barbara Fantechi. Manolache specializes in algebraic geometry and has expertise in birational geometry and wall crossings. She has contributed to publications of the American Mathematical Society and Cambridge University Press. Notable publications include Reduced invariants from cuspidal maps (2020), co-authored with Luca Battistella and Francesca Carocci; Stable maps and stable quotients (2014); Virtual pull-backs] (2012); and Virtual push-forwards (2012). Awards and honors Manolache was awarded the Emmy Noether Fellowship in 2020. References Living people Year of birth missing (living people) 21st-century Italian mathematicians Italian women mathematicians 21st-century Italian women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandini%20Kannan
Nandini Kannan is the Executive Director at the Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum (IUSSTF). Education and career Kannan received her PhD in Statistics from Pennsylvania State University in 1992. Her dissertation, Estimation of Direction of Arrival in Signal Processing Models, was supervised by C. R. Rao. Kannan spent over 20 years in academia, first as a faculty member and then as Chair, Department of Management Science and Statistics at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA). During her time at UTSA, she helped to develop new undergraduate and graduate programs and led a university-wide initiative on quantitative literacy. Since 2014, Kannan has served as a Program Director at the US National Science Foundation (NSF) where her responsibilities included core disciplinary research, mathematical sciences research institutes, and workforce development programs in the Division of Mathematical Sciences as well as a number of cross-directorate and cross-agency activities. She has served as a co-chair for several Data Science related activities in support of Harnessing the Data Revolution, one of NSF’s 10 Big Ideas. She helped to create new programs to support data science foundations as well as data-intensive research in different science and engineering domains. Kannan also helped to create partnerships with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to support collaborative efforts in biomedical data science. She serves on the board of trustees of the International Indian Statistical Association (IISA) and is a former President of IISA. Awards and honors Kannan was awarded the AAAS Fellows Award in 2019. References External links Math genealogy entry for Kannan Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Pennsylvania State University alumni American women statisticians 21st-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer%20Flegg
Jennifer A. Flegg is an Australian mathematician and is a Professor of applied mathematics in the School of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Melbourne. Education and career Flegg received her PhD in Applied Mathematics from Queensland University of Technology in 2009. Her dissertation, "Mathematical Modelling of Chronic Wound Healing", was supervised by Dr. Sean McElwain. From 2010 to 2013, she was a researcher at the University of Oxford developing mathematical models for the spread of resistance to antimalarial drugs. From 2014 to early 2017, she was a mathematical lecturer in the School of Mathematical Sciences at Monash University. In May 2017, she joined the School of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Melbourne as a senior lecturer in Applied Mathematics and was promoted to Associate Professor in 2020 and again to Professor in 2022. Flegg is an expert in the field of mathematical biology, with special focus in infectious disease epidemiology, wound healing and tumor growth. As of 2020, Flegg also serves as an Editorial Board member for PLOS Computational Biology, eLife and the Bulletin of Mathematical Biology. Awards and honors In 2020, Flegg was awarded the JH Michell Medal for excellence in research by ANZIAM (Australian and New Zealand Industrial and Applied Mathematics), as well as the Christopher Heyde Medal from the Australian Academy of Science and the Society of Mathematical Biology. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Australian mathematicians Australian women mathematicians Queensland University of Technology alumni Academic staff of the University of Melbourne
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alicia%20Prieto%20Langarica
Alicia Prieto Langaricar is an American applied mathematician and professor of mathematics at Youngstown State University. Education and career Prieto Langaricar is the granddaughter of Mexican footballer Max Prieto. She is a graduate of the University of Texas at Dallas, and received her PhD in Applied Mathematics from University of Texas at Arlington in 2012. Her dissertation, From Discrete to Continuous Models of Cell Movement: An Application to Medical Implants was completed under the guidance of Hristo Venelinov Kojouharov. She became an assistant professor of mathematics at Youngstown State University faculty in 2012, after she finished her doctorate. Contributions Prieto Langaricar's research focuses on the intersection of mathematics and biology, specifically problems related to the medical field. She is one of four co-founders of Lathisms, a website that showcase Hispanic and Latinx mathematicians, their research, and their contributions. In 2019 she became one of the associate directors of Project NExT, a program of the Mathematical Association of America to mentor new doctorates in mathematics. During the COVID-19 pandemic, she organized events to give students food during shutdown, focusing particularly on the needs of international students stuck in university housing. Awards and honors Langarica won the Henry L. Alder Award for Distinguished Teaching from the Mathematical Association of America in 2019. She also won the 25 Under 35 Award in 2017, and was nominated for the Athena Award in 2019. She competed for five years in the Mexican Mathematical Olympiad, with first place finishes in two years. References External links Math genealogy entry for Langarica Year of birth missing (living people) Living people 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians University of Texas at Arlington alumni University of Texas at Dallas alumni Youngstown State University faculty 21st-century American women academics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary%20Beisiegel
Mary Beisiegel is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at Oregon State University. Her research is in math education. Education and career Beisiegel received her PhD in Mathematics from the University of Alberta in 2009. Her dissertation, Being (Almost) a Mathematician: Teacher Identity Formation in Post-Secondary Mathematics, was supervised by Elaine Simmt, David Pimm, and Terrance Ronald Carson. Awards and honors Beisiegel received the Mathematical Association of America's Henry L. Adler Award in 2017. References Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Canadian mathematicians Canadian women mathematicians Mathematics educators University of Alberta alumni Oregon State University faculty
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynda%20Carlson
Lynda Shirley Tepfer Carlson (born 1943) is a retired American statistician, formerly the director of the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics of the National Science Foundation. As director of the center, she led an effort to collect information about college education by including this topic in the American Community Survey of the United States Census Bureau. Education and career Carlson is a 1965 graduate of Brooklyn College, and earned a PhD in political science from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1974. Her dissertation was The Closing of the Brooklyn Navy Yard: A Case Study in Group Politics. She worked in the United States Department of Energy, becoming director of the Statistics and Methods Group in the Energy Information Administration, before moving to the National Science Foundation as director of the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics in 2000. She retired in 2012. Recognition Carlson was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2000, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2011. She was the 2009 winner of the Roger Herriot Award for Innovation in Federal Statistics, given jointly by the Social Statistics and Government Statistics Sections of the American Statistical Association and by the Washington Statistical Society. She is also a recipient of the Presidential Meritorious Rank Award. Personal life Carlson is married to George N. Carlson, an economist who also served the U.S. government as director of the Office of Tax Analysis in the United States Department of the Treasury. They met as graduate students in the library of the University of Illinois, where they had adjacent study carrels. References 1943 births Living people American women statisticians Brooklyn College alumni Fellows of the American Statistical Association Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 21st-century American women University of Illinois College of Liberal Arts and Sciences alumni
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20Seigal
Anna Seigal is a British mathematician who conducts research in applied algebraic geometry at Harvard University and the University of Oxford. She was awarded the 2020 SIAM Richard C. DiPrima Prize and the Bernard Friedman Memorial Prize in Applied Mathematics. Education and career Seigal earned her bachelor's degree (BA honors) from Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge in 2013, scoring 1st class, top 10 in the Mathematical Tripos. She earned her master's degree (MMath, 2014) there earning an honours pass with distinction on Part III of the Mathematical Tripos. Her Master's essay, Iwasawa Theory of Elliptic Curves with Complex Multiplication, was supervised by John H. Coates. Seigal earned her PhD in Mathematics from UC Berkeley in 2019. Her dissertation, Structured Tensors and the Geometry of Data, was supervised by Bernd Sturmfels. It investigates the algebraic theory of tensors and algorithms for tensor data. At University of Oxford she is a Junior Research Fellow in The Queen's College and Hooke Research Fellow in the Mathematical Institute. Awards and honors She was awarded the 2020 SIAM Richard C. DiPrima Prize and the Bernard Friedman Memorial Prize in Applied Mathematics. References External links Year of birth missing (living people) Living people British mathematicians British women mathematicians Harvard University Department of Mathematics faculty Harvard University faculty Alumni of the University of Cambridge University of California, Berkeley alumni Applied mathematicians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haruka%20Hamada
