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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%E2%80%9313%20FC%20Thun%20season | This article covers the results and statistics of FC Thun during the 2012–13 season. During the season Thun will compete in the Swiss Super League and in the Swiss Cup.
Match results
Legend
Swiss Super League
League results and fixtures
League table
Swiss Cup
External links
FC Thun official website
FC Thun on soccerway.com
Thun season
FC Thun seasons |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008%E2%80%9309%20Parma%20FC%20season |
Squad
Competitions
Serie B
Results
Table
Coppa Italia
Squad statistics
Appearances and goals
|-
|colspan="14"|Players who appeared for Parma that left during the season:
|}
Top scorers
Disciplinary record
Sources
RSSSF - Italy 2008/09
Parma Calcio 1913 seasons
Parma |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%E2%80%9313%20Fleetwood%20Town%20F.C.%20season | The 2012–13 season was Fleetwood Town's first in the Football League following promotion from the Football Conference the previous season.
League Two
Standings
Results summary
Squad
Statistics
|-
|colspan="14"|Players currently out on loan:
|-
|-
|colspan="14"|Players who have left the club with appearances:
|}
Goalscorers
Disciplinary record
Transfers
In
Loans in
Out
Loans Out
Fixtures and Results
Pre–season
League Two
FA Cup
League Cup
League Trophy
References
Fleetwood Town F.C. seasons
Fleetwood Town |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction%20to%20Statistics%20%28Community%29 | "Introduction to Statistics" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American comedy television series Community, airing on NBC on October 29, 2009. Annie (Alison Brie) hosts a Dia de los Muertos party, the success of which depends on Jeff (Joel McHale) attending. At the party, Pierce gets high, causing trouble for the other characters. Jeff pursues their statistics professor, Professor Michelle Slater (Lauren Stamile). Finally, Shirley (Yvette Nicole Brown) is distressed due to her ex-husband's behavior.
Plot
Annie (Alison Brie) announces to the Spanish class that she will be hosting a Día de los Muertos-themed Halloween party for extra credit, hoping that Jeff (Joel McHale) will attend as his popularity would influence others to attend as well. Shirley (Yvette Nicole Brown) announces to the study group that she returned her wedding ring to her ex-husband, who had cheated on her months prior.
After confirming with Britta (Gillian Jacobs) that she does not see him as a sexual prospect, Jeff asks his statistics instructor, Professor Michelle Slater (Lauren Stamile), out, but is rejected when she tells him that she does not date students. Shirley believes that Britta is upset with Jeff pursuing Slater after being interested in Britta.
Annie invites Jeff to the party but he initially declines, claiming it conflicts with his enjoyment of life. After Annie breaks down in tears, recalling how unpopular she was in high school, Jeff reluctantly agrees.
At the party, the study group is dressed in their Halloween costumes: Annie comes as a skeleton, Britta as a modest squirrel, Troy (Donald Glover) as Eddie Murphy, Abed (Danny Pudi) as Batman, Shirley as Harry Potter (mistaken by others as Steve Urkel) and Pierce (Chevy Chase) as the Beastmaster. Jeff does not wear a costume. Señor Chang (Ken Jeong), dressed as a matador, lets Jeff know that Slater is attending the faculty party in the cafeteria.
Star-Burns (Dino Stamatopoulos) runs into Pierce in the bathroom; while Pierce is taking his medication, Star-Burns suggests Pierce trade some of his pills for the ones that Star-Burns has. Pierce, in an attempt to feel younger, agrees.
Jeff asks Chang to make him his plus one to the faculty party so he can see Professor Slater. Chang agrees in exchange for $20. Jeff quietly grabs his coat and leaves Annie's party before anyone notices.
Annie gathers everyone from the party in a circle to start dancing. She invites Jeff up to have the first dance of the night. Once everyone realizes Jeff has left the party, people begin to express their desire to leave. Britta tries to cover for him, enlisting Shirley to help get him back. Pierce, meanwhile, is high on Star-Burns' pills and begins hitting on Annie, who rebuffs his advances.
Jeff makes it into the faculty Halloween party wearing a cowboy costume. He finds Professor Slater dressed in a revealing Robin Hood outfit and immediately makes advances on her. Britta interrupts their conversation in an |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satyo%20Husodo | Satyo Husodo (born February 22, 1983) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1983 births
Men's association football forwards
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persipa Pati players
Deltras F.C. players
Gresik United F.C. players
Indonesian Premier Division players
PS Mitra Kukar players
Persewangi Banyuwangi players
PS Barito Putera players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haynes%20Miller | Haynes Robert Miller (born January 29, 1948 in Princeton, New Jersey) is an American mathematician specializing in algebraic topology.
Miller completed his undergraduate study at Harvard University and earned his PhD in 1974 under the supervision of John Coleman Moore at Princeton University with thesis Some Algebraic Aspects of the Adams–Novikov Spectral Sequence. After his PhD, he became an assistant professor at Harvard and at Northwestern University, from 1977 at the University of Washington, and from 1984 a professor at the University of Notre Dame. Since 1986 he is a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). From 1992 to 1993 he was MIT's Chair of the Committee for Pure Mathematics, since 2004 Chair of the Undergraduate Mathematics Committee, and since 2005 MacVicar Faculty Fellow. His doctoral students at MIT include Brooke Shipley.
In 1984 Miller proved the generalized Sullivan conjecture, independently of Jean Lannes and Gunnar Carlsson.
In 1986 he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berkeley, California (The Sullivan conjecture and homotopical representation theory). In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.
References
External links
Haynes R. Miller at the MIT website
Profile of Haynes Miller at the MIT website
1948 births
Living people
Mathematicians from New Jersey
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Harvard University alumni
Princeton University alumni
University of Washington faculty
Northwestern University faculty
University of Notre Dame faculty
Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Science faculty
Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
Topologists |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frieda%20Zames | Frieda Zames (October 29, 1932 – June 16, 2005) was an American disability rights activist and mathematics professor. With her sister, Doris Zames Fleischer, Zames wrote The Disability Rights Movement: From Charity to Confrontation, a historical survey that has been used as a disability rights textbook.
Life and career
Zames was born on October 29, 1932, in Brooklyn and died on June 16, 2005, in Manhattan. Disabled by a childhood bout of polio, Zames was institutionalized for many years. Because of institutionalization and the school system's automatic placement of physically disabled students in non-rigorous academic tracks, Zames was mostly self-taught, according to friends.
Zames earned an undergraduate degree from Brooklyn College where she was Phi Beta Kappa. Zames' mother accompanied her to college every day and carried her books. Zames, then her family's breadwinner, worked as an actuary at MetLife, then went on to earn a doctorate in mathematics from New York University. In 1966 Zames was hired by the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) in Newark, where she taught classes ranging from remedial to graduate level. She retired with the title associate professor of Mathematics Emeritus in 2000.
Zames' activism began in the 1970s, when she joined the disability rights group Disabled in Action and began to use a motorized scooter, which enabled her to travel to protests more easily. In one of her first demonstrations, she joined a group of paraplegic activists in surrounding a Metropolitan Transportation Authority bus during rush hour to protest its lack of wheelchair access, part of a campaign which ultimately resulted in all MTA buses being fitted in wheelchair lifts beginning in 1981. Once the Americans with Disabilities Act took effect, Zames joined in a successful lawsuit to make the Empire State Building accessible. She also participated in campaigns to make the school at which she taught, NJIT, wheelchair accessible. Other work focused on curb cuts, restaurants, subways, ferries, public restrooms and public buildings. Zames' activism included civil disobedience, litigation and advocacy literature to obtain full participation in public life for disabled people.
According to her sister, Doris Zames Fleischer, Zames' sense of social justice included the struggles for equality for women, racial minorities, gays and other disfranchised people. Zames served on the board of Disabled in Action, the New York State Independent Living Coalition, the Disabilities Network of NYC, and WBAI, a radio station.
Awards and honors
Zames won the George Pólya Award of the Mathematical Association of America in 1978, for her work describing the Schwarz lantern, a shape demonstrating that the area of smooth surfaces cannot be accurately approximated by polyhedra that are close to the surface. The corner of First Avenue and East 4th Street in Manhattan was named Frieda Zames Way in 2009 in her honor.
References
Notes
1932 births
2005 deaths
Am |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuval%20Peres | Yuval Peres (; born 5 October 1963) is a mathematician known for his research in probability theory, ergodic theory, mathematical analysis, theoretical computer science, and in particular for topics such as fractals and Hausdorff measure, random walks, Brownian motion, percolation and Markov chain mixing times. He was born in Israel and obtained his Ph.D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1990 under the supervision of Hillel Furstenberg. He was a faculty member at the Hebrew University and the University of California at Berkeley, and a Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington. Peres has been accused of sexual harassment by several female scientists.
Career
After his Ph.D. Peres had postdoctoral positions at Stanford and Yale.
In 1993 Peres joined the statistics department at UC Berkeley. He later became a professor in both the mathematics and statistics departments. He was also a professor at the Hebrew University.
In 2006 Peres joined the Theory Group of Microsoft Research. By 2011 he was principal researcher at Microsoft Research and manager of the Microsoft Research Theory Group, an affiliate professor of mathematics at the University of Washington and an adjunct professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Recognition
Peres was awarded the Rollo Davidson Prize in 1995 and the Loève Prize in 2001. The work that led to the Loève Prize was surveyed in the Notices of the American Mathematical Society: "A key breakthrough was the observation that certain (hard to prove) intersection properties for Brownian motion and random walks are in fact equivalent to (easier to prove) survival properties of branching processes. This led ultimately to deep work on sample path properties of Brownian motion; for instance, on the fractal dimension of the frontier of two-dimensional Brownian motion and precise study of its thick and thin points and cover times."
Peres was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 2002.
In 2011, he was a co-recipient of the David P. Robbins Prize for work on the maximum overhang problem. That year he also delivered the Paul Turán Memorial Lecture. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. In 2016, he was elected a foreign associate of the National Academy of Sciences. In July 2017, he was a plenary lecturer at the Mathematical Congress of the Americas.
Allegations of sexual harassment
Peres has been accused of sexual harassment by several female scientists, including Dana Moshkovitz, Anima Anandkumar and Lisha Li. Moshkovitz said she was harassed by Peres on an informal job interview and she reported this to the Microsoft Theory Group. She also said that Peres was promoted shortly after her report.
Peres resigned from an affiliate position at the University of Washington in 2012. The university said he resigned “after receiving notice that the university would be investigating allegations of sexual harassment.”
In November 2018 th |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jun-iti%20Nagata | was a Japanese mathematician specializing in topology.
In 1956, Jun-iti Nagata earned his PhD from Osaka University under the direction of Kiiti Morita. He was the author of two standard graduate texts in topology: Modern Dimension Theory and Modern General Topology. His name is attached to the Nagata–Smirnov metrization theorem, which was proved independently by Nagata in 1950 and by Smirnov in 1951, as well as the Assouad–Nagata dimension of a metric space, which he introduced in a 1958 article.
