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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet%20Barnett | Janet Heine Barnett is a professor of mathematics at Colorado State University–Pueblo, interested in set theory, mathematical logic, the history of mathematics, women in mathematics, and mathematics education.
Education and career
Barnett is originally from Pueblo, Colorado.
She did her undergraduate studies at Colorado State University, entering as an engineering student but switching to a double major in mathematics and humanities. She graduated in 1981, served in the Peace Corps teaching mathematics in Bambari in the Central African Republic from 1982 to 1984, and in doing so discovered her love for teaching mathematics.
She completed her doctorate in 1990, at the University of Colorado Boulder. Her dissertation, Random Reals, Cohen Reals and Variants of Martin's Axioms, concerned set theory; it was supervised by Richard Laver. In the same year she joined the CSU Pueblo faculty.
Recognition
In 2015, Barnett won the Burton W. Jones Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of the Mathematical Association of America.
In 2017, she won the Deborah and Franklin Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics, for excellence in teaching reaching beyond her own campus. The award recognized in particular her work in integrating the history of mathematics, and its original source documents, into the teaching of mathematics, and her mentorship of mathematics schoolteachers.
References
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
People from Pueblo, Colorado
American women mathematicians
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Colorado State University alumni
University of Colorado Boulder alumni
Colorado State University Pueblo faculty
20th-century women mathematicians
21st-century women mathematicians
20th-century American women academics
21st-century American women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis-Jacques%20Rondeleux | Louis-Jacques Rondeleux (24 October 1923 – 2 November 2000) was a 20th-century French lyrical artist (baritone).
Biography
After studying eclectic topics (mathematics, history, philosophy and theology), Rondeleux began his career in the Catholic clergy. He entered the Major Seminary of Paris (1941–1944) and after a short period of service in the army (December 1944–August 1945) he began a novitiate with the Dominican friars. After 9 months with the Dominicans he gave up his ecclesiastical career (1946).
It was only in the early 1950s that he decided to become a professional singer. He made a career in the 1950s and 1960s during which he explored all repertoires, from medieval musics and troubador and trouvères songs to contemporary creation, through Baroque music and mélodies.
From 1970 to 1989 he was a singing teacher.
The lyrical artist (1951–1970)
In the late forties Louis-Jacques Rondeleux was a pupil of Jane Bathori, mezzo-soprano, creator of most of Maurice Ravel's melodies. She will pass on to him her art in the interpretation of melodies.
His career as a professional singer began in 1951, as member in the choirs of Élisabeth Brasseur or as a church singer (cantor) (particularly at the Église de la Trinité. In October 1951, he sang for the first time as a soloist under the direction of André Cluytens during a concert in Paris at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées (Duruflé's Requiem Op.9, Florent Schmitt's Psaume XLVII). He soon became acquainted with many composers and conductors with whom he helped to promote contemporary music (Henri Sauguet, Darius Milhaud, Marcel Landowski, Míkis Theodorákis, Henri Cliquet-Pleyel, Manuel Rosenthal, Frank Martin, Henri Tomasi, Pierre Boulez…).
In 1954 he took part - still as a chorister - in two musical-theatrical creations of the compagnie Renaud-Barrault:
in Paris, at the Théâtre Marigny, in an adaptation of Le Livre de Christophe Colomb (Libretto by Paul Claudel) on a new music by Darius Milhaud.
as part of the Festival de Bordeaux, in May 1954, in L'Orestie (after Aeschylus) on a music by Pierre Boulez, of whom it will be the only stage music.
On 30 July 1954 at Aix-en-Provence, he was soloist at the time of the premiere of Sauguet's Les Caprices de Marianne opera.
In 1957, he recorded his first disc with works by Darius Milhaud and Henri Sauguet (Visions infernales).
In 1960, he performed two premieres:
On 20 May at the Bordeaux festival an opera by Pierre Capdevielle: Les amants captifs.
On 3 September at the Besançon festival, Henri Sauguet's cantata "L'oiseau a vu tout cela" .
In the same year, he toured Morocco with the Jeunesses musicales de France (JMF).
He also made his first televised recording in La Traviata (broadcast on 9 December 1960).