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder in the WE League. Career statistics Club Notes International References 1993 births Living people People from Takatsuki, Osaka Association football people from Osaka Prefecture Japanese women's footballers Japan women's international footballers Women's association football midfielders Nadeshiko League players AC Nagano Parceiro Ladies players TEPCO Mareeze players Speranza Osaka-Takatsuki players Mynavi Vegalta Sendai Ladies players Mynavi Sendai Ladies players WE League players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanami%20Kitamura
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender in the Japanese WE League club Tokyo Verdy Beleza and the Japan women's national team. Career statistics Club International Honours Tokyo Verdy Beleza Empress's Cup: 2022 WE League Cup runner-up: 2022–23 Japan U20 AFC U-19 Women's Championship: 2017 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup: 2018 References 1999 births Living people Association football people from Osaka Prefecture Japanese women's footballers Japan women's international footballers Women's association football defenders Nadeshiko League players Cerezo Osaka Sakai Ladies players Nippon TV Tokyo Verdy Beleza players Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics Olympic footballers for Japan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Momoka%20Kinoshita
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder. Career statistics Club Notes International Career statistics International International goals Scores and results list Japan's goal tally first. References 2003 births Living people Association football people from Hokkaido Japanese women's footballers Japan women's international footballers Women's association football midfielders Nippon TV Tokyo Verdy Beleza players Footballers at the 2020 Summer Olympics Olympic footballers for Japan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonja%20Petrovi%C4%87%20%28statistician%29
Sonja Petrović is a Serbian-American statistician and associate professor in the Department of Applied Mathematics, College of Computing, at Illinois Institute of Technology. Her research is focused on mathematical statistics and algebraic statistics, applied and computational algebraic geometry and random graph (network) models. She was elected to the International Statistics Institute in 2015. Education and career Petrović did her undergraduate work at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and received her B.S. degree in applied mathematics, magna cum laude in 2003. She minored in music performance at Chattanooga. Petrović did her doctoral work in mathematics at the University of Kentucky in Lexington, Kentucky, specializing in commutative algebra. Her dissertation Algebraic and Combinatorial Properties of Certain Toric Ideals in the Theory and Applications was directed by Uwe Nagel. Petrović was awarded her Ph.D. by Kentucky in 2008. After her doctoral studies, Petrović held a post-doctoral position at the University of Illinois at Chicago from 2008 to 2011. She was a research fellow at the Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute based in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, in 2009, participating in the Program on Algebraic Methods in Systems Biology and Statistics. After holding the position of assistant professor of statistics at Pennsylvania State University from 2011 to 2013, Petrović joined the faculty of Illinois Tech as an assistant professor of applied mathematics in 2013. She was promoted to associate professor at Illinois Tech in 2017. In 2011, Petrović visited the Mittag-Leffler Institute in Djursholm, Sweden and participated in the program "Algebraic Geometry with a View Towards Applications". In 2016, she was a long-term participant in the "Theoretical Foundations of Statistical Network Analysis Program" at the Isaac Newton Institute of Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge, United Kingdom. Petrović was a co-organizer of the “Summer School on Randomness and Learning in Non-Linear Algebra” at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics located in Leipzig, Germany in July 2019. She received an Illinois Tech College of Science Junior Research Excellence Award in 2015 and an Excellence in Teaching Award for the College of Science in April 2018.. References External links Sonja Petrović Author Profile at MathSciNet Living people 21st-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians American statisticians Women statisticians University of Kentucky alumni University of Tennessee at Chattanooga alumni Illinois Institute of Technology faculty American people of Serbian descent 21st-century American women Year of birth missing (living people) Mathematical statisticians
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistics%20of%20the%20COVID-19%20pandemic%20in%20Peru
This article presents official statistics gathered during the COVID-19 pandemic in Peru. Maps By department Note: The Regional Directorate of Health (DIRESA, acronym in Spanish) and the Regional Health Management (GERESA, acronym in Spanish) are health authorities belonging to each regional government (departments) except the province of Lima which is administered by the Ministry of Health, these health authorities have regional autonomy by which show different figures than the reports of the Ministry of Health. Summary table Note: References in the daily report are in the annex, at the beginning of this section. Demographics Registry of cases and deaths by gender and age based on data from the "Datos Abiertos" platform provided by the Ministry of Health. References S P
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A%20Philosophical%20Essay%20on%20Probabilities
A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities is a work by Pierre-Simon Laplace on the mathematical theory of probability. The book consists of two parts, the first with five chapters and the second with thirteen. Table of Contents Part I - A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities Introduction Concerning Probability General Principles of the Calculus of Probability Concerning Hope Analytical Methods of the Calculus of Probability Part II - Application of the Calculus of Probabilities Games of Chance Concerning the Unknown Inequalities which may Exist among Chances Supposed to be Equal Concerning the Laws of Probability which result from the Indefinite Multiplication of Events Application of the Calculus of Probabilities to Natural Philosophy Application of the Calculus of Probabilities to the Moral Sciences Concerning the Probability of Testimonies Concerning the Selections and Deliberations of Assemblies Concerning the Probability of the Judgements of Tribunals Concerning Tables of Mortality, and the Mean Durations of Life, Marriage and Some Assemblies Concerning the Benefits of Institutions which Depend on the Probability of Events Concerning Illusions in the Estimation of Probabilities Concerning the Various Means of Approaching Certainty Historical Note of the Calculus of Probabilities to 1816 References External links A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities at Project Gutenberg A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities at Internet Archive History of probability and statistics Probability books 1814 documents 19th-century essays Pierre-Simon Laplace
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%281914%E2%80%931949%29
This page details the match results and statistics of the Brazil national football team from 1914 to 1949. 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 Brazil's score is shown first in each case. Record by opponent References Brazil national football team results
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipswich%20built-up%20area
The Ipswich built-up area is a statistical unit devised by the UK Office for National Statistics to organise data for an urban area which extends from the town of Ipswich to Kesgrave, Woodbridge, Bramford and Martlesham Heath in Suffolk, England. The area takes in the borough of Ipswich, parts of the East Suffolk and part of the Mid Suffolk. The area was recorded at having a population of 178,835. According to the 2011 census, the gender makeup of the population was 88,482 male and 90,353 female. The ethnic makeup of the whole urban area was 91% white and 4% Asian. Other ethnic minorities were around 5%. The religious make up of the whole area was: Sub divisions In 2001 the built-up-area included the sub divisions of Ipswich and Martlesham Heath, while in the 2011 census it included Ipswich, Bramford, Kesgrave (which included Martlesham Heath), Martlesham and Woodbridge. References Ipswich Geography of Suffolk Urban areas of England
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine%20Chen