Nagata became a professor emeritus at both Osaka Kyoiku University, where he taught for 10 years, and Osaka Electro-Communication University, where he taught for 5 years.
Works
Jun-iti Nagata: Modern Dimension Theory, Interscience Publishers (1965)
Jun-iti Nagata: Modern General Topology, John Wiley (1968),
Kiiti Morita – Jun-iti Nagata: Topics in General Topology, North-Holland (1989)
K.P. Hart, Jun-iti Nagata, and J.E. Vaughan: Encyclopedia of General Topology, Elsevier Science (August 16, 2004),
References
External links
Brief obituary notice by ams.org
20th-century Japanese mathematicians
21st-century Japanese mathematicians
Topologists
1925 births
2007 deaths
Osaka University alumni |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey%20Tikhonovsky | Sergey Ivanovich Tikhonovsky (; ; born 26 June 1990) is a Belarusian footballer who plays for Slavia Mozyr.
Career statistics
Club
Honors
Istiklol
Tajikistan Football League champion: 2018
Tajik Supercup winner: 2018
References
External links
1990 births
Living people
Belarusian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Belarusian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Tajikistan
Expatriate men's footballers in Kazakhstan
Tajikistan Higher League players
FC Torpedo-BelAZ Zhodino players
FC Bereza-2010 players
FC Rudensk players
FC Dnepr Mogilev players
FC Slavia Mozyr players
FC Vitebsk players
FC Istiklol players
FC Gorodeya players
FC Rukh Brest players
FC Dynamo Brest players
FC Kyzylzhar players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammadan%20%28footballer%29 | Muhammadan (born August 21, 1977 in Denpasar, Bali) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1977 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Sportspeople from Denpasar
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Deltras F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wahyudi | Wahyudi (born on April 4, 1978, in Kediri, East Java) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1978 births
Men's association football goalkeepers
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Deltras F.C. players
Persik Kediri players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Persema Malang players
PSAP Sigli players
People from Kediri (city)
Footballers from East Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman%20Batak | Herman Batak (born May 16, 1983 in Medan, North Sumatra) is a retired Indonesian footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1983 births
Men's association football goalkeepers
Living people
Footballers from Medan
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Bontang F.C. players
Deltras F.C. players
Persik Kediri players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
PSM Makassar players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barzeh%2C%20Syria | Barzeh or Barza (, also transliterated Berzé) is a municipality and a neighborhood to the north of Damascus, Syria. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Barzeh had a population of 47,339 in the 2004 census.
History
Barzeh's foundation dates back to at least Roman times. There is archaeological evidence of Roman and Aramean tombs in the area. Traditionally it has always been a town of the Ghouta, and therefore closely linked to agriculture. Rice, oil and olives and various types of fruit are produced. In the 20th century, it was absorbed into Damascus.
Syrian Civil War
The municipality has been active in the Syrian civil war. The Sunni Barzeh al-Balad neighborhood was largely pro-rebel. However, the neighboring Alawite "slum" Ish al-Warwar is largely pro-government. The Barzeh area has been under truce between the rebels and government since 2014.
On 1 April 2015, the rebels (Jaish al-Islam and the Free Syrian Army's First Brigade) launched a military campaign to expel the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant from the Barzeh and Qaboun neighborhoods, which ended in success three days later. On 8 February 2016, an IS car bomb targeting a government officer's club killed eight people in Masakin Barzeh.
On 29 May 2017 the Syrian government regained control of the entire district.
Neighborhoods
Al-Abbas (pop. 23,112)
Barza al-Balad (pop. 31,634)
Ish al-Warwar (pop. 20,458)
Al-Manara (pop. 10,199)
Masakin Barzeh (pop. 15,705)
An-Nuzha (pop. 6,488)
Population
1922: 2000 inhabitants
1935: 3500 inhabitants
1950: 4,239 inhabitants
1960: 6554 inhabitants
2004: 47,339 inhabitants
Education
The Higher Institute for Applied Sciences and Technology has its main campus in the Hameesh area of Barzeh.
References
Neighborhoods of Damascus |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%E2%80%9313%20FK%20Vojvodina%20season | The 2012–13 season was FK Vojvodina's 7th season in Serbian SuperLiga. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club played during the 2012–13 season.
Players
Squad information
Squad statistics
Matches
Serbian SuperLiga
Serbian Cup
UEFA Europa League
External links
Official website
FK Vojvodina seasons
Vojvodina
Vojvodina |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk%20queue | In queueing theory, a discipline within the mathematical theory of probability, a bulk queue (sometimes batch queue) is a general queueing model where jobs arrive in and/or are served in groups of random size. Batch arrivals have been used to describe large deliveries and batch services to model a hospital out-patient department holding a clinic once a week, a transport link with fixed capacity and an elevator.
Networks of such queues are known to have a product form stationary distribution under certain conditions. Under heavy traffic conditions a bulk queue is known to behave like a reflected Brownian motion.
Kendall's notation
In Kendall's notation for single queueing nodes, the random variable denoting bulk arrivals or service is denoted with a superscript, for example MX/MY/1 denotes an M/M/1 queue where the arrivals are in batches determined by the random variable X and the services in bulk determined by the random variable Y. In a similar way, the GI/G/1 queue is extended to GIX/GY/1.
Bulk service
Customers arrive at random instants according to a Poisson process and form a single queue, from the front of which batches of customers (typically with a fixed maximum size) are served at a rate with independent distribution. The equilibrium distribution, mean and variance of queue length are known for this model.
The optimal maximum size of batch, subject to operating cost constraints, can be modelled as a Markov decision process.
Bulk arrival
Optimal service-provision procedures to minimize long run expected cost have been published.
Waiting Time Distribution
The waiting time distribution of bulk Poisson arrival is presented in.
References
Single queueing nodes |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portugal%20national%20football%20team%20records%20and%20statistics | The following is a list of the Portugal national football team's competitive records and statistics.
Individual records
Player records
Most capped players
Players in bold are still active with Portugal.
Top goalscorers
Players in bold are still active for the national team.
Other records
Most matches played in World Cup 21 – Cristiano Ronaldo (2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 and 2022)
Most matches played in European Championship 25 – Cristiano Ronaldo (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020)
Oldest player (outfield and goalkeeper) 39 years, 9 months and 10 days – Pepe (6–1 against Switzerland on 6 December 2022)
Longest national career 20 years and 54 days – Cristiano Ronaldo (from 20 August 2003 to 13 October 2023)
Longest national career for an outfield player 20 years and 54 days – Cristiano Ronaldo (from 20 August 2003 to 13 October 2023)
Youngest debutant 17 years, 6 months and 24 days – Paulo Futre (5–0 against Finland on 21 September 1983)
Youngest player to reach 100 caps 27 years, 8 months and 11 days – Cristiano Ronaldo (1–1 against Northern Ireland on 16 October 2012)
Manager records
Goal records
Most goals scored in one World Cup 9 – Eusébio (1966)
Most goals scored in World Cups 9 – Eusébio (1966)
Most goals scored in one European Championship 5 – Cristiano Ronaldo (2020)
Most goals scored in European Championships 14 – Cristiano Ronaldo (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020)
Oldest goalscorer 39 years, 9 months and 10 days – Pepe (6–1 against Switzerland on 6 December 2022)
Youngest goalscorer 17 years, 9 months and 25 days – Fernando Chalana (2–1 against Cyprus on 5 December 1976)
Most hat-tricks 10 – Cristiano Ronaldo (includes four goals against Andorra on 7 October 2016 and Lithuania on 10 September 2019)
Most pokers 2 – Cristiano Ronaldo
Youngest player to score a hat-trick 20 years, 11 months and 4 days – André Silva (6–0 against Faroe Islands on 10 October 2016)
Competition records
Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
FIFA World Cup
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
UEFA European Championship
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out. Red border colour indicates that the tournament was held on home soil.
UEFA Nations League
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
**Group stage played home and away. Flag shown represents host nation for the finals stage. Red border colour indicates the finals stage will be held on home soil
FIFA Confederations Cup
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
Olympic Games
1968–1988 national amateur football team. Football at the Summer Olympics has been an under-23 tournament since 1992.
*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
Minor tournaments*Draws include knockout matches decided via penalty shoot-out.
All-time results
The following table shows Portugal's all-time international record, correct as of 29 March 2022.
Source: Portugal - Historical res |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%20in%20STEM%20fields | Many scholars and policymakers have noted that the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) have remained predominantly male with historically low participation among women since the origins of these fields in the 18th century during the Age of Enlightenment.
Scholars are exploring the various reasons for the continued existence of this gender disparity in STEM fields. Those who view this disparity as resulting from discriminatory forces are also seeking ways to redress this disparity within STEM fields (these are typically construed as well-compensated, high-status professions with universal career appeal).
History
Women's participation in science, technology, and engineering has been limited and also under-reported throughout most of history. This has been the case, with exceptions, until large-scale changes began around the 1970s. Scholars have discussed possible reasons and mechanisms behind the limitations such as ingrained gender roles, sexism, and sex differences in psychology. There has also been an effort among historians of science to uncover under-reported contributions of women.
The term STEM was first used in 2001, primarily in connection with the choice of education and career. Different STEM fields have different histories, but women's participation, although limited, has been seen throughout history. Science protoscience and mathematics have been practiced since ancient times, and during this time women have contributed to such fields as medicine, botany, astronomy, algebra, and geometry. In the Middle Ages in Europe and the Middle East, Christian monasteries and Islamic madrasas were places where women could work on such subjects as mathematics and the study of nature.
Universities in the Christian tradition began as places of education of a professional clergy that allowed no women, and the practice of barring women continued even after universities' missions broadened. Because women were generally barred from formal higher education until late in the 19th century, it was very difficult for them to enter specialized disciplines.
The development of industrial technology was dominated by men, and early technical achievements, such as the invention of the steam engine, were mainly due to men. Nevertheless, there are many examples of women's contributions to engineering.
Initially a "computer" was a person doing computations, who was often a woman. Working as a computer required conscientiousness, accuracy and speed. Some women who initially worked as human computers later advanced from doing simpler calculations to higher levels of work, where they specified tasks and algorithms and analyzed results.
Women's participation rates in the STEM fields started increasing noticeably in the 1970s and 1980s. Some fields, such as biotechnology, now have almost 50% participation of women.
Gender imbalance in STEM fields
Studies suggest that many factors contribute to the attitudes towards the achievement |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census%20in%20Botswana | The Population and Housing Census is a decennial census which is the once-a-decade population and housing count of all people in Botswana. This count is carried out by the Statistics Botswana (formerly Central Statistics Office).