In 1963 he collaborated, under the direction of Pierre Boulez, on the homage album to Igor Stravinsky (concerning the whole of the discography see the notice on the BNF website).
On 15 June 1963 at the festival de Strasbourg, he performed |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohn%27s%20theorem | In mathematics, Cohn's theorem states that a nth-degree self-inversive polynomial has as many roots in the open unit disk as the reciprocal polynomial of its derivative. Cohn's theorem is useful for studying the distribution of the roots of self-inversive and self-reciprocal polynomials in the complex plane.
An nth-degree polynomial,
is called self-inversive if there exists a fixed complex number ( ) of modulus 1 so that,
where
is the reciprocal polynomial associated with and the bar means complex conjugation. Self-inversive polynomials have many interesting properties. For instance, its roots are all symmetric with respect to the unit circle and a polynomial whose roots are all on the unit circle is necessarily self-inversive. The coefficients of self-inversive polynomials satisfy the relations.
In the case where a self-inversive polynomial becomes a complex-reciprocal polynomial (also known as a self-conjugate polynomial). If its coefficients are real then it becomes a real self-reciprocal polynomial.
The formal derivative of is a (n − 1)th-degree polynomial given by
Therefore, Cohn's theorem states that both and the polynomial
have the same number of roots in
See also
Geometrical properties of polynomial roots
References
Theorems about polynomials |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir%20Turaev | Vladimir Georgievich Turaev (Владимир Георгиевич Тураев, born in 1954) is a Russian mathematician, specializing in topology.
Turaev received in 1979 from the Steklov Institute of Mathematics his Candidate of Sciences degree (PhD) under Oleg Viro. Turaev was a professor at the University of Strasbourg and then became a professor at Indiana University. In 2016 he was elected a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.
Turaev's research deals with low-dimensional topology, quantum topology, and knot theory and their interconnections with quantum field theory. In 1991 Reshetikhin and Turaev published a mathematical construction of new topological invariants of compact oriented 3-manifolds and framed links in these manifolds, corresponding to a mathematical implementation of ideas in quantum field theory published by Witten; the invariants are now called Witten-Reshetikhin-Turaev (or Reshetikhin-Turaev) invariants. In 1992 Turaev and Viro introduced a new family of invariants for 3-manifolds by using state sums computed on triangulations of manifolds; these invariants are now called Turaev-Viro invariants.
In 1990 Turaev was an Invited Speaker with talk State sum models in low dimensional topology at the ICM in Kyōto. In 2016 he shared, with Alexis Virelizier, the Ferran Sunyer i Balaguer Prize for their monograph Monoidal categories and topological field theory.
Selected publications
Articles
with Nicolai Reshetikhin:
Books
Quantum invariants of Knots and 3-Manifolds, de Gruyter 1994; ;
with Christian Kassel and Marc Rosso: Quantum groups and knot invariants, SMF (Panoramas et Synthèses) 1997
as editor with Anatoly Vershik: Topology, ergodic theory, real algebraic geometry - Rokhlin´s memorial, American Mathematical Society 2001
Introduction to combinatorial torsions, Birkhäuser 2001
Torsions of 3-dimensional manifolds, Birkhäuser 2002
with Christian Kassel: Braid Groups, Springer 2008,
Homotopy quantum field theory, European Mathematical Society 2010
with Alexis Virelizier: Monoidal Categories and Topological Field Theory, Birkhäuser 2015
See also
Reshetikhin–Turaev invariant
References
External links
Vladimir Touraev, Mathematics Department, Indiana University
mathnet.ru
20th-century Russian mathematicians
21st-century Russian mathematicians
Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
Academic staff of the University of Strasbourg
Indiana University faculty
1954 births
Living people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewout%20W.%20Steyerberg | Ewout W. Steyerberg (born July 26, 1967) is Professor of Clinical Biostatistics and Medical Decision Making at Leiden University Medical Center and a Professor of Medical Decision Making at Erasmus MC. He is interested in a wide range of statistical methods for medical research, but is mainly known for his seminal work on prediction modeling, which was stimulated by various research grants including a fellowship from the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Steyerberg is one of the most cited researchers from the Netherlands. He has published over 1000 peer-reviewed articles according to PubMed , many in collaboration with clinical researchers, both in methodological and medical journals. His h-index exceeds 150 according to Google Scholar.