Yi-Ning Katherine Chen is a Taiwanese professor and former national communications regulator who teaches public relations and statistics at National Chengchi University. , she serves as a member of Facebook's independent Oversight Board. Chen attended Taipei First Girls' High School and received a B.S. in plant pathology from the National Taiwan University in 1988, followed by an M.S. in that field from the same institution in 1990. She received a second M.S. in journalism from National Chengchi University in 1996, and a Ph.D. in that subject from the University of Texas at Austin in 1999. Chen became a professor at National Chengchi University in 2004 and served as Associate Dean of the College of Communication there from 2010 to 2014, when she became a member of the National Communications Commission in 2014. She continued to teach as a professor concurrently with that service, which continued until 2018. Chen's research has focused on "social media, mobile news, and privacy". In May 2020, Chen was one of twenty professionals from around the world named to the Facebook's independent Oversight Board, an independent body tasked with making consequential precedential determinations about content moderation decisions made by Facebook and Instagram. Chen had also planned to publish a research paper on the 2020 Taiwanese presidential election at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, but by September 2020, she had become concerned that the newly implemented Hong Kong national security law would jeopardize her ability to do so. References Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Taiwanese women academics National Taiwan University alumni University of Texas at Austin alumni National Chengchi University alumni Academic staff of the National Chengchi University Facebook Oversight Board members
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riku%20Morioka
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a centre back for Júbilo Iwata. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people Association football people from Okayama Prefecture Hosei University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders J2 League players Júbilo Iwata players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted%20K
Ted K is a 2021 American historical crime drama written, directed, produced, and edited by Tony Stone. It stars Sharlto Copley as mathematics prodigy turned domestic terrorist Ted Kaczynski, also known as the Unabomber. The film depicts the events leading to his arrest. Ted K premiered at the 71st Berlin International Film Festival on March 1, 2021 and was released in the United States by Neon's Super Ltd on February 18, 2022. The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with praise aimed towards Stone's direction and Copley's performance. Plot Since 1971, mathematics prodigy Ted Kaczynski has lived a primitive life in a remote cabin near Lincoln, Montana. He hunts for his food and lives without electricity or running water. He strongly believes modern technology is destroying the planet. Kaczynski witnesses the destruction of the wilderness surrounding his cabin and concludes that living in nature is impossible. He goes to the library and acquires the address of Percy Wood, the president of United Airlines. He damages a neighbor's snowmobile, cuts down a power line, and destroys nearby construction equipment. He grows frustrated with the number of jets flying over his home, calling it his breaking point. To fight back against the destruction of nature, he creates a plan for revenge. Kaczynski mails bombs to important people that he believes will harm society. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) becomes involved when a bomb injures and nearly kills Wood inside his house. Kaczynski changes his appearance by shaving his beard and slamming his nose against a cinder block. Computer store owner Hugh Scrutton is the first to die from one of his bombs. Eighteen months later, Kaczynski is in desperate need of money. He argues with his brother David over the phone. He writes a 35,000-word manifesto and uses the word "we" when writing to local newspapers about the bombings. The country begins to refer to him as the "Unabomber". He sends a letter to The New York Times and The Washington Post, promising to stop his bombing spree if they publish his manifesto. The Washington Post complies on September 19, 1995. David recognizes the prose style of the manifesto as Ted's and reports his suspicions. The FBI arrest Kaczynski in 1996. He is given life in a supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, for killing three people and injuring twenty-three others. An epilogue recognizes the manhunt for Ted Kaczynski as the largest in FBI history. Cast Production Sharlto Copley announced his involvement in the film in early 2018. Musician Melissa Auf der Maur, Stone's wife, served as one of the executive producers. Filming took place over four seasons in and around Lincoln, Montana. Release The film premiered at the 71st Berlin International Film Festival, on March 1, 2021. It was also screened at the Red Sea International Film Festival. In March 2021, Neon's Super Ltd acquired the film's distribution rights. Ted K was released in the United State
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81ngel%20Garc%C3%ADa%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202000%29
Ángel García Hernández (born 1 September 2000) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Liga de Expansión MX club Pumas Tabasco, on loan from UNAM. Career statistics Club References External links 2000 births Living people Mexican men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Club Universidad Nacional footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmitry%20Ioffe
Dmitry Ioffe (April 5, 1963 - October 1, 2020) was an Israeli mathematician, specializing in probability theory. Biography Dmitry Ioffe obtained his diploma from the Moscow Mining Institute in 1985 and his PhD in mathematics in 1991 from the Technion, under the supervision of Ross Pinsky. He then spent a post-doc at the University of California, Davis and the Courant Institute. He was an assistant professor at Northwestern University (1993-1995) and a researcher at the Weierstrass Institute of Analysis and Stochastics (WIAS) in Berlin (1995-1997), before returning to the Technion, where he spent the rest of his life as professor. From 2014, he was the incumbent of the Alexander Goldberg chair in management sciences. Scientific work Ioffe made fundamental contributions to several areas of statistical mechanics, including random interface models, interacting particle systems, polymers in random environments, random perturbations of dynamical systems, metastability and homogenization. In particular, he extended the Dobrushin-Kotecky-Shlosman two dimensional Wulff construction to the full range of subcritical temperatures and developed with Bodineau and Velenik a robust analytic alternative that worked also in higher dimension. With collaborators, he developed the Ornstein-Zernike theory (at temperatures above criticality) and introduced a diamond representation for a range of models including self-avoiding walks, Bernoulli percolation, Ising ferromagnets and polymers. He also made important contributions to the analysis of quantum spin systems and metastability. Personal life Ioffe's family applied for permission to leave the USSR for Israel in 1976 but was refused and hence he became refusenik. It was only in 1987, following a hunger strike by his father, mathematician Alexander Ioffe, that Dmitry and his family were allowed to emigrate. Prizes and honors Ioffe got the Prix de l’Institut Henri Poincare (2005) and a Humboldt research award (2011). Selected publications References External links Dmitry Ioffe, Low temperature interfaces and level lines in the critical prewetting regime, CIRM Dmitry Ioffe, Technion. Dmitry Ioffe, Minerva foundation Obituary. Obituary: Medallion lecturer Dmitry Ioffe,Institute of Mathematical Statistics. Obituary to Dmitry Ioffe, Bonn University. Israeli mathematicians 1963 births 2020 deaths
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth%20Otabor
Kenneth Otabor (born 13 May 2002) is a Nigerian footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Iwate Grulla Morioka. Career statistics Club Notes References 2002 births Living people Nigerian men's footballers Nigerian expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players Iwate Grulla Morioka players Expatriate men's footballers in Japan Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Japan Footballers from Kaduna
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuto%20Hikida
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Fagiano Okayama. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people Association football people from Yamaguchi Prefecture Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J2 League players Fagiano Okayama players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomoyuki%20Hirose
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Vanraure Hachinohe. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1994 births Living people Association football people from Hokkaido Josai International University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Japan Football League players J3 League players Tokyo Musashino United FC players ReinMeer Aomori players Vanraure Hachinohe players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheldon%20M.%20Ross
