The concrete tetrahedron in algorithmic combinatorics

Activity: Talk or presentationInvited talkunknown

Description

Donald Knuth introduced a course ''Concrete Mathematics'' that has been taught annually at Stanford University since 1970. The course, and the accompanying book coauthored with Ron Graham and Oren Patashnik, was originally intended as an antidote to ''Abstract Mathematics''. In the 1990s, Doron Zeilberger’s 'holonomic systems approach to special functions identities' inspired a further wave in this “concrete evolution”: the development of computer algebra methods for symbolic summation, generating functions, recurrences, and asymptotic estimates. The book “The Concrete Tetrahedron,” by Manuel Kauers and the speaker, describes basic elements of this tool-box and can be viewed as an algorithmic supplement to ''Concrete Mathematics'' by Graham, Knuth, and Patashnik. The talk introduces to some of these methods. A major application concerns the computer-assisted evaluation of relativistic Coulomb integrals, joint work with Christoph Koutschan and Sergei Suslov.
Period25 Feb 2015
Event titleunbekannt/unknown
Event typeOther
LocationTurkeyShow on map

Fields of science

  • 101013 Mathematical logic
  • 101001 Algebra
  • 101012 Combinatorics
  • 101020 Technical mathematics
  • 101 Mathematics
  • 101009 Geometry
  • 101005 Computer algebra

JKU Focus areas

  • Computation in Informatics and Mathematics