The most recent census took place in 2022; the next census is scheduled for 2031.Through the census, Botswana systematically obtains/records information on demographic, social and economic characteristics, pertaining to all persons in the geographic boundaries of the country at a specified time. The Population and Housing Census aims to count all persons, vis. citizens, non-citizens, visitors, babies, elderly, etc. living in Botswana and determine the socio-economic and demographic characteristics of the population. Such characteristics include among others, the total number, geographic distribution by sex, age, migration patterns, education, housing characteristics, household sizes, etc. Therefore, the census covers all inhabitants in Botswana. The results of the census provide the Government and other stakeholders with relevant, reliable and timely baseline data and statistical information for development planning, policy formulation and service delivery as well as for monitoring and evaluation of development programs and plans.
Census is a project that is provided for in the Census Act of 1904 and Statistics Act of 2009. The population and Housing Census is a national exercise and it is implemented by the District Commissioners in their respective districts. Statistics Botswana, being the National Statistical Office is entrusted with the responsibility to coordinate the project. The Statistician General (SG) is the Principal Investigator responsible to Government for the conduct of the census while the District Commissioners (DCs) are the District Census Coordinators in the respective districts.
Geographic divisions
Botswana is made up of 10 administrative districts plus the two cities of Francistown and Gaborone. For census purposes, there are 28 census districts, which consist of; two
(2) cities, five (5) towns, 17 sub districts and four (4) districts with no sub-district.
Confidentiality
The Census Act and Statistics Act strictly stipulates the protection and confidentiality of individual's data obtained during the census. The law goes further to spell out penalties for those (census officials and members of the public) who violate it.
History
Bechuanaland Protectorate
The seven censuses of Botswana before its independence happened irregularly. Due to the Anglo-Boer War, the first census of Bechuanaland Protectorate, originally set to occur in 1901, took place on 17 April 1904. The 1931 census was postponed to 1936 because of the Great Depression. The early censuses were unreliable and took several years to tabulate; the results were outdated by the time they were calculated.
Post-independence
There have been five censuses after the independence of Botswana, each occurring every ten years in th |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011%20Botswana%20population%20and%20housing%20census | The 2011 Botswana population and housing census was the latest national census of Botswana. The enumeration was managed by the Statistics Botswana (formerly Central Statistics Office) and took place over ten days starting on 22 August 2011. The census counted a total population of 2,024,787, a 20.5% increase from the 2001 census.
Cost
The total budget for the 2011 census was 243,575,993 pula (US$35.3 million as of August 2011) with the Botswana government funding all the costs. Over P100,000,000 was planned to pay for personnel.
Controversy
Bushmen living in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve boycotted the census in response to an earlier situation where the Bushmen were not provided polling stations in the 2009 election. Jumanda Gakelebone spoke on behalf of the Bushmen, saying that "the government does not recognise us [the Bushmen] as a people. So why count us? They should count their own people and leave us alone."
See also
Census in Botswana
References
External links
Results of the 2011 Census (PDF)
Sample questionnaire (PDF)
Censuses in Botswana
2011 in Botswana
Botswana |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Learning%20Lab | The Learning Lab is a private tuition and enrichment centre based in Singapore. It offers programmes in English, Mathematics and Science at the preschool, primary, secondary and pre-tertiary levels. The Learning Lab also offers classes for GEP students and for both the ‘O’ Level track and Integrated Programme.
Description
The Learning Lab runs academic enrichment and tuition programmes for pre-primary, primary, secondary and pre-tertiary students.
The Learning Lab also offers preparatory classes for the Gifted Education Programme screening test and selection test and for the Direct School Admission (DSA) programme.
The Learning Lab has eight centres across Singapore, and is headquartered in United Square.
In September 2014, U.S.-based private equity fund Advent invested in The Learning Lab in a buyout deal. The deal is estimated to be in the region of $300 million.
See also
Gifted Education Programme (Singapore)
Education in Singapore
References
Schools in Singapore |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1945%E2%80%9346%20Galatasaray%20S.K.%20season | The 1945–46 season was Galatasaray SK's 42nd in existence and the club's 34th consecutive season in the Istanbul Football League.
Squad statistics
Competitions
Istanbul Football League
Classification
Matches
Kick-off listed in local time (EEST)
Milli Küme Istanbul qualifying round
Classification
Matches
Istanbul Futbol Kupası
Matches
References
Atabeyoğlu, Cem. 1453-1991 Türk Spor Tarihi Ansiklopedisi. page(155-159).(1991) An Grafik Basın Sanayi ve Ticaret AŞ
Tekil, Süleyman. Dünden bugüne Galatasaray, (1983), page(88, 123-125, 184). Arset Matbaacılık Kol.Şti.
Futbol vol.2. Galatasaray. Page: 565, 586. Tercüman Spor Ansiklopedisi. (1981)Tercüman Gazetecilik ve Matbaacılık AŞ.
1940 Milli Küme Maçları. Türk Futbol Tarihi vol.1. page(81). (June 1992) Türkiye Futbol Federasyonu Yayınları.
External links
Galatasaray Sports Club Official Website
Turkish Football Federation - Galatasaray A.Ş.
uefa.com - Galatasaray AŞ
Galatasaray S.K. (football) seasons
Turkish football clubs 1945–46 season
1940s in Istanbul |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%E2%80%9313%20NK%20Slaven%20Belupo%20season | This article shows statistics of individual players for the Slaven Belupo football club. It also lists all matches that Slaven Belupo played in the 2012–13 season.
First-team squad
Competitions
Overall
Prva HNL
Classification
Results summary
Results by round
Matches
Prva HNL
Europa League
Croatian Cup
Player seasonal records
Competitive matches only. Updated to games played 26 May 2013.
Top scorers
Source: Competitive matches
Appearances and goals
References
Croatian football clubs 2012–13 season |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joice%20Sorongan | Joice Sorongan (born October 18, 1975) is a former Indonesian footballer and current Goalkeeping coach of Persipura Jayapura.
Club statistics
References
External links
1975 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Central Sulawesi
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Persita Tangerang players
Persma Manado players
Persidafon Dafonsoro players
Persikab Bandung players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
PS Mitra Kukar players
Men's association football goalkeepers
Association football goalkeeping coaches |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telfit | Telfit (; or Tilfit) is a Palestinian village in the Jenin Governorate of Palestine, in the northern West Bank, located southeast of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) census, the village had a population of 238 in 2007 and 439 by 2017.
Situated on an isolated tell in the Zababdeh Valley, Telfit has an elevation of 390 meters above sea level. Nearby localities include Kufeir to the south, Zababdeh to the southwest, Qabatiya to the west, Umm at-Tut to the north, Jalqamus and al-Mughayyir to the northeast and Raba to the southeast. The principal water source is Ein Ginai, 6 kilometers to the west and there are 35 cisterns in the village. In 1980 Telfit's built-up area consisted of 15 dunams.
History
The northern and westerns parts of Telfit contain ruins dating to the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods between the 5th-8th centuries. Ancient building material is used in some of the houses.
Ottoman era
In 1838, during the Ottoman era, ‘’Telfit’’ was noted as a Muslim village in the Haritheh area, north of Nablus.
The PEF's Survey of Western Palestine noted in 1882 that the place (then called "Khurbet Telfit") had modern masonry.
British Mandate era
In the 1922 census of Palestine, conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Telfit had a population of 43; 24 Muslims and 19 Christians, where the Christians were all Orthodox. The population increased in the 1931 census to 120; all Muslim, in a total of 26 houses.
In the 1945 statistics the population was 170; all Muslims, with 6,627 dunams of land, according to an official land and population survey. 194 dunams were used for plantations and irrigable land, 2,726 dunams for cereals, while a total of 3,707 dunams were non-cultivable land.
1948-1967
In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, Telfit came under Jordanian rule.
post-1967
Since the Six-Day War in 1967, Telfit has been under Israeli occupation.
References
Bibliography
External links
Welcome To Tilfit
Tilfit, Welsome to Palestine
Survey of Western Palestine, Map 12: IAA, Wikimedia commons
Villages in the West Bank |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20D.%20T.%20A.%20Elliott | Peter D. T. A. Elliott (born 1941) is an American mathematician, working in the field of number theory. He is one of the two mathematicians after whom the Elliott–Halberstam conjecture is named.
He obtained his PhD in 1969, from the University of Cambridge, under the supervision of Harold Davenport. He currently teaches at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Books
Probabilistic Number Theory I - Mean Value Theorems, Spring-Verlag New York, 1979
Probabilistic Number Theory II - Central Limit Theorems, Springer-Verlag New York, 1980
Arithmetic Functions and Integer Products, Springer-Verlag New York, 1985
Duality in Analytic Number Theory, Cambridge University Press, 1997
Analytic and Elementary Number Theory - A Tribute to Mathematical Legend Paul Erdos, Krishnaswami Alladi, Andrew Granville, and G. Tenenbaum, Springer US, 1998
References
External links
Publications list at CU Experts site
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Number theorists
1941 births
Living people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tri%20Rahmad%20Priadi | Tri Rahmad Priadi (born 9 April 1989, in Bukittinggi) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a centre back.
Club statistics
Honours
Club
Pelita Jaya U-21
Indonesia Super League U-21: 2008-09; runner-up 2009-10
Persiraja Banda Aceh
Liga 2 third place (play-offs): 2019
References
External links
Tri Rahmad Priadi at Liga Indonesia
1989 births
Men's association football central defenders
Living people
Minangkabau people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier League players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Madura United F.C. players
Persibo Bojonegoro players
PSP Padang players
Perssu 1977 Sumenep players
KSB West Sumbawa players
PSPS Riau players
RANS Nusantara F.C. players
Persiraja Banda Aceh players
Semen Padang F.C. players
PSCS Cilacap players
People from Bukittinggi
Sportspeople from West Sumatra
21st-century Indonesian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruben%20Sanadi | Ruben Karel Sanadi (born on 8 January 1987 in Biak, Indonesia) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a left back for Liga 2 club PSBS Biak.
Career statistics
International
Honours
Club
Persipura Jayapura
Indonesia Super League: 2013
Indonesia Soccer Championship A: 2016
Individual
Liga 1 Team of the Season: 2019
References
External links
Ruben Sanadi at Liga Indonesia
1988 births
Living people
People from Biak
Indonesian men's footballers
Sportspeople from Papua
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persigubin Pegunungan Bintang players
Persikota Tangerang players
Persipasi Bekasi players
PSMS Medan players
Madura United F.C. players
Persipura Jayapura players
Persebaya Surabaya players
Bhayangkara Presisi Indonesia F.C. players
PSBS Biak players
Indonesia men's youth international footballers
Indonesia men's international footballers
Footballers from Papua
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon%20Brendle | Simon Brendle (born June 1981) is a German-American mathematician working in differential geometry and nonlinear partial differential equations. He received his Dr. rer. nat. from Tübingen University under the supervision of Gerhard Huisken (2001). He was a professor at Stanford University (2005–2016), and is currently a professor at Columbia University. He has held visiting positions at MIT, ETH Zürich, Princeton University, and Cambridge University.
