
1 slide/page
... • Remember that 10/12 homeworks count. Each one is roughly worth 50 points, and homework is 35% of your final grade. ◦ 16 homework points = 1% on your final grade • Remember we’re grading about 100 homeworks and graders are not expected to be mind readers. It’s your problem to write clearly. • Don’t ...
... • Remember that 10/12 homeworks count. Each one is roughly worth 50 points, and homework is 35% of your final grade. ◦ 16 homework points = 1% on your final grade • Remember we’re grading about 100 homeworks and graders are not expected to be mind readers. It’s your problem to write clearly. • Don’t ...
Lecture Notes
... to express this fact formally. To make this more concrete, consider the set N of all integers greater than or equal to 0; it is clear that every element x of N is such that x + 1 is also an element of N. We can write this statement formally (and succintly) as: ∀x ∈ N : x + 1 ∈ N. The symbol ∀ in the ...
... to express this fact formally. To make this more concrete, consider the set N of all integers greater than or equal to 0; it is clear that every element x of N is such that x + 1 is also an element of N. We can write this statement formally (and succintly) as: ∀x ∈ N : x + 1 ∈ N. The symbol ∀ in the ...
4 slides/page
... graders are not expected to be mind readers. It’s your problem to write clearly. • Don’t forget to staple your homework pages together, add the cover sheet, and put your name on clearly. ◦ I’ll deduct 2 points if that’s not the case ...
... graders are not expected to be mind readers. It’s your problem to write clearly. • Don’t forget to staple your homework pages together, add the cover sheet, and put your name on clearly. ◦ I’ll deduct 2 points if that’s not the case ...
1-2 Note page
... will keep everything organized so you can concentrate on the 2. numbers. Write factors of -24x2 that add to 10x in boxes #6 and 9. ...
... will keep everything organized so you can concentrate on the 2. numbers. Write factors of -24x2 that add to 10x in boxes #6 and 9. ...
22 January 2013 The Queen of Mathematics Professor Raymond
... The second fact is even more astonishing, for it states just the opposite: that the prime numbers exhibit stunning regularity, that there are laws governing their behaviour, and that they obey these laws with almost military precision. To talk about this second fact we need to change our point of v ...
... The second fact is even more astonishing, for it states just the opposite: that the prime numbers exhibit stunning regularity, that there are laws governing their behaviour, and that they obey these laws with almost military precision. To talk about this second fact we need to change our point of v ...
CHAPTER 07 - Prime recognition and factorization
... IV054 Elliptic curve method for integer factorization Basic idea: To factorize an integer n one keeps choosing randomly elliptic curves and performs certain computations that include gcd(x, n) evaluations, for various x, and that these computations continue only if all gcd(x, n) = 1. If n is a prim ...
... IV054 Elliptic curve method for integer factorization Basic idea: To factorize an integer n one keeps choosing randomly elliptic curves and performs certain computations that include gcd(x, n) evaluations, for various x, and that these computations continue only if all gcd(x, n) = 1. If n is a prim ...
Mathematics of radio engineering

The mathematics of radio engineering is the mathematical description by complex analysis of the electromagnetic theory applied to radio. Waves have been studied since ancient times and many different techniques have developed of which the most useful idea is the superposition principle which apply to radio waves. The Huygen's principle, which says that each wavefront creates an infinite number of new wavefronts that can be added, is the base for this analysis.