Sheldon M. Ross is the Daniel J. Epstein Chair and Professor at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. He is the author of several books in the field of probability. Biography Ross received his B. S. degree in mathematics from Brooklyn College in 1963, his M.S. degrees in mathematics from Purdue University in 1964 and his Ph.D. degree in Statistics from Stanford University in 1968, studying under Gerald Lieberman and Cyrus Derman. He served as a Professor at the University of California, Berkeley from 1976 until joining the USC Viterbi School of Engineering in 2004. He serves as the Editor for several journals, among which Probability in the Engineering and Informational Sciences. In 2013 he became a fellow of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences. In 1978, he formulated what became known as Ross's conjecture in queuing theory, which was solved three years later by Tomasz Rolski at Poland's Wroclaw University. Selected publications Ross S. M. (1970) Applied Probability Models with Optimization Applications. Holden-Day: San Francisco, CA. Ross S. M. (1972) Introduction to Probability Models. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. Ross S. M. (1976) A First Course in Probability. MacMillan Publishing Company: London. Ross S. M. (1982) Stochastic Processes. John Wiley & Sons: New York. Ross S. M. (1983) Introduction to Stochastic Dynamic Programming. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. Ross S. M. (1995) Introductory Statistics. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. Ross S. M. (1996) Simulation. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. Derman C. & Ross S. M. (1997) Statistical Aspects of Quality Control. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. Ross S. M. (1999) An Elementary Introduction to Mathematical Finance: Options and Other Topics. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. Ross S. M. (2000) Topics in Finite and Discrete Mathematics. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. Ross S. M. (2001) Probability Models for Computer Science. Academic Press: Waltham, MA. References External links Living people Mathematicians from California University of Southern California faculty Brooklyn College alumni Purdue University alumni Stanford University alumni University of California, Berkeley faculty American statisticians 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians Year of birth missing (living people) American textbook writers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirolateral
In Euclidean geometry, a spirolateral is a polygon created by a sequence of fixed vertex internal angles and sequential edge lengths 1,2,3,...,n which repeat until the figure closes. The number of repeats needed is called its cycles. A simple spirolateral has only positive angles. A simple spiral approximates of a portion of an archimedean spiral. A general spirolateral allows positive and negative angles. A spirolateral which completes in one turn is a simple polygon, while requiring more than 1 turn is a star polygon and must be self-crossing. A simple spirolateral can be an equangular simple polygon <p> with p vertices, or an equiangular star polygon <p/q> with p vertices and q turns. Spirolaterals were invented and named by Frank C. Odds as a teenager in 1962, as square spirolaterals with 90° angles, drawn on graph paper. In 1970, Odds discovered triangular and hexagonal spirolateral, with 60° and 120° angles, can be drawn on isometric (triangular) graph paper. Odds wrote to Martin Gardner who encouraged him to publish the results in Mathematics Teacher in 1973. The process can be represented in turtle graphics, alternating turn angle and move forward instructions, but limiting the turn to a fixed rational angle. The smallest golygon is a spirolateral, 790°4, made with 7 right angles, and length 4 follow concave turns. Golygons are different in that they must close with a single sequence 1,2,3,..n, while a spirolateral will repeat that sequence until it closes. Classifications A simple spirolateral has turns all the same direction. It is denoted by nθ, where n is the number of sequential integer edge lengths and θ is the internal angle, as any rational divisor of 360°. Sequential edge lengths can be expressed explicitly as (1,2,...,n)θ. Note: The angle θ can be confusing because it represents the internal angle, while the supplementary turn angle can make more sense. These two angles are the same for 90°. This defines an equiangular polygon of the form <kp/kq>, where angle θ = 180(1−2q/p), with k = n/d, and d = gcd(n,p). If d = n, the pattern never closes. Otherwise it has kp vertices and kq density. The cyclic symmetry of a simple spirolateral is p/d-fold. A regular polygon, {p} is a special case of a spirolateral, 1180(1−2/p)°. A regular star polygon, {p/q}, is a special case of a spirolateral, 1180(1−2q/p)°. An isogonal polygon, is a special case spirolateral, 2180(1−2/p)° or 2180(1−2q/p)°. A general spirolateral can turn left or right. It is denoted by nθa1,...,ak, where ai are indices with negative or concave angles. For example, 260°2 is a crossed rectangle with ±60° internal angles, bending left or right. An unexpected closed spiralateral returns to the first vertex on a single cycle. Only general spirolaterals may not close. A golygon is a regular unexpected closed spiralateral that closes from the expected direction. An irregular unexpected closed spiralateral is one that returns to the first point but from the wrong di
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith%20Bush
Edith Linwood Bush (September 15, 1882 – November 3, 1977) was an American mathematician. She was the high school mathematics teacher of her younger brother, Vannevar Bush, before becoming dean of the Jackson College for Women at Tufts University and the first woman to teach engineering at Tufts. Life Bush was born on September 15, 1882, in Everett, Massachusetts, one of three children of Universalist minister R. Perry Bush and his wife, née Emma Linwood Paine. She grew up in Chelsea, Massachusetts, and graduated from Tufts University in 1903 as a member of Chi Omega and Phi Beta Kappa. She became the head mathematics teacher at Chelsea High School from 1906 to 1918, becoming the mathematics teacher of her younger brother, Vannevar Bush. She briefly became principal of Provincetown High School before returning to Tufts in 1920, where she became a mathematics instructor. In 1922, she became an assistant professor at Tufts, the first female faculty member to teach in the School of Engineering. She was named dean of the Jackson College for Women in 1925, and in the same year became a full professor. She retired in 1952, and was succeeded as dean by biologist Katherine Jeffers. On her retirement she returned to Provincetown, Massachusetts, where she lived in a house built by her grandfather, Captain Lysander N. Paine. She died on November 3, 1977, in Waltham, Massachusetts. Recognition Tufts University gave Bush an honorary doctorate in 1942. In 1959, a new student residence at Tufts was named Bush Hall in her honor. It was originally an undergraduate women's dormitory, but by 1991 was occupied only by graduate students. After major renovation in 1995, it again became an undergraduate dormitory. References 1882 births 1977 deaths People from Everett, Massachusetts 20th-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Tufts University alumni Tufts University faculty 20th-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bettina%20Huber
Bettina Huber (born 7 September 1995) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for FC Staad and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International References 1995 births Living people Women's association football goalkeepers Liechtenstein women's footballers Liechtenstein women's international footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lena%20G%C3%B6ppel
Lena Göppel (born 11 August 2001) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a midfielder for the Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International International goals Personal life She is the younger sister of Liechtenstein men's international defender Maximilian Göppel. References External links Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks bio 2001 births Living people Women's association football midfielders Liechtenstein women's footballers Liechtenstein women's international footballers Liechtenstein expatriate women's footballers Liechtenstein expatriate sportspeople in the United States Expatriate women's soccer players in the United States Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks women's soccer players Sportspeople from St. Gallen (city)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elena%20Lohner
Elena Lohner (born 19 July 2001) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a defender for Triesen and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International References 2001 births Living people Women's association football defenders Liechtenstein women's international footballers Liechtenstein women's footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polar%20factorization%20theorem
In optimal transport, a branch of mathematics, polar factorization of vector fields is a basic result due to Brenier (1987), with antecedents of Knott-Smith (1984) and Rachev (1985), that generalizes many existing results among which are the polar decomposition of real matrices, and the rearrangement of real-valued functions. The theorem Notation. Denote the image measure of through the map . Definition: Measure preserving map. Let and be some probability spaces and a map. Then, is said to be measure preserving if for every -measurable subset of , is -measurable and , that is: with that is -integrable and that is -integrable. Theorem. Consider a map where is a convex subset of , and a measure on which is absolutely continuous. Assume that is absolutely continuous. Then there is a convex function and a map preserving such that In addition, and are uniquely defined almost everywhere. Applications and connections Dimension 1 In dimension 1, and when is the Lebesgue measure over the unit interval, the result specializes to Ryff's theorem. When and is the uniform distribution over , the polar decomposition boils down to where is cumulative distribution function of the random variable and has a uniform distribution over . is assumed to be continuous, and preserves the Lebesgue measure on . Polar decomposition of matrices When is a linear map and is the Gaussian normal distribution, the result coincides with the polar decomposition of matrices. Assuming where is an invertible matrix and considering the probability measure, the polar decomposition boils down to where is a symmetric positive definite matrix, and an orthogonal matrix. The connection with the polar factorization is which is convex, and which preserves the measure. Helmholtz decomposition The results also allow to recover Helmholtz decomposition. Letting be a smooth vector field it can then be written in a unique way as where is a smooth real function defined on , unique up to an additive constant, and is a smooth divergence free vector field, parallel to the boundary of . The connection can be seen by assuming is the Lebesgue measure on a compact set and by writing as a perturbation of the identity map where is small. The polar decomposition of is given by . Then, for any test function the following holds: where the fact that was preserving the Lebesgue measure was used in the second equality. In fact, as , one can expand , and therefore . As a result, for any smooth function , which implies that is divergence-free. See also References Measures (measure theory) Theorems involving convexity