Contributions to mathematics
Simon Brendle has solved major open problems regarding the Yamabe equation in conformal geometry. This includes his counterexamples to the compactness conjecture for the Yamabe problem, and the proof of the convergence of the Yamabe flow in all dimensions (conjectured by Richard Hamilton). In 2007, he proved the differentiable sphere theorem (in collaboration with Richard Schoen), a fundamental problem in global differential geometry. In 2012, he proved the Hsiang–Lawson's conjecture, a longstanding problem in minimal surface theory. He has also worked on singularity formation in the mean curvature flow and Ricci flow, solving a question concerning the uniqueness of self-similar solutions to the Ricci flow which arose in the context of Grigori Perelman's work.
Honors and awards
For his contributions to differential geometry he was awarded an EMS Prize in 2012. He delivered the 2012 Euler Lecture and the 2011 Takagi Lectures. He received an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship in 2006. In December 2013, he was named as the recipient of the Bôcher Prize of the American Mathematical Society. In 2017, he received a Simons Investigator Award and the Fermat Prize. In 2023, he received the Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics.
Main publications
Blow-up phenomena for the Yamabe equation, Journal of the AMS 21, pp. 951–979, 2008
Convergence of the Yamabe flow in dimension 6 and higher, Inventiones Mathematicae 170, pp. 541–576, 2007
(joint with R. Schoen) Manifolds with 1/4 pinched curvature are space forms, Journal of the AMS, 22, 2009, pp. 287 (Differentiable Sphere Theorem)
Ricci Flow and the Sphere Theorem, American Mathematical Society, Graduate Studies in Mathematics, vol. 111, 2010
(joint with R. Schoen) Curvature, sphere theorem and the Ricci flow, Bulletin of the AMS, 48, 2011, pp. 1–32, Online
(joint with R. Schoen) Riemannian manifolds of positive curvature, Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians (ICM 2010), Hyderabad, India, August 19–27, 2010. Vol. I, pp. 449–475, 2011
(joint with F. C. Marques, A. Neves) Deformations of the hemisphere that increase scalar curvature, Inventiones Mathematicae 185, 2011, pp. 175–197, Preprint (Min-Oo Conjecture)
Rotational symmetry of self-similar solutions to the Ricci flow Inventiones Mathematicae 194, 2013, pp. 731–764
Embedded minimal tori in and the Lawson conjecture, Acta Mathematica 211, 2013, pp. 177–190, Preprint (Lawson Conjecture)
Embedded self-similar shrinkers of genus 0, Annals of Mathematics 183, 715-72 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maqdis%20Shalim%20Alfarizi | Maqdis Shalim Alfarizi (born April 8, 1989) is an Indonesian former footballer who played as a midfielder.
Club statistics
Honours
Clubs
Pelita Jaya U-21 :
Indonesia Super League U-21 champions: (2008-09)
Indonesia Super League U-21 runner-up: (2009-10)
References
External links
1989 births
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Madura United F.C. players
Dewa United F.C. players
People from Cirebon
Footballers from West Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipan%20Priyanto | Ipan Priyanto (born January 19, 1990 in Semarang) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Pelita Jaya U-21 :
Indonesia Super League U-21 runner-up : 1 (2009-10)
References
External links
1990 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Javanese people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Pesik Kuningan players
Madura United F.C. players
PSIS Semarang players
Persitara Jakarta Utara players
PSGC Ciamis players
Footballers from Semarang
21st-century Indonesian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System%20of%20bilinear%20equations | In mathematics, a system of bilinear equations is a special sort of system of polynomial equations, where each equation equates a bilinear form with a constant (possibly zero). More precisely, given two sets of variables represented as coordinate vectors and y, then each equation of the system can be written where, is an integer whose value ranges from 1 to the number of equations, each is a matrix, and each is a real number. Systems of bilinear equations arise in many subjects including engineering, biology, and statistics.
See also
Systems of linear equations
References
Charles R. Johnson, Joshua A. Link 'Solution theory for complete bilinear systems of equations' - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/nla.676/abstract
Vinh, Le Anh 'On the solvability of systems of bilinear equations in finite fields' - https://arxiv.org/abs/0903.1156
Yang Dian 'Solution theory for system of bilinear equations' - https://digitalarchive.wm.edu/handle/10288/13726
Scott Cohen and Carlo Tomasi. 'Systems of bilinear equations'. Technical report, Stanford, CA, USA, 1997.- ftp://reports.stanford.edu/public_html/cstr/reports/cs/tr/97/1588/CS-TR-97-1588.pdf
Equations |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James%20Dugundji | James Dugundji (August 30, 1919 – January 8, 1985) was an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the University of Southern California.
Dugundji's parents emigrated from Greece to New York City, where Dugundji was born in 1919. He studied at New York University, graduating with a B.A. in 1940, and went on to graduate school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, studying there under the supervision of Witold Hurewicz. After two years of study at UNC, Dugundji joined the United States Air Force for the duration of World War II, and then completed his doctorate from 1946 to 1948 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to which his advisor had moved. He then took a faculty position at the University of Southern California, where he remained for the rest of his career. He was also a long-time member of the editorial boards of two mathematics journals, the Pacific Journal of Mathematics and Topology and its Applications.
Dugundji is the author of the textbook Topology (Allyn and Bacon, 1966), on general topology. Reviewer M. Edelstein wrote that this was "one of the best among the numerous books on the subject", and it went through numerous reprintings. With Andrzej Granas he also wrote the research monograph Fixed Point Theory; originally planned as a two-volume series, the first volume was published by Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe in 1982, and the complete text was published as a single volume in 2003 by Springer-Verlag. Reviewer A. G. Kartsatos called the completed volume "the most comprehensive, well-written and complete book on fixed point theory to date".
In his own research, as well as producing highly cited works on problems of pure mathematics such as the Tietze extension theorem, Dugundji did important early work in cheminformatics. With co-authors I. Ugi, R. Kopp and D. Marquarding, he wrote a book on this subject as well, Perspectives in Theoretical Stereochemistry (Springer, 1984).
In 2005, an international conference on fixed point theorems was held in Dugundji's memory in Będlewo, Poland.
Selected publications
References
1919 births
1985 deaths
20th-century American mathematicians
American people of Greek descent
Scientists from New York City
Topologists
New York University alumni
Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
University of Southern California faculty
Mathematicians from New York (state) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20Goldhammer | Arthur Goldhammer (born November 17, 1946) is an American academic and translator.
Early life
Goldhammer studied mathematics at MIT, gaining his PhD in 1973.
Career
Since 1977 he has worked as a translator. He is based at the Center for European Studies at Harvard.
Goldhammer is a four-time winner of the French-American Foundation translation prize, including for his translations of Alexis de Tocqueville's The Ancien Régime and the French Revolution and Democracy in America.
Goldhammer's translation of Thomas Piketty's book Capital in the Twenty-First Century became a New York Times best-seller.
Personal life
Goldhammer lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Works translated
The institutions of France under the absolute monarchy, 1598-1789 by Roland Mousnier, 2 vols, 1979–1984.
The three orders: feudal society imagined by Georges Duby, 1980.
Time, work & culture in the Middle Ages by Jacques Le Goff, 1980.
The Arabs by Maxime Rodinson, 1981.
Medieval slavery and liberation by Pierre Dockès, 1981.
The heights of power: an essay on the power elite in France: with a new postscript, 1981 by Pierre Birnbaum, 1982.
Nature's second kingdom: explorations of vegetality in the eighteenth century by François Delaporte, 1982.
The psychiatric society by Robert Castel, Françoise Castel, and Anne Lovell, 1982.
The sociology of the state by Bertrand Badie and Pierre Birnbaum, 1983.
The birth of purgatory by Jacques Le Goff, 1984
Understanding Imperial Russia: state and society in the old regime by Marc Raeff, 1984
How New York stole the idea of modern art: abstract expressionism, freedom, and the cold war by Serge Guilbaut, 1985
Montaigne in motion by Jean Starobinski, 1985.
Disease and civilization: the cholera in Paris, 1832 by François Delaporte, 1986.
Outside: selected writings by Marguerite Duras, 1986.
To be a slave in Brazil, 1550-1888 by Katia de Queirós Mattoso, 1986.
Homosexuality in Greek myth by Bernard Sergent, 1986.
The poor in the Middle Ages: an essay in social history by Michel Mollat, 1986.
From pagan Rome to Byzantium. A history of private life, vol. I, ed. Paul Veyne. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1987.
In the beginning was love: psychoanalysis and faith by Julia Kristeva, 1987
Ideology and rationality in the history of the life sciences by Georges Canguilhem, 1988.
Revelations of the medieval world. A history of private life, vol. II, ed. Georges Duby and Philippe Aries, 1988.
The medieval imagination by Jacques Le Goff. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, transparency and obstruction by Jean Starobinski, 1988.
Wind spirit: an autobiography by Michel Tournier, 1988.
Passions of the Renaissance. A history of private life, vol. III, ed. Roger Chartier, 1989.
Dionysos at large by Marcel Detienne, 1989.
A critical dictionary of the French Revolution, ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf, 1989.
The living eye by Jean Starobinski, 1989.
From the |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumtaz%20Akhtar | Mumtaz Akhtar (born 8 December 1988) is an Indian professional footballer who plays as a central midfielder for Pune in the I-League.
Career statistics
References
External links
Pune Football Club profile.
1988 births
Living people
Indian men's footballers
Mohammedan SC (Kolkata) players
United Sikkim FC players
Pune FC players
Men's association football midfielders
Footballers from Punjab, India
I-League players
I-League 2nd Division players
Punjabi people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instituto%20Nacional%20de%20Estat%C3%ADstica%20de%20Timor-Leste | The Instituto Nacional de Estatística de Timor-Leste is the national government agency for statistics of East Timor. It is responsible for compiling and disseminating data on the people, society, economy and environment of the nation and the national censuses.
The agency was formed in 2023 as the successor to the Direcção Nacional de Estatística (Portuguese for National Directorate of Statistics). The DNE was a state department under the Directorate-General of Analysis and Research of the Ministry of Finance,
References
External links
East Timor
Demographics of East Timor
Organizations based in East Timor
Government of East Timor |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir%20Uspensky%20%28mathematician%29 | Vladimir Andreyevich Uspensky (Russian: Влади́мир Андре́евич Успе́нский; 27 November 1930 – 27 June 2018) was a Russian mathematician, linguist, writer, doctor of physics and mathematics (1964). He was the author of numerous papers on mathematical logic and linguistics. In addition, he also penned a number of memoir essays. Uspensky initiated a reform of linguistic education in Russia.
Biography
Uspensky graduated in 1952 from the MSU Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics (Lomonosov Moscow State University). He was a student of Andrey Kolmogorov. He was the head of the Chair of Mathematical Logic and Theory of Algorithms in the MSU Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics (1995) and one of the founders of the Structural Linguistics branch (now the Theoretical and Applied Linguistics branch) in the MSU Faculty of Philology, where he also taught.
