
Solutions
... Problem 9 Of the four teams in a softball league, one team has four pitchers and the other teams have three each. Give the counting rules that apply to determine each of the following. (a) the number of possible selections of pitchers for an all-star team, if exactly four pitchers are to be chosen. ...
... Problem 9 Of the four teams in a softball league, one team has four pitchers and the other teams have three each. Give the counting rules that apply to determine each of the following. (a) the number of possible selections of pitchers for an all-star team, if exactly four pitchers are to be chosen. ...
Pascal`s Triangle - Penn State University
... We now shift gears to look at a set of topics related to work which was popularized by the French mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal (1623-1662). In terms of mathematical work, Pascal is probably best known for his work in elementary probability. As part of that work, he spent a good deal o ...
... We now shift gears to look at a set of topics related to work which was popularized by the French mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal (1623-1662). In terms of mathematical work, Pascal is probably best known for his work in elementary probability. As part of that work, he spent a good deal o ...
Weber problem

In geometry, the Weber problem, named after Alfred Weber, is one of the most famous problems in location theory. It requires finding a point in the plane that minimizes the sum of the transportation costs from this point to n destination points, where different destination points are associated with different costs per unit distance.The Weber problem generalizes the geometric median, which assumes transportation costs per unit distance are the same for all destination points, and the problem of computing the Fermat point, the geometric median of three points. For this reason it is sometimes called the Fermat–Weber problem, although the same name has also been used for the unweighted geometric median problem. The Weber problem is in turn generalized by the attraction–repulsion problem, which allows some of the costs to be negative, so that greater distance from some points is better.