Biography
Steyerberg started his education in medicine at the Medical Faculty of Leiden University in 1985. After obtaining his 'propedeuse' in medicine, he initiated his education in Biomedical Sciences at the same university. In 1991, he received his MSc (cum laude). He started working towards his PhD at the Department of Public Health of Erasmus MC. His thesis, titled ‘Prognostic Modeling for Clinical Decision Making: Theory and Applications’, was completed in 1996. Subsequently, Steyerberg held a position at Erasmus MC. He spent sabbaticals at Duke University (Durham, NC: 1996) and Harvard University (Boston, MA: 2003 and 2005). In 2006, he was appointed professor at Erasmus MC, where he has been the chair of the Medical Decision Making group till the end of 2016, succeeded by Dr Hester Lingsma. In 2017, Steyerberg was appointed as Chair of the Department of Biomedical Data Sciences at Leiden University Medical Center.
Research findings
Steyerberg's methodological research is mainly focussed on clinical prediction modeling. He has developed and applied advanced regression modeling and related statistical techniques for prediction in many medical domains. Other areas of interest include design and analysis of randomized clinical trials, cost-effectiveness, decision analysis, and quality of care research, all with the aim to make better decisions in health care. Contemporary research themes have his attention, including Comparative effectiveness research, Big data, Machine learning, Value-based Healthcare and Precision medicine.
Medical fields of application include oncology (e.g. testicular, bladder, prostate, esophageal, colorectal, lymphomas, and hereditary cancers); cardiovascular disease (e.g. acute myocardial infarction, heart valve replacement, limb ischemia, primary and secondary prevention of CVD); internal medicine; pediatrics (e.g. triage systems); infectious diseases (e.g. leprosy, chlamydia trachomatis screening); neurology (Guillain Barré syndrome, stroke); and traumatic brain injury (prognosis and efficiency of trial design, comparative effectiveness research, new biomarkers).
Achievements
Steyerberg is known for his tremendous contribution to the field of statistical m |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shingo%20Kajiyama | is the Head coach of the Nagoya Diamond Dolphins in the Japanese B.League.
Career statistics
|-
| align="left" | 2007-13
| align="left" | Mitsubishi
| 162 || || 24.5|| .333 || .363 || .754 || 2.0 || 1.0 || 0.5 || 0.1 || 5.8
|-
Head coaching record
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Nagoya Diamond Dolphins
| style="text-align:left;"|2017-18
| 60||31||29|||| style="text-align:center;"| 2nd in Central|||3||1||2||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in 1st round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Nagoya Diamond Dolphins
| style="text-align:left;"|2018-19
| 60||33||27|||| style="text-align:center;"| 2nd in Western|||3||1||2||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in 1st round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Nagoya Diamond Dolphins
| style="text-align:left;"|2019-20
| 41||17||24|||| style="text-align:center;"| 5th in Western|||-||-||-||
| style="text-align:center;"|-
|-
References
External links
1976 births
Living people
Japanese basketball coaches
Nagoya Diamond Dolphins coaches
Nagoya Diamond Dolphins players
Nihon University Red Sharks men's basketball players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmin%20Dur-Bozoanc%C4%83 | Cosmin Andrei Dur-Bozoancă (born 15 February 1998) is a Romanian professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Liga I club Oțelul Galați.
Career Statistics
Club
Honours
Oțelul Galați
Liga III: 2021–22
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Footballers from Brașov
Romanian men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Romania men's youth international footballers
Romania men's under-21 international footballers
Liga I players
FC Viitorul Constanța players
Liga II players
SSU Politehnica Timișoara players
FC Universitatea Cluj players
FCV Farul Constanța players
Liga III players
ASC Oțelul Galați players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968%E2%80%9369%20FK%20Partizan%20season | The 1968–69 season was the 23rd season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and matches that the club played during the 1968–69 season.
Players
Squad information
Friendlies
Competitions
Yugoslav First League
Yugoslav Cup
See also
List of FK Partizan seasons
References
External links
Official website
Partizanopedia 1968-69 (in Serbian)
FK Partizan seasons
Partizan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriele%20Kaiser | Gabriele Kaiser is a German mathematics educator. She is a professor of mathematics education at the University of Hamburg.