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva%20Beck
Eva Beck (born 25 November 1997) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a midfielder for Walperswil and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International References 1997 births Living people Women's association football midfielders Liechtenstein women's footballers Liechtenstein women's international footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patricia%20Koch
Patricia Koch (born 15 November 1990) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a midfielder for Neusiedl am See and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International References 1990 births Living people Women's association football midfielders Liechtenstein women's international footballers Liechtenstein women's footballers Liechtenstein expatriate women's footballers Expatriate women's footballers in Austria
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christina%20M%C3%BCssner
Christina Müssner (born 10 December 1993) is a Liechtensteiner footballer who plays as a striker for Schlieren and the Liechtenstein national football team. Career statistics International International goals References 1993 births Living people Women's association football midfielders Liechtenstein women's international footballers Liechtenstein women's footballers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason%20P.%20Miller
Jason Peter Miller (born November 23, 1983) is an American mathematician, specializing in probability theory. After graduating from Okemos High School, Miller matriculated in 2002 at the University of Michigan, where he graduated in 2006 with a B.S. with joint majors in mathematics, computer science, and economics. In 2006 he became a graduate student in mathematics at Stanford University. In 2011 he graduated there with a PhD supervised by Amir Dembo with dissertation Limit theorems for Ginzburg-Landau random surfaces . Miller was a summer intern in 2009 at Microsoft Research and in 2010 at D.E. Shaw & Co. He was a postdoctoral researcher from September 2010 to July 2012 at Microsoft and from July 2012 to July 2015 (as a Schramm Fellow and a NSF Fellow) at MIT's department of mathematics, where he worked with Scott Sheffield. In 2015 Miller became a reader at Trinity College, Cambridge and in the University of Cambridge's Statistics Laboratory. His research deals with many aspects of probability theory, including "stochastic interface models (random surfaces and SLE), random walk, mixing times for Markov chains, and interacting particle systems." With Scott Sheffield, he did research on the geometry of d-dimensional Gaussian free fields (GFF fields), also called (Euclidean bosonic) massless free fields, which are d-dimensional analogs of Brownian motion. The two mathematicians introduced an "imaginary geometry" which made it possible to integrate the Schramm-Loewner evolution in many GFF fields. Miller and Sheffield also proved that two models of measure-endowed random surfaces, namely Liouville quantum gravity and the Brownian map, are equivalent. (The two models were introduced by Alexander Markovich Polyakov.) Miller won the Rollo Davidson Prize in 2015, the Whitehead Prize in 2016, the Clay Research Award in 2017 (with Scott Sheffield), and the Doeblin Prize in 2018. He was an invited speaker with talk Liouville quantum gravity as a metric space and a scaling limit at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2018 in Rio de Janeiro. He was awarded the Leonard Eisenbud Prize for Mathematics and Physics of the AMS in 2023 jointly with Scott Sheffield. Selected publications References External links Kevin Hartnett, A unified theory of randomness, Quanta Magazine, 2016 1983 births Living people 20th-century American mathematicians 21st-century American mathematicians University of Michigan alumni Stanford University alumni Academics of the University of Cambridge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultrafilter%20on%20a%20set
In the mathematical field of set theory, an ultrafilter on a set is a maximal filter on the set In other words, it is a collection of subsets of that satisfies the definition of a filter on and that is maximal with respect to inclusion, in the sense that there does not exist a strictly larger collection of subsets of that is also a filter. (In the above, by definition a filter on a set does not contain the empty set.) Equivalently, an ultrafilter on the set can also be characterized as a filter on with the property that for every subset of either or its complement belongs to the ultrafilter. Ultrafilters on sets are an important special instance of ultrafilters on partially ordered sets, where the partially ordered set consists of the power set and the partial order is subset inclusion This article deals specifically with ultrafilters on a set and does not cover the more general notion. There are two types of ultrafilter on a set. A principal ultrafilter on is the collection of all subsets of that contain a fixed element . The ultrafilters that are not principal are the free ultrafilters. The existence of free ultrafilters on any infinite set is implied by the ultrafilter lemma, which can be proven in ZFC. On the other hand, there exists models of ZF where every ultrafilter on a set is principal. Ultrafilters have many applications in set theory, model theory, and topology. Usually, only free ultrafilters lead to non-trivial constructions. For example, an ultraproduct modulo a principal ultrafilter is always isomorphic to one of the factors, while an ultraproduct modulo a free ultrafilter usually has more complex structures. Definitions Given an arbitrary set an ultrafilter on is a non-empty family of subsets of such that: or : The empty set is not an element of : If and if is any superset of (that is, if ) then : If and are elements of then so is their intersection If then either or its complement is an element of Properties (1), (2), and (3) are the defining properties of a Some authors do not include non-degeneracy (which is property (1) above) in their definition of "filter". However, the definition of "ultrafilter" (and also of "prefilter" and "filter subbase") always includes non-degeneracy as a defining condition. This article requires that all filters be proper although a filter might be described as "proper" for emphasis. A filter base is a non-empty family of sets that has the finite intersection property (i.e. all finite intersections are non-empty). Equivalently, a filter subbase is a non-empty family of sets that is contained in (proper) filter. The smallest (relative to ) filter containing a given filter subbase is said to be generated by the filter subbase. The upward closure in of a family of sets is the set A or is a non-empty and proper (i.e. ) family of sets that is downward directed, which means that if then there exists some such that Equivalently, a prefilter is any f
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet%20Griffin
Harriet Madeline Griffin (April 6, 1903 – January 13, 1991) was an American mathematician, and the author of a textbook on number theory. She taught for many years at Brooklyn College. Education and career Griffin was born on April 6, 1903, in Brooklyn, one of two daughters of a furniture salesman. She was educated at Baldwin High School in Baldwin, New York, graduating as valedictorian in 1920. She earned a bachelor's degree at Hunter College in 1925, graduating Phi Beta Kappa, winning the Thomas Hunter Prize in mathematics, and becoming a founding member of Pi Mu Epsilon; her sister graduated in the same year and become a mathematics teacher. Griffin continued at Hunter College as a tutor and instructor from 1926 to 1930, meanwhile earning a master's degree at Columbia University in 1929. Her master's thesis was Modern Geometry in Three Dimensions. When Hunter College merged with the Brooklyn campus of the City College of New York to form Brooklyn College in 1930, she became a faculty member at the newly formed college. While continuing to work as a faculty member at Brooklyn College, she completed a Ph.D. at New York University in 1939; her dissertation, The Abelian Quasi-Group, was supervised by Donald Flanders. With the completion of her doctorate, she rose through the faculty ranks at Brooklyn College to become an assistant professor in 1940, associate professor in 1950, and full professor in 1956. She retired as a professor emerita in 1966, continuing to teach for two years at Molloy College. She died on January 13, 1991, in Lakewood, New Jersey. Book Griffin was the author of Elementary Theory of Numbers (McGraw-Hill, 1954). She also published two textbooks through the Brooklyn College Press, The Concepts of the Theory of Numbers (1947) and Systems of Abstract Algebra (1962). Recognition Griffin was named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1960. References 1903 births 1991 deaths People from Brooklyn 20th-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Hunter College alumni Columbia University alumni New York University alumni Hunter College faculty Brooklyn College faculty Molloy College faculty Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 20th-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohga%20Tsuruhara