He was the author of many books and of over 100 research papers. He prepared 25 candidates and 4 doctors of sciences. His book "The Apology of Mathematics" received in 2010 the “Enlightener" award in the field of natural and exact sciences. He was a distinguished professor at the Moscow State University (1998).
His brother Boris Uspensky is a distinguished Russian philologist and mythographer.
References
V.A. Uspensky. Труды по нематематике. М.: ОГИ, 2002, т. I—II. (т.1), (т.2)
Chapter from the book "Апология математики"
V.A. Uspensky: Seven reflections on the themes of philosophy of mathematics
V.A. Uspensky: Lecture on mathematics as part of the culture, and the Poincare conjecture
External links
Mathematics Genealogy Project entry
MSU home page
Dynkin Collection entry with video interviews
Russian listing of publications
Math-Net.ru list of publications, including video lectures
1930 births
2018 deaths
Linguists from Russia
Russian mathematicians
Russian non-fiction writers
Writers from Moscow
Moscow State University alumni
Academic staff of Moscow State University
Soviet mathematicians |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunnett%27s%20test | In statistics, Dunnett's test is a multiple comparison procedure developed by Canadian statistician Charles Dunnett to compare each of a number of treatments with a single control. Multiple comparisons to a control are also referred to as many-to-one comparisons.
History
Dunnett's test was developed in 1955; an updated table of critical values was published in 1964.
Multiple Comparisons Problem
The multiple comparisons, multiplicity or multiple testing problem occurs when one considers a set of statistical inferences simultaneously or infers a subset of parameters selected based on the observed values. The major issue in any discussion of multiple-comparison procedures is the question of the probability of Type I errors. Most differences among alternative techniques result from different approaches to the question of how to control these errors. The problem is in part technical; but it is really much more a subjective question of how you want to define the error rate and how large you are willing to let the maximum possible error rate be.
Dunnett's test are well known and widely used in multiple comparison procedure for simultaneously comparing, by interval estimation or hypothesis testing, all active treatments with a control when sampling from a distribution where the normality assumption is reasonable. Dunnett's test is designed to hold the family-wise error rate at or below when performing multiple comparisons of treatment group with control.
Uses of Dunnett’s test
The original work on Multiple Comparisons problem was made by Tukey and Scheffé. Their method was a general one, which considered all kinds of pairwise comparisons. Tukey's and Scheffé's methods allow any number of comparisons among a set of sample means. On the other hand, Dunnett's test only compares one group with the others, addressing a special case of multiple comparisons problem — pairwise comparisons of multiple treatment groups with a single control group. In the general case, where we compare each of the pairs, we make comparisons (where k is the number of groups), but in the treatment vs. controls case we will make only comparisons. If in the case of treatment and control groups we were to use the more general Tukey's and Scheffé's methods, they can result in unnecessarily wide confidence intervals. Dunnett's test takes into consideration the special structure of comparing treatment against control, yielding narrower confidence intervals.
It is very common to use Dunnett's test in medical experiments, for example comparing blood count measurements on three groups of animals, one of which served as a control while the other two were treated with two different drugs. Another common use of this method is among agronomists: agronomists may want to study the effect of certain chemicals added to the soil on crop yield, so they will leave some plots untreated (control plots) and compare them to the plots where chemicals were added to the soil (treatment plots).
Formal |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luca%20Pontigo | Luca Alonso Pontigo Marín (, born 25 November 1994) is a Chilean footballer that currently plays for Primera B side Deportes Copiapó as a striker.
Career statistics
Honours
Deportes Santa Cruz
Segunda División: 2018
Coquimbo Unido
Primera B: 2021
References
External links
1987 births
Living people
Footballers from Santiago
Chilean men's footballers
Colo-Colo footballers
Colo-Colo B footballers
Deportes Magallanes footballers
Rangers de Talca footballers
Deportes Iberia footballers
Real Juventud San Joaquín footballers
Independiente de Cauquenes footballers
Deportes Santa Cruz footballers
Deportes Copiapó footballers
Coquimbo Unido footballers
Chilean Primera División players
Segunda División Profesional de Chile players
Primera B de Chile players
Men's association football forwards |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Dinu | Robert Dinu (born 4 January 1974) is a Romanian former water polo player who competed in the 1996 Summer Olympics.
See also
Romania men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
1974 births
Living people
Romanian male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Romania
Water polo players at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Place of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelu%20Lisac | Gelu Lisac (born 19 November 1967) is a Romanian former water polo player who competed in the 1996 Summer Olympics.
See also
Romania men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
1967 births
Living people
Romanian male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Romania
Water polo players at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Place of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andesi%20Setyo%20Prabowo | Andesi Setyo Prabowo (born October 1, 1989) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Liga 3 club Persikasi Bekasi.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Pelita Jaya U-21
Indonesia Super League U-21: 2008-09
Indonesia Super League U-21 runner-up: 2009-10
PSCS Cilacap
Indonesia Soccer Championship B: 2016
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Men's association football midfielders
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Madura United F.C. players
Persibas Banyumas players
PSCS Cilacap players
PSGC Ciamis players
People from Banyumas Regency
Footballers from Central Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandru%20Dedov | Alexandru Dedov (born 26 July 1989) is a Moldovan professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Zimbru.
Career statistics
International goals
Scores and results list Moldova's goal tally first.HonoursFK VentspilsVirsliga: 2008Dacia ChişinăuMoldovan National Division: 2010–11Sheriff TiraspolMoldovan National Division: 2011–12Zimbru Chișinău'
Moldovan Cup: 2013–14
Moldovan Super Cup: 2014
References
External links
Profile at zimbru.md
1989 births
Living people
Moldovan men's footballers
Moldovan expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
FK Ventspils players
FC Zimbru Chișinău players
FC Sheriff Tiraspol players
ASA 2013 Târgu Mureș players
Zira FK players
FC Dacia Chișinău players
FC Academia Chișinău players
FC Milsami Orhei players
FC Petrocub Hîncești players
Liga I players
Azerbaijan Premier League players
Moldovan Super Liga players
Latvian Higher League players
Moldovan expatriate sportspeople in Romania
Moldovan expatriate sportspeople in Latvia
Moldovan expatriate sportspeople in Azerbaijan
Expatriate men's footballers in Romania
Expatriate men's footballers in Latvia
Expatriate men's footballers in Azerbaijan
Moldova men's international footballers
Footballers from Chișinău |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haim%20Gaifman | Haim Gaifman (born 1934) is a logician, probability theorist, and philosopher of language who is professor of philosophy at Columbia University.
Education and career
In 1958 he received his M.Sc. at Hebrew University. Then in 1962, he received his Ph.D. at University of California, Berkeley under Alfred Tarski on the topic of infinite Boolean algebras. Since, he has held various permanent and visiting positions in mathematics, philosophy and computer science departments. While he was professor of mathematics at the Hebrew University, he taught courses in philosophy and directed the program in History and Philosophy of Science.
Philosophical work
Gaifman works in mathematical logic and developed the iterated ultrapower technique in set theory and models of Peano arithmetic. Further, he has results in the foundations of probability, defining probabilities on first-order and on richer languages. He has also worked in philosophy of language, philosophy of mathematics, and theoretical computer science.
References
External links
Works by Haim Gaifman
Haim Gaifman personal home page
Living people
Columbia University faculty
American logicians
Philosophers of language
Set theorists
21st-century American philosophers
1934 births |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolaos%20Christoforidis | Nikolaos Christoforidis (born 11 June 1965) is a Greek former water polo player who competed in the 1988 Summer Olympics.
See also
Greece men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
1965 births
Living people
Greek male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Greece
Water polo players at the 1988 Summer Olympics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kafr%20Qud | Kafr Qud (, also spelled Kafr Qad) is a Palestinian village in the Jenin Governorate in the northern West Bank, located west of Jenin. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) census, it had a population of 1,143 in 2007 and 1,553 in 2017.
History
The village is situated on an ancient site, with cisterns cut out of rock, and old stones reused in housing.
Pottery sherds from the Persian, Hellenistic, early and late Roman, Byzantine, early Muslim and Medieval eras have been found here.
Ottoman era
Kafr Qud, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517, and in the census of 1596, the village appeared as "Kafr Qud" in the nahiya of Jabal Sami in the liwa of Nablus. It had a population of 19 households and 5 bachelors, all Muslim. The villagers paid a fixed tax-tare of 33.3% on various agricultural products, including wheat, barley, summer crops, olive trees, goats and beehives, in addition to occasional revenues; a total of 2,567 akçe.
Edward Robinson identified Kafr Qud with "Caparcotia" when he passed by on June, 1838, part of the esh–Sha'rawiyeh esh–Shurkiyeh District.
On 14 June 1870 Victor Guérin noted that Kafr Qud was "hidden in the mountains with groves of olives and fig trees ... and very probably the place is Caparcotani of Ptolemy and the Peutinger map." He estimated the population to be 300.
In 1870/1871 (1288 AH), an Ottoman census listed the village in the nahiya (sub-district) of al-Sha'rawiyya al-Sharqiyya.
In 1882 the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine described Kafr Qud as a "good-sized village in a recess among the hills.”
British Mandate era
In the 1922 census of Palestine, conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Kufr Qud had a population of 161; 153 Muslims and 8 Christians, where the Christians were all Orthodox. This was almost unchanged in the 1931 census, when Kafr Qud had 41 occupied houses and a population of 162; 9 Christians and the rest Muslim.
In the 1945 statistics, the population was 250; 240 Muslims and 10 Christians, with 5463 dunams of land, according to an official land and population survey. 908 dunams were used for plantations and irrigable land, 2,170 dunams for cereals, while 14 dunams were built-up (urban) land.
Jordanian era
In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, Kafr Qud came under Jordanian rule. It was annexed by Jordan in 1950.
In 1961, the population was 362 persons.
Post-1967
Since the Six-Day War in 1967, Kafr Qud has been under Israeli occupation. The population Kafar Qud in the 1967 census conducted by Israel was 374, of whom 110 originated from the Israeli territory.
Geography
Kafr Qud is situated in the northern Sahl Arraba on narrow ravine below the Jabal Shibli mountain to the north. It has an average elevation of 330 meters above sea level. The Bir al-Balad (also known as "Bir Kafr Qud") spring inside the village serves as the closest source of water. It is located south of th |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stavros%20Giannopoulos | Stavros Giannopoulos (born 12 July 1961) is a Greek former water polo player who competed in the 1984 Summer Olympics.
See also
Greece men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
1961 births
Living people
Greek male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Greece
Water polo players at the 1984 Summer Olympics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ioannis%20Giannouris | Ioannis Giannouris (born 13 January 1958) is a retired Greek water polo player who competed in the 1980 Summer Olympics.
See also
Greece men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
1958 births
Living people
Greek male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Greece
Water polo players at the 1980 Summer Olympics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimitrios%20Konstas | Dimitrios Konstas is a Greek former water polo player who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics.