Kaiser completed a doctorate in 1986 and a habilitation in 1997 at the University of Kassel. Her doctoral dissertation, Anwendungen im Mathematikunterricht - Konzeptionen und Untersuchungen zur unterrichtlichen Realisierung, was supervised by Werner Blum. She became a professor at Hamburg in 1998, and served as vice dean of education from 2010 to 2016. Since 2005 she has been editor-in-chief of the journal ZDM Mathematics Education, and she is the editor or co-editor of 28 books on mathematics education.
Kaiser was a speaker at the 2002 International Congress of Mathematicians.
In 2012, a festschrift was published in her honor.
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
University of Kassel alumni
Academic staff of the University of Hamburg
20th-century German mathematicians
German women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
21st-century German mathematicians
20th-century German women
21st-century German women |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20H-II%20series%20and%20H3%20launches | This is a list of launches made by JAXA using H-II, H-IIA, H-IIB and H3 rockets.
Launch statistics
Rocket configurations
Launch sites
Launch outcomes
Launch history
Planned launches
Sources: Gunter's Space Page and Cabinet Office of Japan
References
H-II seriesand H3
Lists of events in Japan
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries space launch vehicles |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyoji%20Saito | Kyōji Saitō (齋藤 恭司, Saitō Kyōji; born 25 December 1944) is a Japanese mathematician, specializing in algebraic geometry and complex analytic geometry.
Education and career
Saito received in 1971 his promotion Ph.D. from the University of Göttingen under Egbert Brieskorn, with thesis Quasihomogene isolierte Singularitäten von Hyperflächen (Quasihomogeneous isolated singularities of hypersurfaces). Saito is a professor at the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences (RIMS) of Kyoto University.
Saito's research deals with the interplay among Lie algebras, reflection groups (Coxeter groups), braid groups, and singularities of hypersurfaces.
From the 1980s, he did research on underlying symmetries of period integrals in complex hypersurfaces. Saito introduced higher-dimensional generalizations of elliptic integrals. These generalizations are integrals of "primitive forms", first considered in the study of the unfolding of isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces, associated with infinite-dimensional Lie algebras. He also studied the corresponding new automorphic forms. The theory has a geometric connection to "flat structures" (now called "Saito Frobenius manifolds"), mirror symmetry, Frobenius manifolds, and Gromov–Witten theory in algebraic geometry and various topics in mathematical physics related to string theory.
Saito supervised the thesis of 7 Ph.D. students at Kyoto University, including Hiroaki Terao and Masahiko Yoshinaga.
He was an Invited Speaker with talk The limit element in the configuration algebra for a discrete group: a précis at the International Congress of Mathematicians 1990 in Kyoto. In 2011 he was awarded the Geometry Prize of the Mathematical Society of Japan.
Selected publications
as editor with and Masaki Kashiwara, Atsushi Matsuo, and Ikuo Satake: Topological Field Theory, Primitive Forms and Related Topics, Birkhäuser Verlag, Progress in Mathematics, 1998
Primitive automorphic forms, in Björn Engquist, Wilfried Schmid (eds.) Mathematics Unlimited - 2000 and beyond, Springer Verlag 2001, pp. 1003–1018
Around the theory of the general weight system: relations with singularity theory, the generalized Weyl group and its invariant theory, etc., in Katsumi Nomizu Selected papers on harmonic analysis, groups and invariants, AMS Translations, Series 2, vol. 183, 1991
as editor with Bernard Teissier and Lê Dũng Tráng: Singularity Theory, World Scientific 1995
References
External links
Kyoji Saito, Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University
20th-century Japanese mathematicians
21st-century Japanese mathematicians
University of Göttingen alumni
Academic staff of Kyoto University
1944 births
Living people
Algebraic geometers |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick%20O%27Neil%20%28footballer%29 | Patrick O'Neil (born 31 March 1992) is a Scottish professional footballer who last played as a goalkeeper for Scottish League One side Dumbarton.
Career statistics
References
External links
1992 births
Living people
Scottish men's footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Brechin City F.C. players
Scottish Professional Football League players
Footballers from Glasgow
Dumbarton F.C. players
Troon F.C. players
West of Scotland Football League players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Dhangadhi%20Premier%20League%20records%20and%20statistics | This is an overall list of statistics and records of the Dhangadhi Premier League, a Twenty20 cricket competition based in Nepal.