is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a defender. Career statistics Club . Notes References 2000 births Living people Association football people from Hyōgo Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Singapore Premier League players Mongolian National Premier League players 3. Liga (Slovakia) players Albirex Niigata Singapore FC players NK Radnik Križevci players SP Falcons players ŠKM Liptovský Hrádok players Japanese expatriate men's footballers Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Singapore Expatriate men's footballers in Singapore Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Croatia Expatriate men's footballers in Croatia Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Mongolia Expatriate men's footballers in Mongolia Japanese expatriate sportspeople in Slovakia Expatriate men's footballers in Slovakia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masato%20Igarashi
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Tochigi SC, as a designated special player. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1999 births Living people People from Utsunomiya, Tochigi Association football people from Tochigi Prefecture National Institute of Fitness and Sports in Kanoya alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J2 League players Tochigi SC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyota%20Mochii
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Azul Claro Numazu, on loan from Tokyo Verdy. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1999 births Living people Association football people from Hyōgo Prefecture Meiji University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Tokyo Verdy players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seiya%20Katakura
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Zweigen Kanazawa. Club career Katakura made his professional debut in a 1–4 Emperor's Cup loss against Albirex Niigata. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people Association football people from Tochigi Prefecture Josai University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Zweigen Kanazawa players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized%20renewal%20process
In the mathematical theory of probability, a generalized renewal process (GRP) or G-renewal process is a stochastic point process used to model failure/repair behavior of repairable systems in reliability engineering. Poisson point process is a particular case of GRP. Probabilistic model Virtual age The G-renewal process is introduced by Kijima and Sumita through the notion of the virtual age. where: and is real and virtual age (respectively) of the system at/after the i repair, is the restoration factor (a.k.a., repair effectiveness factor), , represents the condition of a perfect repair, where the system age is reset to zero after the repair. This condition corresponds to the Ordinary Renewal Process. , represents the condition of a minimal repair, where the system condition after the repair remains the same as right before the repair. This condition corresponds to the Non-Homogeneous Poisson Process. , represents the condition of a general repair, where the system condition is between perfect repair and minimal repair. This condition corresponds to the Generalized Renewal Process. Kaminskiy and Krivtsov extended the Kijima models by allowing q > 1, so that the repair damages (ages) the system to a higher degree than it was just before the respective failure. G-renewal equation Mathematically, the G-renewal process is quantified through the solution of the G-renewal equation: where, f(t) is the probability density function (PDF) of the underlying failure time distribution, F(t) is the cumulative distribution function (CDF) of the underlying failure time distribution, q is the restoration factor, is the vector of parameters of the underlying failure-time distribution. A closed-form solution to the G-renewal equation is not possible. Also, numerical approximations are difficult to obtain due to the recurrent infinite series. A Monte Carlo based approach to solving the G-renewal Equation was developed by Kaminiskiy and Krivtsov. Statistical estimation The G–renewal process gained its practical popularity in reliability engineering only after methods for estimating its parameters had become available. Monte Carlo approach The nonlinear LSQ estimation of the G–renewal process was first offered by Kaminskiy & Krivtsov. A random inter-arrival time from a parameterized G-Renewal process is given by: where, is the cumulative real age before the i inter-arrival, is a uniformly distributed random variable, is the CDF of the underlying failure-time distribution. The Monte Carlo solution was subsequently improved and implemented as a web resource. Maximum likelihood approach The maximum likelihood procedures were subsequently discussed by Yañez, et al., and Mettas & Zhao. The estimation of the G–renewal restoration factor was addressed in detail by Kahle & Love. Regularization method in estimating GRP parameters The estimation of G–renewal process parameters is an ill–posed inverse problem, and therefore, the solu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anton%C3%ADn%20V%C3%A1clav%20%C5%A0ourek
Antonín Václav Šourek (June 3, 1857, Písek – February 20, 1926, Sofia) was a Czech mathematician, noteworthy as one of the founders of modern mathematics in Bulgaria (which became modernized after the Treaty of San Stefano.) Antonín Šourek graduated in 1876 from a Realschule in Písek. From 1876 to 1878 he studied at TU Wien, where he attended lectures on mathematics, physics, and descriptive geometry. He was a student of Emil Weyr. Šourek then went to Czech Technical University in Prague, where he furthered his knowledge of mathematics, physics, and descriptive geometry. In 1880 he passed the examination certifying teaching competence in mathematics and descriptive geometry and went to Bulgaria. There in September 1880 he became a mathematics teacher at the Realschule in Slivna. A year later he was transferred from Slivna to Plovdiv. From there, in 1890, he moved to the Realschule in Sofia, where he was almost simultaneously appointed professor extraordinarius at Sofia University (founded in October 1888). In 1893 he resigned from the Realschule and completely transferred to Sofia University, where he was appointed professor ordinarius in 1898. From the years 1893 to 1902, while continuing his professorial duties at Sofia University, he lectured on descriptive geometry at a school for teacher training. He was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1904 at Heidelberg. Beginning in 1893 he also became a professor of descriptive geometry at the Military Academy in Sofia, where he taught for nine years. From 1895 to 1912 he lectured on perspective at the Academy of Painting in Sofia. In 1914 his bad health compelled him to resign his professorship at Sofia University and to move to Rome, where he became an unsalaried secretary of the military attaché. At the beginning of 1916 Šourek went to Bern, where he helped care for Bulgarian war prisoners. At the request of university administrators, after the end of WWI he returned to Sofia University and taught there from 1921 until his death in 1926. Šourek wrote Bulgarian textbooks on plane trigonometry, solid geometry, analytic geometry, spherical trigonometry, and descriptive geometry. He published his Bulgarian mathematical lectures on projective geometry (1909), differential geometry (1911), analytical geometry (1912, 1914), and descriptive geometry (1914). Perhaps his two most important translations into Bulgarian are Alois Strnad's Geometrie pro vyšší třídy reálných gymnázií (Bulgarian title: Геометрия за висшите класове на реалните гимназии, Geometry for upper classes of state gymnasia) and Emanuel Taftl’s textbook Algebra pro vyšší třídy středních škol (Bulgarian title: Алгебра за горните класове на гимназиалните училища, Algebra for upper classes of secondary schools). References 1857 births 1926 deaths People from Písek Mathematicians from Austria-Hungary Czech mathematicians TU Wien alumni Czech Technical University in Prague alumni Academic staff of Sofia Unive
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lam%27s%20problem
In finite geometry, Lam's problem is the problem of determining if a finite projective plane of order ten exists. The order ten case is the first theoretically uncertain case, as all smaller orders can be resolved by purely theoretical means. Lam's problem is named after Clement W. H. Lam who experimentally determined that projective planes of order ten do not exist via exhaustive computational searches. Introduction A finite projective plane of order is a collection of points and lines such that any two points define a unique line, any two lines meet at a unique point, there are exactly points on every line, and there are exactly lines through every point. A consequence of this definition is that a projective plane of order will contain points and lines. The incidence relation between points and lines may equivalently be described using an incidence matrix. In this context a projective plane of order is equivalent to a matrix with entries such that every row and column has ones and the inner product between any two rows or columns is exactly . Using the incidence matrix representation, Lam's problem is equivalent to determining if there is a way of placing 0s and 1s in a matrix such that there are exactly eleven 1s in each row and column and any pair of rows share a single 1 in the same column. Clement W. H. Lam considered studying the existence of a projective plane of order ten in his PhD thesis but was dissuaded by his thesis advisor H. J. Ryser who believed the problem was too difficult. Resolution Edward Assmus presented a connection between projective planes and coding theory at the conference Combinatorial Aspects of Finite Geometries in 1970. He studied the code generated by the rows of the incidence matrix of a hypothetical projective plane of order ten and derived a number of restrictive properties that such a code must satisfy. In particular, the enumerator polynomial of the code is completely determined by the number of words of weights 12, 15, and 16 in the code. Over the next two decades a number of computer searches showed that the hypothetical code associated with the projective plane of order ten does not contain words of weights 15, 12, and 16—which implied that it must contain words of weight 19. Finally, Clement Lam, Larry Thiel and Stanley Swiercz used about three months of time on a Cray-1A supercomputer to show that words of weight 19 are also not present in the code. This resolved Lam's problem in the negative. Their result was independently verified in 2021 by using a SAT solver to generate computer-verifiable certificates for the correctness of the exhaustive searches. References Finite geometry Combinatorial design