See also
Greece men's Olympic water polo team records and statistics
List of men's Olympic water polo tournament goalkeepers
References
External links
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Greek male water polo players
Water polo goalkeepers
Olympic water polo players for Greece
Olympiacos Water Polo Club players
Water polo players at the 1972 Summer Olympics
Ethnikos Piraeus Water Polo Club players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dries%20Wuytens | Dries Wuytens (born 18 March 1991) is a Belgian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Beveren in the Belgian First Division B.
Career statistics
Honours
Club
Willem II
Eerste Divisie (1): 2013–14
References
External links
1991 births
Living people
Belgian men's footballers
Beerschot A.C. players
Willem II (football club) players
Heracles Almelo players
Sparta Rotterdam players
Sektzia Ness Ziona F.C. players
S.K. Beveren players
Belgian Pro League players
Challenger Pro League players
Eredivisie players
Eerste Divisie players
Israeli Premier League players
Belgian expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in the Netherlands
Expatriate men's footballers in Israel
Belgian expatriate sportspeople in the Netherlands
Belgian expatriate sportspeople in Israel
Men's association football defenders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miju%C5%A1ko%20Bojovi%C4%87 | Mijuško Bojović (born 9 August 1988) is a Montenegrin professional footballer who plays as a defender for Inđija in the Serbian First League.
Club statistics
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Pljevlja
Men's association football central defenders
Montenegrin men's footballers
Montenegro men's under-21 international footballers
FK Rudar Pljevlja players
R. Charleroi S.C. players
S.K. Beveren players
Enosis Neon Paralimni FC players
Gyirmót FC Győr players
Újpest FC players
Shamakhi FK players
Montenegrin First League players
Belgian Pro League players
Cypriot First Division players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Azerbaijan Premier League players
Montenegrin expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Belgium
Expatriate men's footballers in Cyprus
Expatriate men's footballers in Hungary
Expatriate men's footballers in Azerbaijan
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Belgium
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Cyprus
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Hungary
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Azerbaijan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symlet | In applied mathematics, symlet wavelets are a family of wavelets. They are a modified version of Daubechies wavelets with increased symmetry.
References
Wavelets |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C4%83zvan%20Tincu | Răzvan Tincu (born 15 July 1987) is a Romanian footballer who plays as a defender for Liga I club Politehnica Iași, which he captains.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Politehnica Iași
Liga II: 2011–12, 2022–23
Concordia Chiajna
Cupa Ligii runner-up: 2015–16
Sepsi OSK
Cupa României: 2021–22
References
External links
1987 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Satu Mare
Romanian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Liga I players
Liga II players
Liga III players
FC Rapid București players
FC Politehnica Iași (2010) players
FC Botoșani players
CS Concordia Chiajna players
Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe players
Cypriot First Division players
Doxa Katokopias FC players
Romanian expatriate men's footballers
Romanian expatriate sportspeople in Cyprus
Expatriate men's footballers in Cyprus |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogdan%20Mitrea | Bogdan Alexandru Mitrea (born 29 September 1987) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Liga I club Universitatea Cluj.
Career statistics
Club
International
International goals
Honours
SESO Iara
Liga IV – Cluj County: 2007–08
Studențesc Iași
Liga II: 2011–12
Sepsi OSK
Cupa României: 2021–22
Supercupa României: 2022
Individual
Liga I Team of the Season: 2020–21
References
External links
1987 births
Living people
Footballers from Cluj-Napoca
Romanian men's footballers
Romania men's international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Liga I players
Liga II players
Liga III players
FC Universitatea Cluj players
CSM Câmpia Turzii players
FC Politehnica Iași (2010) players
FC Viitorul Constanța players
FC Steaua București players
Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe players
CS Universitatea Craiova players
Serie B players
Ascoli Calcio 1898 FC players
Cypriot First Division players
AEL Limassol players
Doxa Katokopias FC players
FC Spartak Trnava players
Slovak First Football League players
Romanian expatriate men's footballers
Romanian expatriate sportspeople in Italy
Expatriate men's footballers in Italy
Romanian expatriate sportspeople in Cyprus
Expatriate men's footballers in Cyprus
Romanian expatriate sportspeople in Slovakia
Expatriate men's footballers in Slovakia |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truncated%2016-cell%20honeycomb | In four-dimensional Euclidean geometry, the truncated 16-cell honeycomb (or cantic tesseractic honeycomb) is a uniform space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 4-space. It is constructed by 24-cell and truncated 16-cell facets.
Alternate names
Truncated hexadecachoric tetracomb / Truncated hexadecachoric honeycomb
Related honeycombs
See also
Regular and uniform honeycombs in 4-space:
Tesseractic honeycomb
16-cell honeycomb
24-cell honeycomb
Rectified 24-cell honeycomb
Truncated 24-cell honeycomb
Snub 24-cell honeycomb
5-cell honeycomb
Truncated 5-cell honeycomb
Omnitruncated 5-cell honeycomb
Notes
References
Kaleidoscopes: Selected Writings of H.S.M. Coxeter, edited by F. Arthur Sherk, Peter McMullen, Anthony C. Thompson, Asia Ivic Weiss, Wiley-Interscience Publication, 1995,
(Paper 24) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes III, [Math. Zeit. 200 (1988) 3-45]
George Olshevsky, Uniform Panoploid Tetracombs, Manuscript (2006) (Complete list of 11 convex uniform tilings, 28 convex uniform honeycombs, and 143 convex uniform tetracombs)
(x3x3o *b3o4o), (x3x3o *b3o *b3o), x3x3o4o3o - thext - O105
5-polytopes
Honeycombs (geometry)
Truncated tilings |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic%20pyramid | In 4-dimensional geometry, the cubic pyramid is bounded by one cube on the base and 6 square pyramid cells which meet at the apex. Since a cube has a circumradius divided by edge length less than one, the square pyramids can be made with regular faces by computing the appropriate height.
Images
Related polytopes and honeycombs
Exactly 8 regular cubic pyramids will fit together around a vertex in four-dimensional space (the apex of each pyramid). This construction yields a tesseract with 8 cubical bounding cells, surrounding a central vertex with 16 edge-length long radii. The tesseract tessellates 4-dimensional space as the tesseractic honeycomb. The 4-dimensional content of a unit-edge-length tesseract is 1, so the content of the regular cubic pyramid is 1/8.
The regular 24-cell has cubic pyramids around every vertex. Placing 8 cubic pyramids on the cubic bounding cells of a tesseract is Gosset's construction of the 24-cell. Thus the 24-cell is constructed from exactly 16 cubic pyramids. The 24-cell tessellates 4-dimensional space as the 24-cell honeycomb.
The dual to the cubic pyramid is an octahedral pyramid, seen as an octahedral base, and 8 regular tetrahedra meeting at an apex.
A cubic pyramid of height zero can be seen as a cube divided into 6 square pyramids along with the center point. These square pyramid-filled cubes can tessellate three-dimensional space as a dual of the truncated cubic honeycomb, called a hexakis cubic honeycomb, or pyramidille.
References
External links
Richard Klitzing, Axial-Symmetrical Edge Facetings of Uniform Polyhedra
4-polytopes |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giacomo%20Badoer%20%28French%20diplomat%29 | Giacomo Badoer (c.1575 – c.1620) was a French-born diplomat, of Venetian parentage, and pupil of Galileo Galilei.
Scientific interests
Badoer studied mathematics with Galileo in Padua in 1598/9. He later supported Galileo in 1607, in a priority dispute with Baldassarre Capra over the invention of a military compass.
Badoer was one of the correspondents of Paolo Sarpi in Venice, who towards the end of 1608 was making enquiries about the invention in the Netherlands of the telescope. Badoer wrote back in spring 1609 from Paris to Sarpi with news of the commercial telescopes then being sold; it is said that Galileo heard of the new product via this route, around July 1609. He mentioned Badoer as his source in Sidereus Nuncius.
Badoer remained close to Galileo, according to Élie Diodati, writing around 1620, when Badoer was already dead.
Religion and diplomacy
By upbringing Badoer was a Huguenot; he became a Catholic convert through the Jesuit Pierre Coton, at some point in the period 1599 to 1603, and by this connection became a diplomat in the service of Henry IV of France. One mission was to Cleves in 1609, at the time of the Jülich-Cleves War. Sarpi, who in 1609 wrote to Badoer in confiding terms, broke with him around 1610: he then described Badoer as an atheist, and Francesco Castrino of Sarpi's network wrote obscene poems about him (Badoer was a reputed homosexual).
Notes
1575 births
1620 deaths
17th-century French diplomats
French people of Italian descent
Galileo Galilei |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedi%20Indra%20Sampurna | Dedi Indra Sampurna (born April 2, 1986), is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1986 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
People from Gresik Regency
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Persikab Bandung players
Gresik United F.C. players
Persela Lamongan players
Persepam Madura Utama players
PSBI Blitar players
Footballers from East Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fathlul%20Rahman | Fathlul Rahman (born August 16, 1984) is an Indonesian professional football coach and former player who is currently head coach of Alesha in the Liga 3.
Club career statistics
References
External links
1984 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian football managers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
PSM Makassar players
PS Mitra Kukar players
Persela Lamongan players
PS Barito Putera players
Sriwijaya F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Borneo F.C. Samarinda players
Footballers from Makassar |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1946%E2%80%9347%20Galatasaray%20S.K.%20season | The 1946–47 season was Galatasaray SK's 43rd in existence and the club's 35th consecutive season in the Istanbul Football League.
Squad statistics
Squad changes for the 1946–1947 season
In:
Competitions
Istanbul Football League
Classification
Matches
Kick-off listed in local time (EEST)
Milli Küme
Classification
Matches
Istanbul Futbol Kupası
Matches
References
Atabeyoğlu, Cem. 1453-1991 Türk Spor Tarihi Ansiklopedisi. page(155-159).(1991) An Grafik Basın Sanayi ve Ticaret AŞ
Tekil, Süleyman. Dünden bugüne Galatasaray, (1983), page(88, 123-125, 184). Arset Matbaacılık Kol.Şti.
Futbol vol.2. Galatasaray. Page: 565, 586. Tercüman Spor Ansiklopedisi. (1981)Tercüman Gazetecilik ve Matbaacılık AŞ.
1940 Milli Küme Maçları. Türk Futbol Tarihi vol.1. page(81). (June 1992) Türkiye Futbol Federasyonu Yayınları.
External links
Galatasaray Sports Club Official Website
Turkish Football Federation - Galatasaray A.Ş.
uefa.com - Galatasaray AŞ
Galatasaray S.K. (football) seasons
Turkish football clubs 1946–47 season
1940s in Istanbul |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhanu%20Rosadhe | Dhanu Rosadhe (born June 22, 1989 in Tuban, Tuban Regency, East Java) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a midfielder.