Listing notation
Team notation
(100-3) indicates that a team scored 100 runs for three wickets and the innings was closed,
either due to a successful run chase or if no overs remained (or are able) to be bowled.
(100) indicates that a team scored 100 runs and was all out,
either by losing all ten wickets or by having one or more batsmen unable to bat and losing the remaining wickets.
Batting notation
(100) indicates that a batsman scored 100 runs and was out.
(100*) indicates that a batsman scored 100 runs and was not out.
Bowling notation
(3-25) indicates that a bowler has captured 3 wickets while giving away 25 runs.
Currently playing
Record holders who are currently in the recent team squad of the series/tournament are shown in bold.
Comparison
Team records
Team wins, losses, and ties
Matches played (by team)
Team scoring records
(Records includes full 20-over matches only)
Highest innings totals
Lowest innings totals
Highest match aggregate
Highest successful run chases
Source: Last Updated: 12-April-2018
Lowest scores defended
Source: Last Updated:10-Apr-2018
Largest victories by runs
Source: Last Updated: 4-Apr-2018
Largest victories with most wickets & balls remaining
Source: Last Updated: 3-April-2018
Individual records 2017
Individual records (batting) 2017
Most career runs 2017
Highest career average 2017
Highest career strike rate 2017
Most half-centuries in a career 2017
Most sixes in a career 2017
Most fours in a career 2017
Highest individual scores 2017
Individual records (bowling) 2017
Most career wickets 2017 (minimum 5 wickets)
Best bowling figures 2017
(Minimum 3 Wickets in an inning)
Best career bowling average 2017
(Minimum 10 Wickets)
Best career strike rate 2017
Individual records (wicket-keeping) 2017
Most dismissals in career 2017
Individual records (fielding) 2017
Most catches in a career 2017
Individual records 2018
Individual records (batting) 2018
Most career runs 2018
Most centuries in a career 2018
Most half-centuries in a career 2018 (5 half-centuries this year)
Most sixes in a career 2018
Most fours in a career 2018
Highest individual scores 2018
Individual records (bowling) 2018
Most career wickets 2018 (minimum 5 wickets)
Best bowling figures 2018
(Minimum 3 Wickets in an inning)
Best career bowling average 2018
(Minimum 10 Wickets)
Best career strike rate 2018
Individual records (wicket-keeping) 2018
Most dismissals in career 2018
Individual records (fielding) 2018
Most catches in a career 2018
All-time records
Most 5 wickets haul
Most 4 wickets haul
Most Hat-Tricks
See also
Dhangadhi Premier League
Everest Premier League
Nepal national cricket team
Biratnagar Kings
Team Chauraha Dhangadhi
References
Stats
records and statistics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weyl%20sequence | In mathematics, a Weyl sequence is a sequence from the equidistribution theorem proven by Hermann Weyl:
The sequence of all multiples of an irrational α,
0, α, 2α, 3α, 4α, ...
is equidistributed modulo 1.
In other words, the sequence of the fractional parts of each term will be uniformly distributed in the interval [0, 1).
In computing
In computing, an integer version of this sequence is often used to generate a discrete uniform distribution rather than a continuous one. Instead of using an irrational number, which cannot be calculated on a digital computer, the ratio of two integers is used in its place. An integer k is chosen, relatively prime to an integer modulus m. In the common case that m is a power of 2, this amounts to requiring that k is odd.
The sequence of all multiples of such an integer k,
0, k, 2k, 3k, 4k, …
is equidistributed modulo m.
That is, the sequence of the remainders of each term when divided by m will be uniformly distributed in the interval [0, m).
The term appears to originate with George Marsaglia’s paper "Xorshift RNGs".
The following C code generates what Marsaglia calls a "Weyl sequence":
d += 362437;
In this case, the odd integer is 362437, and the results are computed modulo because d is a 32-bit quantity. The results are equidistributed modulo 232.
See also
List of things named after Hermann Weyl
References
Mathematical series |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ApertusVR | ApertusVR is an embeddable, open-source (MIT), framework-independent, platform-independent, network-topology-independent, distributed, augmented reality/virtual reality/mixed reality engine.