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred%20Galichon
Alfred Galichon (; born May 4, 1977) is a French economist and mathematician. His work focuses on quantitative economics and econometrics. He is a professor of economics and of mathematics at New York University. Life and work Galichon was born in Paris. He is a professor at New York University in the Courant Institute, and the director of NYU Paris. Previously, he had been a full professor at Ecole Polytechnique, and then at Sciences Po, Paris. He is a graduate of Ecole Polytechnique and Corps des Mines, and holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard University. His work lies within quantitative economics, in particular on the economic applications of optimal transport. He has contributed to the econometrics of matching markets, discrete choice models, martingale optimal transport, and quantile regression. He is a fellow of the Econometric Society and the author of Optimal Transport Methods in Economics. Research Galichon is the author of more than forty peer-reviewed articles. His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation (2017-2020) and twice by the European Research Council, for a total amount of approximately 3 million Euros. Awards and distinctions Edmond Malinvaud Prize from the French Association of Economic Sciences, 2015. Starting grant, European Research Council, 2013-2016. 'Young Leader' of the French-American Foundation, 2018. Economic Theory Fellow, 2019. Fellow of the Econometric Society, 2020. Consolidator grant, European Research Council, 2020-2025. Selected publications Books Articles References External links Personal website NYU Department of Economics profile NYU Department of Mathematics profile French economists 21st-century French mathematicians 1977 births Living people New York University faculty École Polytechnique alumni Mines Paris - PSL alumni Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni Fellows of the Econometric Society French expatriates in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huff%20model
In spatial analysis, the Huff model is a widely used tool for predicting the probability of a consumer visiting a site, as a function of the distance of the site, its attractiveness, and the relative attractiveness of alternatives. It was formulated by David Huff in 1963. It is used in marketing, economics, retail research and urban planning, and is implemented in several commercially available GIS systems. Its relative ease of use and applicability to a wide range of problems contribute to its enduring appeal. The formula is given as: where : is a measure of attractiveness of store j is the distance from the consumer's location, i, to store j. is an attractiveness parameter is a distance decay parameter is the total number of stores, including store j References Retail analytics Economics models Spatial analysis
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%20Guangzhou%20F.C.%20season
The 2021 Guangzhou season is the 68th year in Guangzhou's existence and its 54th season in the Chinese football league, also its 32nd season in the top flight. Transfers In Out Statistics Appearances and goals References Guangzhou F.C. Guangzhou F.C. seasons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth%20Stokes
Ruth Wyckliffe Stokes (October 12, 1890 or 1891 – August 27, 1968) was an American mathematician, cryptologist, and astronomer. She earned the first doctorate in mathematics from Duke University, made pioneering contributions to the theory of linear programming, and founded the Pi Mu Epsilon journal. Early life and education Stokes was born on October 12, 1890 or 1891, in Mountville, South Carolina, one of six children of William Henry Stokes, a physician and farmer, and his wife Francis Emily Fuller Stokes. She earned a bachelor's degree in 1911 from the Winthrop Normal and Industrial College, a women's college that later became Winthrop University, and began working as a high school mathematics teacher. She was principal of a school in Rock Hill, South Carolina, from 1913 to 1916, and head of mathematics at Synodical College in Fulton, Missouri, from 1916 to 1917. She subsequently held two more teaching positions in South Carolina. During this time she also studied mathematics by correspondence through Columbia University, the University of Virginia, and the University of Chicago. She returned to graduate study in 1922 at Vanderbilt University, where she earned a master's degree in mathematics in 1923 with a thesis in the history of mathematics on the fundamental theorem of algebra. She became an instructor at Winthrop College, and began taking summer classes at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, entering more formal doctoral study at Duke University in 1928. She completed her Ph.D. in 1931, supervised by Joseph Miller Thomas, becoming the first person to earn a doctorate in mathematics at Duke. Her dissertation, A Geometric Theory of Solution of Linear Inequalities, represented pioneering work in linear programming, following on from the work of Lloyd Dines and Hermann Minkowski. Career and later life Stokes expected her position at Winthrop to be waiting for her on the completion of her doctorate, but David Bancroft Johnson, the president of Winthrop with whom she had made this agreement, died in 1928 and the next president did not hold to the agreement. After continuing at Duke as an instructor for a year, Stokes became a mathematics instructor at North Texas State Teachers College (now the University of North Texas) from 1932 until 1935, when she became head of mathematics at Mitchell College in Statesville, North Carolina. In 1936, Stokes returned once more to Winthrop College where she became a professor of astronomy and mathematics and, later, the head of mathematics. Her astronomical work included an excursion to Florida to observe the solar eclipse of April 7, 1940. As a response to World War II, in 1942, she instituted a program in cryptology, and began teaching navigation and astronomy to pilots in the United States Army Air Corps. During this period at Winthrop she also chaired the Southeastern Section of the Mathematical Association of America and was president of the section for mathematics of the South Carolina Educati
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yota%20Sato%20%28footballer%29
is a Japanese footballer who plays as a centre back for club Gamba Osaka. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people People from Kunitachi, Tokyo Association football people from Tokyo Metropolis Meiji University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders J1 League players J2 League players Gamba Osaka players Vegalta Sendai players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gowers%27%20theorem
In mathematics, Gowers' theorem, also known as Gowers' Ramsey theorem and Gowers' FINk theorem, is a theorem in Ramsey theory and combinatorics. It is a Ramsey-theoretic result about functions with finite support. Timothy Gowers originally proved the result in 1992, motivated by a problem regarding Banach spaces. The result was subsequently generalised by Bartošová, Kwiatkowska, and Lupini. Definitions The presentation and notation is taken from Todorčević, and is different to that originally given by Gowers. For a function , the support of is defined . Given , let be the set If , have disjoint supports, we define to be their pointwise sum, where . Each is a partial semigroup under . The tetris operation is defined . Intuitively, if is represented as a pile of square blocks, where the th column has height , then is the result of removing the bottom row. The name is in analogy with the video game. denotes the th iterate of . A block sequence in is one such that for every . The theorem Note that, for a block sequence , numbers and indices , the sum is always defined. Gowers' original theorem states that, for any finite colouring of , there is a block sequence such that all elements of the form have the same colour. The standard proof uses ultrafilters, or equivalently, nonstandard arithmetic. Generalisation Intuitively, the tetris operation can be seen as removing the bottom row of a pile of boxes. It is natural to ask what would happen if we tried removing different rows. Bartošová and Kwiatkowska considered the wider class of generalised tetris operations, where we can remove any chosen subset of the rows. Formally, let be a nondecreasing surjection. The induced tetris operation is given by composition with , i.e. . The generalised tetris operations are the collection of for all nondecreasing surjections . In this language, the original tetris operation is induced by the map . Bartošová and Kwiatkowska showed that the finite version of Gowers' theorem holds for the collection of generalised tetris operations. Lupini later extended this result to the infinite case. References Ramsey theory Theorems in combinatorics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshiaki%20Arai