Club statistics
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Javanese people
People from Tuban
Men's association football midfielders
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persela Lamongan players
Gresik United F.C. players
Persatu Tuban players
Footballers from East Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali%20Barkah | Ali Barkah (born July 30, 1988) is an Indonesian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Pelita Jaya U-21
Indonesia Super League U-21: 2008-09
PSS Sleman
Divisi Utama LPIS: 2013
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
Men's association football goalkeepers
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Madura United F.C. players
Persela Lamongan players
PSS Sleman players
Persibas Banyumas players
PS Mitra Kukar players
Persita Tangerang players
RANS Nusantara F.C. players
PSGC Ciamis players
People from Banyumas Regency
Footballers from Central Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mario%20Rokhmanto | Mario Rokhmanto (born July 16, 1992) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a defender.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Persela U-21 :
Indonesia Super League U-21 champions : 2 (2010-11, 2012)
References
External links
1992 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Javanese people
People from Lamongan Regency
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persela Lamongan players
Footballers from East Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanuar%20Tri%20Firmanda | Yanuar Tri Firmanda (born January 31, 1980 in Malang) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1980 births
Men's association football goalkeepers
Living people
Javanese people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Deltras F.C. players
Indonesian Premier Division players
PSIR Rembang players
Persin Sinjai players
Footballers from Malang |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwi%20Joko%20Prihatin | Dwi Joko Prihatin (born February 25, 1982 in Sukoharjo Regency) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1982 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Petrokimia Putra players
Persita Tangerang players
Deltras F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Persis Solo players
People from Sukoharjo Regency
Footballers from Central Java
21st-century Indonesian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absor%20Fauzi | Absor Fauzi (born August 11, 1988, in Bandung) is an Indonesian former professional footballer.
Club career statistics
References
External links
1987 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Balikpapan players
PSS Sleman players
Persis Solo players
Persik Kediri players
Footballers from Bandung
Footballers from West Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supriyadi%20%28footballer%29 | Supriyadi (born 14 April 1985 in Jakarta) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a left back or left winger.
Club statistics
References
External links
1985 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Bantul players
Persita Tangerang players
Persekabpas Pasuruan players
Putra Samarinda F.C. players
Persitara Jakarta Utara players
Persiwa Wamena players
Persiba Balikpapan players
PS Barito Putera players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Persik Kediri players
PS Bengkulu players
Footballers from Jakarta
Indonesia men's youth international footballers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syaiful%20Lewenusa | Syaiful Lewenusa (born June 13, 1986 in Masohi, Seram, Central Maluku Regency) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Persisam Putra Samarinda :
Liga Indonesia Premier Division champions : 1 (2008-09)
References
External links
1986 births
Living people
Indonesian Muslims
Moluccan people
People from Maluku (province)
Indonesian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
PSP Padang players
Putra Samarinda F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Persela Lamongan players
Persikabo Bogor players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Borneo F.C. Samarinda players
PSCS Cilacap players
Footballers from Maluku (province) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul%20Hamid%20Mony | Abdul Hamid Mony (born March 14, 1989, in Ambon) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1989 births
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
People from Ambon, Maluku
Footballers from Maluku (province)
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Balikpapan players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iqbal%20Samad | Iqbal Samad (born June 17, 1983 in Gowa Regency) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1983 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Bontang F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
PSM Makassar players
Persis Solo players
People from Gowa Regency
Footballers from South Sulawesi |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eki%20Nurhakim | Eki Nurhakim (born September 3, 1983 in Bandung) is an Indonesian former professional footballer who plays as a striker.
Club career statistics
Honours
Club honors
Sriwijaya
Liga Indonesia (1): 2007–08
Copa Indonesia (2): 2007–08, 2008–09
References
External links
1983 births
Men's association football forwards
Living people
Sundanese people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persikabo Bogor players
Madura United F.C. players
Sriwijaya F.C. players
Persijap Jepara players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Persela Lamongan players
Persibat Batang players
Kalteng Putra F.C. players
Persatu Tuban players
Footballers from Bandung
Footballers from West Java |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevanus%20Bungaran | Stevanus Bungaran (born November 24, 1988 in Balikpapan) is an Indonesian former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Club statistics
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
People of Batak descent
People from Balikpapan
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Kalteng Putra F.C. players
Borneo F.C. Samarinda players
Gresik United F.C. players
Persikabo 1973 players
Footballers from East Kalimantan
Men's association football midfielders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handi%20Hamzah | Handi Hamzah (born 20 December 1982) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1982 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Footballers from Makassar
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Bontang F.C. players
Persiba Balikpapan players
PSM Makassar players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinzenz | Vinzenz is a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Vinzenz Bronzin (1872–1970), professor of mathematics in Trieste, Italy
Vinzenz Dittrich (1890–1965), Austrian football (soccer) player in defender role and manager
Vinzenz Fux (1606–1659), organist of the church Maria am Gestade in Vienna, then joined the chapel of the widowed Empress Eleanora
Vinzenz Maria Gredler (1823–1912), Austrian naturalist
Vinzenz Kaiser, Obersturmbannführer in the Waffen SS during World War II, awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross
Franz Vinzenz Krommer (1759–1831), Czech composer of classical music
Vinzenz Lachner (1811–1893), German composer and conductor
Carl Alois Johann-Nepomuk Vinzenz, Fuerst Lichnowsky (1761–1814), second Prince Lichnowsky and a Chamberlain at the Imperial Austrian court
Vinzenz Eduard Milde (1777–1853), Prince-Archbishop of Vienna
Vinzenz Schöttl (1905–1946), German Nazi concentration camp SS officer executed for war crimes
Ignaz Vinzenz Zingerle von Summersberg (1825–1892), Austrian poet and scholar
Vinzenz von Wartenberg (1379–1419), commander of the Royalist Bohemian forces at the start of the Hussite Wars
See also
Vinzenz Lausmann Memorial State Natural Area, state park in northern Hood River County, Oregon, USA
Vincenzo
Vinzel
German masculine given names
Masculine given names |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugeno%20integral | In mathematics, the Sugeno integral, named after M. Sugeno, is a type of integral with respect to a fuzzy measure.
Let be a measurable space and let be an -measurable function.
The Sugeno integral over the crisp set of the function with respect to the fuzzy measure is defined by:
where .
The Sugeno integral over the fuzzy set of the function with respect to the fuzzy measure is defined by:
where is the membership function of the fuzzy set .
Usage and Relationships
Sugeno integral is related to h-index.
References
Gunther Schmidt (2006) Relational measures and integration, Lecture Notes in Computer Science # 4136, pages 343−57, Springer books
M. Sugeno & T. Murofushi (1987) "Pseudo-additive measures and integrals", Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications 122: 197−222
Fuzzy logic
Measure theory
Definitions of mathematical integration |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcuin%27s%20sequence | In mathematics, Alcuin's sequence, named after Alcuin of York, is the sequence of coefficients of the power-series expansion of:
The sequence begins with these integers:
0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 3, 2, 4, 3, 5, 4, 7, 5, 8, 7, 10, 8, 12, 10, 14, 12, 16, 14, 19, 16, 21
The nth term is the number of triangles with integer sides and perimeter n. It is also the number of triangles with distinct integer sides and perimeter n + 6, i.e. number of triples (a, b, c) such that 1 ≤ a < b < c < a + b, a + b + c = n + 6.
If one deletes the three leading zeros, then it is the number of ways in which n empty casks, n casks half-full of wine and n full casks can be distributed to three persons in such a way that each one gets the same number of casks and the same amount of wine. This is the generalization of problem 12 appearing in Propositiones ad Acuendos Juvenes ("Problems to Sharpen the Young") usually attributed to Alcuin. That problem is given as,
Problem 12: A certain father died and left as an inheritance to his three sons 30 glass flasks, of which 10 were full of oil, another 10 were half full, while another 10 were empty. Divide the oil and flasks so that an equal share of the commodities should equally come down to the three sons, both of oil and glass.
The term "Alcuin's sequence" may be traced back to D. Olivastro's 1993 book on mathematical games, Ancient Puzzle: Classical Brainteasers and Other Timeless Mathematical Games of the Last 10 Centuries (Bantam, New York).
The sequence with the three leading zeros deleted is obtained as the sequence of coefficients of the power-series expansion of
This sequence has also been called Alcuin's sequence by some authors.
References
Integer sequences
Works attributed to Alcuin |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fpqc%20morphism | In algebraic geometry, there are two slightly different definitions of an fpqc morphism, both variations of faithfully flat morphisms.
Sometimes an fpqc morphism means one that is faithfully flat and quasicompact. This is where the abbreviation fpqc comes from: fpqc stands for the French phrase "fidèlement plat et quasi-compact", meaning "faithfully flat and quasi-compact".
However it is more common to define an fpqc morphism of schemes to be a faithfully flat morphism that satisfies the following equivalent conditions:
Every quasi-compact open subset of Y is the image of a quasi-compact open subset of X.
There exists a covering of Y by open affine subschemes such that each is the image of a quasi-compact open subset of X.
Each point has a neighborhood such that is open and is quasi-compact.
Each point has a quasi-compact neighborhood such that is open affine.
Examples: An open faithfully flat morphism is fpqc.
An fpqc morphism satisfies the following properties:
The composite of fpqc morphisms is fpqc.
A base change of an fpqc morphism is fpqc.
If is a morphism of schemes and if there is an open covering of Y such that the is fpqc, then f is fpqc.
A faithfully flat morphism that is locally of finite presentation (i.e., fppf) is fpqc.
If is an fpqc morphism, a subset of Y is open in Y if and only if its inverse image under f is open in X.
See also
Flat topology
fppf morphism
References
Stacks Project, "The fpqc Topology." http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/03NV
Morphisms of schemes |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frangky%20Amo | Frangky Amo (born February 27, 1986) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a left-back
Club statistics
References
External links
1986 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persidafon Dafonsoro players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Place of birth missing (living people)
21st-century Indonesian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yohanes%20Makanuay | Yohanes Makanuay (born January 14, 1984) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1984 births
Men's association football forwards
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persidafon Dafonsoro players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Footballers from Papua |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahreza%20Agamal | Fahreza Agamal (born March 11, 1992) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a defender.
Club statistics
References
External links
1992 births
Men's association football defenders
Betawi people
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persija Jakarta players
Dewa United F.C. players
Footballers from Jakarta |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delton%20Stevano | Delton Stevano Wohon (born September 16, 1992) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1992 births
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
Footballers from Jakarta
Minahasa people
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persija Jakarta players
Celebest F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sahroni | Sahroni (born September 20, 1985) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1985 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Sportspeople from Tangerang
Footballers from Banten
Indonesian men's footballers
Indonesian Premier Division players
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persita Tangerang players
Persikota Tangerang players
Persikad Depok players
Persibom Bolaang Mongondow players
PSMS Medan players
Persih Tembilahan players
Persija Jakarta players
Celebest F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Tata | Daniel Siogama Tata (born on August 9, 1990) is an Indonesian footballer who plays as a defender or defensive midfielder.