It is written in C++, with JavaScript and HTTP Rest API (in Node.js). ApertusVR creates a new abstraction layer over the hardware in order to integrate the virtual and augmented reality technologies into any developments or products.
References
External links
https://github.com/MTASZTAKI/ApertusVR
http://apertusvr.org/
2016 establishments
Virtual reality
Open-source movement |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J.%20P.%20Carnahan | Jacob Preston Carnahan (September 22, 1832 – July 16, 1912) was an American Confederate officer, a professor of mathematics, and Populist politician.
Early life
Carnahan was born in Canehill, Arkansas on September 22, 1832. He attended the Cane Hill School and graduated from Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee.
Civil War
Carnahan was a captain in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War, he commanded Company G of the 16th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, involved in the bloody Battle of Elkhorn Tavern, also known as the Battle of Pea Ridge.
Educator
He was a professor of mathematics at Cane Hill College, formerly Cane Hill School from 1869 to 1883.
Politician
He was candidate for governor with the People's Party of Arkansas in 1892, receiving 31,116 of 156,186 (20%) votes, losing to Democrat William Meade Fishback and winning narrowly fewer votes than Republican mayor of Little Rock, William G. Whipple.
Personal life
He was married to Susan Amelia Crawford Carnahan. They had five children, three daughters Evalyn "Eve" Carnahan (Quailie), Mary Clementine "Clem" Carnahan (Moore), Susan E. Carnahan (Rogers), and sons Rev. Alfred E. Carnahan of Cane Hill and James Crawford Carnahan. He died July 16, 1912, at the home of his youngest daughter, Mrs. Susan Rogers, near Prairie Grove. He was buried at Cane Hill..
References
External links
1832 births
1912 deaths
Confederate States Army officers
Arkansas Populists
Mathematicians from Arkansas
Cumberland University alumni |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1979 season.
Overview
It was contested by 8 teams, and FC Jinnan won the championship.
Results
Quarterfinals
FC Jinnan 7-1 Nishiyama High School
AC Plum 0-8 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizu FC Mama 3-1 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Jissen Women's University 0-3 Takatsuki FC
Semifinals
FC Jinnan 2-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizu FC Mama 0-5 Takatsuki FC
Final
FC Jinnan 2-1 Takatsuki FC
FC Jinnan won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1979 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1981 season.
Overview
It was contested by 8 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
Quarterfinals
FC Jinnan 2-0 Nagoya LFC
FC PAF 2-1 Nishiyama High School
Takatsuki FC 3-0 Yowa Ladies
Kobe FC 0-5 Shimizudaihachi SC
Semifinals
FC Jinnan 0-0 (pen 1–2) FC PAF
Takatsuki FC 0-3 Shimizudaihachi SC
Final
FC PAF 0-6 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1981 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1982%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1982 season.
Overview
It was contested by 12 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
IMO SC 0-2 Shimizu FC Mama
Chiba Gakuen High School 0-5 FC PAF
Nishiyama Club 4-0 Molten Habatake
Kobe FC 10-0 Hiroshima Oko FC
Quarterfinals
FC Jinnan 6-0 Shimizu FC Mama
Takatsuki FC 2-0 FC PAF
Nishiyama Club 1-1 (pen 0-2) FC Kodaira
Kobe FC 0-4 Shimizudaihachi SC
Semifinals
FC Jinnan 1-0 Takatsuki FC
FC Kodaira 0-6 Shimizudaihachi SC
Final
FC Jinnan 0-6 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1982 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1983 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
FC Jinnan 8-0 Mikaho Reebons
Takakura Junior High School 4-0 Fujieda Sisters FC
FC Kodaira 7-0 Shimizu FC Mama
Chiba Gakuen High School 0-4 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 5-0 Uwajima Minami High School
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries 0-4 Kobe FC
Nishiyama Club 4-0 Ichinomiya Graces
Ryuhoku Club 0-10 Shimizudaihachi SC
Quarterfinals
FC Jinnan 3-0 Takakura Junior High School
FC Kodaira 0-3 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 4-3 Kobe FC
Nishiyama Club 0-4 Shimizudaihachi SC