is a Japanese football player for Oita Trinita. Career After attending Ryutsu Keizai University, Arai joined Shimizu S-Pulse in January 2018. Club statistics Updated to 1 December 2022. Honours Individual Japanese college best GK (2017) References External links Profile at J. League Profile at Kanazawa Profile at Shimizu Profile at Akita 1995 births Living people Ryutsu Keizai University alumni Association football people from Saitama Prefecture Japanese men's footballers J2 League players Shimizu S-Pulse players Zweigen Kanazawa players Blaublitz Akita players Oita Trinita players Men's association football goalkeepers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986%E2%80%9387%20Rochdale%20A.F.C.%20season
The 1986–87 season saw Rochdale compete in their 13th consecutive season in the Football League Fourth Division. Statistics |} Final League Table Competitions Football League Fourth Division F.A. Cup League Cup (Littlewoods Challenge Cup) Associate Members' Cup (Freight Rover Trophy) Lancashire Cup References Rochdale A.F.C. seasons Rochdale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie%20S.%20Wilcox
Marie S. Wilcox (died September 29, 1995) was an American high school mathematics teacher and textbook author who served as president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Education and career Wilcox was a graduate of Indiana University Bloomington, and taught mathematics at George Washington Community High School and Thomas Carr Howe Community High School in Indianapolis from 1927 until retiring in 1969. She served as president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics from 1954 to 1956. After retiring, she moved to Florida, where she died on September 29, 1995. Books Wilcox was the author or coauthor of textbooks in mathematics including: Algebra, First Course (with John R. Mayor, Prentice-Hall, 1956) Algebra, Second Course (with John R. Mayor, Prentice-Hall, 1957) Mathematics, a Modern Approach (with John E. Yarnelle, Addison-Wesley, 1963) Basic Modern Mathematics (with John E. Yarnelle, Addison-Wesley, 1964) Contemporary Algebra, First Course (with John R. Mayor, Prentice-Hall, 1965) Contemporary Algebra, Second Course (with John R. Mayor, Prentice-Hall, 1965) Mathematics, a Modern Approach, Second Course (Addison-Wesley, 1966) Basic Algebra (Addison-Wesley, 1977) Recognition Wilcox was named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1956. An award for female mathematics students at Indiana University, the Marie S. Wilcox Scholarship, is named for Wilcox. References Year of birth missing 1995 deaths 20th-century American mathematicians American women mathematicians Mathematics educators Indiana University Bloomington alumni Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science 20th-century American women
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiki%20Miyabe
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a right-back for Matsumoto Yamaga. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people Association football people from Tokyo Hosei University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders J2 League players Matsumoto Yamaga FC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim%20Ho%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201998%29
Kim Ho (; born 15 March 1998) is a South Korean footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for FC Gifu. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 1998 births Living people Korea University alumni South Korean men's footballers South Korea men's youth international footballers South Korean expatriate men's footballers Men's association football midfielders J3 League players FC Gifu players South Korean expatriate sportspeople in Japan Expatriate men's footballers in Japan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naoki%20Sutoh
is a Japanese professional footballer currently playing as a winger for club Kashima Antlers. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2002 births Living people Association football people from Saitama Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Omiya Ardija players Kashima Antlers players Zweigen Kanazawa players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayato%20Tanaka
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a centre back for Kashiwa Reysol of J1 League. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2003 births Living people Association football people from Chiba Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Kashiwa Reysol players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takuma%20Otake
is a Japanese footballer who plays as a left back for J3 League club Ehime FC, on loan from Kashiwa Reysol. Career statistics Club . References External links 2002 births Living people Association football people from Ibaraki Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Men's association football defenders Kashiwa Reysol players Ehime FC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kota%20Kudo
is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a centre back for J2 League club Fujieda MYFC, on loan from Urawa Reds. Career statistics Club . Honours Club Urawa Red Diamonds AFC Champions League: 2022 References External links 2003 births Living people Association football people from Wakayama Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Japan men's youth international footballers Men's association football defenders Urawa Red Diamonds players Fujieda MYFC players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimiya%20Moriyama
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Avispa Fukuoka. Career statistics Club . Notes References External links 2002 births Living people Association football people from Fukuoka Prefecture Japanese men's footballers Japan men's youth international footballers Men's association football defenders Avispa Fukuoka players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhang%20Xingbo%20%28footballer%29
Zhang Xingbo (; born 17 January 1994) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a left winger or left-back for Shijiazhuang Gongfu. Career statistics Club . References 1994 births Living people Chinese men's footballers Men's association football midfielders China League Two players China League One players Chinese Super League players Guangdong South China Tiger F.C. players Guangzhou F.C. players Inner Mongolia Zhongyou F.C. players Liaoning Shenyang Urban F.C. players Chongqing Liangjiang Athletic F.C. players 21st-century Chinese people
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li%20Xiang%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201991%29
Li Xiang (; born 17 January 1991) is a Chinese footballer currently playing as a forward for Tianjin Jinmen Tiger. Career statistics Club . References 1991 births Living people Chinese men's footballers Men's association football forwards China League One players China League Two players Chinese Super League players Tianjin Jinmen Tiger F.C. players Shenyang Dongjin F.C. players Hunan Billows F.C. players Beijing Sport University F.C. players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMA%20Lighthill-Thwaites%20Prize
The Lighthill-Thwaites Prize of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications (IMA), in cooperation with the Institute's Journal of Applied Mathematics and the British Applied Mathematics Colloquium (BAMC), is a biennial prize established in 2011 by the IMA in honour of the achievement of its first two Presidents – Professors Sir James Lighthill and Sir Bryan Thwaites. The prize honours young applied mathematicians (of any nationality), and applicants submit papers for review. A committee reviews the papers, invites shortlisted candidates to give lectures at the Lighthill-Thwaites meeting, and then awards a First Prize. Prize winners Source: https://ima.org.uk/awards-medals/ima-lighthill-thwaites-prize/ 2011 – Raphael Assier 2013 – Laura Kimpton 2015 – John Craske 2017 – Doireann O’Kiely 2019 – Matthew Butler 2021 – Matthew Colbrook Finalists Source: https://ima.org.uk/awards-medals/ima-lighthill-thwaites-prize/ 2011 – Igor Chernyavsky, S. Lind, A. Stewart, Alice Thompson 2013 – Thomas Woolley, M. Moore, Matthew Hennessy 2015 – Jonathan Black, Susana Gomes, Lorna Ayton 2017 – Nabil Fadai, Oliver Allanson, Z. Wilmott 2019 – Matthew Colbrook, Maximilian Eggl, Linnea Franssen, Matthew Nethercote, Jessica Williams 2021 – Daniel Hill, Eleanor Johnstone, Kristian Kiradjiev, Ellen Luckins, Joshua Moore See also List of mathematics awards References Mathematics awards
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felipe%20Marques
Felipe Marques da Silva (27 January 1990) Atualmente, joga pelo Novorizontino. Career statistics Honours Horizonte Copa Fares Lopes: 2010 Sampaio Corrêa Campeonato Maranhense: 2017 Remo Campeonato Paraense: 2018 Cuiabá Copa Verde: 2019 References External links 1990 births Living people Footballers from Ceará Brazilian men's footballers Men's association football forwards Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players Horizonte Futebol Clube players Sampaio Corrêa Futebol Clube players Clube do Remo players Londrina Esporte Clube players Grêmio Novorizontino players Cuiabá Esporte Clube players Associação Ferroviária de Esportes players
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%E2%80%9322%20Scottish%20Professional%20Football%20League
Statistics of the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) in season 2021–22. Scottish Premiership Scottish Championship Scottish League One Scottish League Two Award winners See also 2021–22 in Scottish football References Scottish Professional Football League seasons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shunsuke%20Yamamoto
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a forward for Kagoshima United. Career statistics Club . Notes References 1999 births Living people Association football people from Yamaguchi Prefecture Tokuyama University alumni Japanese men's footballers Men's association football forwards Kagoshima United FC players