Club career statistics
References
External links
1990 births
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Jayapura
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persipura Jayapura players
PSM Makassar players
PS Barito Putera players
PSBS Biak players
Men's association football defenders
Men's association football midfielders |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frans%20Freno%20Sauyai | Frans Freno Sauyai (born June 6, 1987), also known as Palao, is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a midfielder.
Club statistics
References
External links
1987 births
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
Papuan people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Indonesian Premier Division players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizophrenic%20number | A schizophrenic number or mock rational number is an irrational number that displays certain characteristics of rational numbers.
Definition
The Universal Book of Mathematics defines "schizophrenic number" as:
The sequence of numbers generated by the recurrence relation described above is:
0, 1, 12, 123, 1234, 12345, 123456, 1234567, 12345678, 123456789, 1234567900, ... .
f(49) = 1234567901234567901234567901234567901234567901229
The integer parts of their square roots,
1, 3, 11, 35, 111, 351, 1111, 3513, 11111, 35136, 111111, 351364, 1111111, ... ,
alternate between numbers with irregular digits and numbers with repeating digits, in a similar way to the alternations appearing within the decimal part of each square root.
Characteristics
The schizophrenic number shown above is the special case of a more general phenomenon that appears in the -ary expansions of square roots of the solutions of the recurrence , for all , with initial value taken at odd positive integers . The case and corresponds to the example above.
Indeed, Tóth showed that these irrational numbers present schizophrenic patterns within their -ary expansion, composed of blocks that begin with a non-repeating digit block followed by a repeating digit block. When put together in base , these blocks form the schizophrenic pattern. For instance, in base 8, the number begins:
1111111111111111111111111.1111111111111111111111 0600
444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 02144
333333333333333333333333333333333333333333 175124422
666666666666666666666666666666666666666 ....
The pattern is due to the Taylor expansion of the square root of the recurrence's solution taken at odd positive integers. The various digit contributions of the Taylor expansion yield the non-repeating and repeating digit blocks that form the schizophrenic pattern.
Other properties
In some cases, instead of repeating digit sequences we find repeating digit patterns. For instance, the number :
1111111111111111111111111.1111111111111111111111111111111 01200
202020202020202020202020202020202020202020 11010102
00120012000012001200120012001200120012 0010
21120020211210002112100021121000211210 ...
shows repeating digit patterns in base .
Numbers that are schizophrenic in base are also schizophrenic in base , up to a certain limit (see Tóth). An example is above, which is still schizophrenic in base :
1444444444444.4444444444 350
666666666666666666666 4112
0505050505050505050 337506
75307530753075307 40552382 ...
History
Clifford A. Pickover has said that the schizophrenic numbers were discovered by Kevin Brown.
In his book Wonders of Numbers he has so described the history of schizophrenic numbers:
See also
Almost integer
Normal number
Six nines in pi
References
External links
Mock-Rational Numbers, K. S. Brown, mathpages.
Irrational numbers
Base-dependent integer sequences |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gideon%20V.%20Way | Gideon Victor Way (born May 7, 1984) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a midfielder. He previously play for Persiram Raja Ampat and Persiba Balikpapan.
Club statistics
References
External links
1984 births
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
Papuan people
People from Sorong
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Indonesian Premier Division players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Adelaide%20United%20FC%20records%20and%20statistics | Adelaide United Football Club is an Australian professional soccer club based in Hindmarsh, Adelaide. The club was formed in 2003. Adelaide United became the first southern member admitted into the A-League Men in 2005.
This list encompasses the honours won by Adelaide United at national, regional and friendly level, records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section itemises the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions.
Adelaide United have won eight top-flight titles, and hold the record for the most Australia Cup wins, with three. The club's record appearance maker is Eugene Galekovic, who made 285 appearances between 2007 and 2017. Craig Goodwin is Adelaide United's record goalscorer, scoring 49 goals.
All figures are correct as of the match played on 29 August 2023.
Honours and achievements
Adelaide United's first ever silverware was won in 2006. The A-League Men Premiership, won by the club was Adelaide United's first trophy. In 2019 they became the most successful club in Australia Cup history with three titles.
Adelaide United's honours and achievements include the following:
Domestic
A-League Men Premiership
Winners (2): 2005–06, 2015–16
Runners-up (2): 2006–07, 2008–09
A-League Men Championship
Winners (1): 2016
Runners-up (2): 2007, 2009
Australia Cup
Winners (3) – Record: 2014, 2018, 2019
Runners-up (1): 2017
A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup
Winners (2): 2006, 2007
AFC
AFC Champions League
Runners-up (1): 2008
Player records
Appearances
Most league appearances: Eugene Galekovic, 238
Most National Cup appearances: Isaías, 26
Most Asian appearances: Eugene Galekovic, 33
Youngest first-team player: Teeboy Kamara, 15 years, 212 days (against Gold Coast United, A-League, 16 December 2011)
Oldest first-team player: Romário, 40 years, 320 days (against Newcastle Jets, A-League, 15 December 2006)
Most consecutive appearances: Eugene Galekovic, 74 (from 15 November 2008 to 26 December 2010)
Most separate spells with the club: 3
Nathan Konstandopoulos (2014–16; 2017–21 and 2022)
Craig Goodwin (2014–16; 2018–19 and 2021–2023)
Most appearances
Competitive matches only, includes appearances as substitute. Numbers in brackets indicate goals scored.
a. Includes the National Soccer League and A-League Men.
b. Includes the A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup and Australia Cup
c. Includes goals and appearances (including those as a substitute) in the FIFA Club World Cup and 2005 Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament.
Goalscorers
Most goals in a season: Sergio van Dijk, 17 goals (in the 2010–11 season)
Most league goals in season: Sergio van Dijk, 16 goals in the A-League, 2010–11
Youngest goalscorer: Mohamed Toure, 15 years, 325 days (against Central Coast Mariners, A-League, 14 February 2020)
Youngest hat-trick scorer: Nathan Burns
Oldest goalscorer: Romário, 40 years, 320 days (against Newcastle Jets, A-League |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumario%20Compendioso | The Sumario Compendioso was the first mathematics book published in the New World. The book was published in Mexico City in 1556 by a clergyman Juan Diez.
Availability
The book has been digitized and is available on the Internet.
Before the Digital Age the only four known surviving copies were preserved at the Huntington Library, San Marino, California, the British Library, London, Duke University Library, and the University of Salamanca in Spain.
Excerpts
In his book The Math Book, Clifford A. Pickover provided the following information about Sumario Compendioso:
References
External links
Open Library
HathiTrust
JSTOR
Archive.org
Mathematics books
1556 books |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan%20Darome | Joan Darome (born October 15, 1989) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1989 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Sportspeople from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wempy%20Obure | Wempy Obure (born December 8, 1989) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1989 births
Men's association football goalkeepers
Living people
Papuan people
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yan%20D.%20Ruatakurey | Yan D. Ruatakurey (born September 7, 1979) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1979 births
Men's association football forwards
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Sportspeople from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Place of birth missing (living people) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anda%20Hendrawan | Anda Hendrawan (born January 25, 1984) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
1984 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Bontang F.C. players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Semen Padang F.C. players
Footballers from Medan
21st-century Indonesian people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sa%20Anun%20Al%20Qadry | Sa Anun Al Qadry (born November 18, 1980) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1979 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Indonesian Premier Division players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yance%20Youwei | Yance Youwei (born January 10, 1989) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1989 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Papuan people
People from Jayapura
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Jayapura
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Perseru Serui players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aidin%20Elmi | Aidin Elmi (born June 13, 1986) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1986 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Liga 2 (Indonesia) players
Persiba Bantul players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Persiba Balikpapan players
Bontang F.C. players
People from Balikpapan
Footballers from East Kalimantan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arifin%20Ginuni | Arifin Ginuni (born May 26, 1983) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
References
External links
1983 births
Men's association football defenders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
West Papuan sportspeople
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
PSAP Sigli players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Persibo Bojonegoro players
PSKS Krakatau Steel Cilegon footballers
Gresik United F.C. players
People from West Papua (province) |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ari%20Kurniawan | Ari Kurniawan Sarwoto (born April 11, 1978) is an Indonesian former footballer who plays as a goalkeeper.
Club statistics
References
External links
1978 births
Men's association football goalkeepers
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Deltras F.C. players
PS Badung players
Persekabpas Pasuruan players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
PS Mojokerto Putra players
Indonesian Premier Division players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nasution%20Karubaba | Nasution Karubaba (born 27 November 1989) is an Indonesian former footballer.
Club statistics
Hounors
Clubs
Persisam Putra Samarinda :
Liga Indonesia Premier Division champions : 1 (2008-09)
References
External links
1989 births
People of Batak descent
Men's association football midfielders
Living people
Indonesian men's footballers
Footballers from Papua
Liga 1 (Indonesia) players
Persiram Raja Ampat players
Indonesian Premier Division players
Perseman Manokwari players
Putra Samarinda F.C. players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arithmetic%20number | In number theory, an arithmetic number is an integer for which the average of its positive divisors is also an integer. For instance, 6 is an arithmetic number because the average of its divisors is
which is also an integer. However, 2 is not an arithmetic number because its only divisors are 1 and 2, and their average 3/2 is not an integer.
The first numbers in the sequence of arithmetic numbers are
1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 29, 30, 31, 33, 35, 37, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, ... .
Density
It is known that the natural density of such numbers is 1: indeed, the proportion of numbers less than X which are not arithmetic is asymptotically
where c = 2 + o(1).
A number N is arithmetic if the number of divisors d(N ) divides the sum of divisors σ(N ). It is known that the density of integers N obeying the stronger condition that d(N )2 divides σ(N ) is 1/2.
Notes
References
Divisor function
Integer sequences |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgil%20Snyder | Virgil Snyder (1869, Dixon, Iowa – 1950) was an American mathematician, specializing in algebraic geometry.
In 1886, Snyder matriculated at Iowa State College and graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1889. He attended Cornell University as a graduate student from 1890 to 1892, leaving to study mathematics in Germany on an Erastus W. Brooks fellowship. In 1895, he received a doctorate from the University of Göttingen under Felix Klein. In 1895, Snyder returned to Cornell as an instructor, becoming an assistant professor in 1905 and a full professor in 1910. In 1938, he retired as professor emeritus, having supervised 39 doctoral students, 13 of whom were women. Of these students, perhaps the most well known is C. L. E. Moore. Snyder served as president of the American Mathematical Society for a two-year term in 1927 and 1928.
He was an Invited Speaker of the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1928 at Bologna, in 1932 at Zurich, and in 1936 at Oslo.
Snyder did research on configurations of ruled surfaces and Cremona and birational transformations.
Selected works
with Charles H. Sisam:
References
External links
19th-century American mathematicians
20th-century American mathematicians
Algebraic geometers
Cornell University faculty
Iowa State University alumni
Presidents of the American Mathematical Society
1869 births
1950 deaths
Mathematicians from Iowa |
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