Semifinals
FC Jinnan 0-1 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 0-5 Shimizudaihachi SC
Final
Takatsuki FC 0-2 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1983 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1984 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Takatsuki FC 9-0 Miss Kick Kanazawa
Yonan SC 4-1 Shizuoka Koki SC
Kobe FC 5-0 Molten Habatake
Aosaki LSC 0-9 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Nishiyama Club 2-0 Miyagi Hirose High School
Shimizu FC Mama 0-3 FC Jinnan
FC Kodaira 4-0 Ryuhoku Club
Uwajima Minami High School 0-12 Shimizudaihachi SC
Quarterfinals
Takatsuki FC 0-0 (pen 5–4) Yonan SC
Kobe FC 0-1 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Nishiyama Club 0-0 (pen 1–2) FC Jinnan
FC Kodaira 0-4 Shimizudaihachi SC
Semifinals
Takatsuki FC 1-1 (pen 3–1) Yomiuri SC Beleza
FC Jinnan 0-3 Shimizudaihachi SC
Final
Takatsuki FC 0-4 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1984 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1985 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Shimizudaihachi SC 16-0 Yonago Cosmos
Miyagi Hirose High School 0-2 Chigasaki Fevers
Kobe FC 3-0 Kumamoto Akita
Nagoya LFC 0-5 FC Jinnan
Yomiuri SC Beleza 14-0 Ladies Saijo
Hyogo University of Teacher Education 3-0 Uwajima Minami High School
Yonan SC 0-0 (pen 3–5) Shizuoka Koki SC
Molten Habatake 0-7 Takatsuki FC
Quarterfinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 6-0 Chigasaki Fevers
Kobe FC 1-0 FC Jinnan
Yomiuri SC Beleza 3-0 Hyogo University of Teacher Education
Shizuoka Koki SC 0-3 Takatsuki FC
Semifinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 2-0 Kobe FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 0-1 Takatsuki FC
Final
Shimizudaihachi SC 5-1 Takatsuki FC
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1985 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1986 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Shimizudaihachi SC 5-0 Miyagi Hirose Club
Kumamoto Akita 2-1 Tendai FC
Chigasaki Kowada FC 0-2 Kusunoki SC
Toyama Ladies SC 0-4 Kobe FC
Nissan FC 9-0 Mikaho Reebons
Iga-Ueno Kunoichi SC 0-3 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 9-0 Yonago Cosmos
Ota Gal 1-2 Nishiyama Club
Quarterfinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 7-0 Kumamoto Akita
Kusunoki SC 0-4 Kobe FC
Nissan FC 1-2 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza 3-0 Nishiyama Club
Semifinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 2-0 Kobe FC
Takatsuki FC 0-2 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Final
Shimizudaihachi SC 1-0 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Shimizudaihachi SC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1986 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1987%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1987 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Yomiuri SC Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Shimizudaihachi SC 3-0 Ladies Saijo
Nissan FC 3-0 Hyogo University of Teacher Education
FC Kodaira 7-0 Hiroshima Minami FC
Shimizu FC 0-3 Kobe FC
Takatsuki FC 1-0 Miyagi Hirose Club
Tendai FC 0-0 (pen 2-3) Iga-Ueno Kunoichi SC
Kumamoto Akita 4-0 FC Atletica
Ota Gal 0-5 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Quarterfinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 2-2 (pen 3-2) Nissan FC
FC Kodaira 0-2 Kobe FC
Takatsuki FC 1-0 Iga-Ueno Kunoichi SC
Kumamoto Akita 0-11 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Semifinals
Shimizudaihachi SC 2-1 Kobe FC
Takatsuki FC 0-1 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Final
Shimizudaihachi SC 0-2 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Yomiuri SC Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1987 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1988%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1988 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Yomiuri SC Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Yomiuri SC Beleza 10-0 Toyama Ladies SC
FC PAF 0-2 Hyogo University of Teacher Education
Nissan FC 8-0 Nagoya Ladies FC
Uwajima Minami High School 0-3 Kobe FC
Shimizudaihachi SC 4-0 Molten Habatake
Miyagi Hirose Club 0-0 (pen 2-3) Sagamihara LSC
Takatsuki FC 2-1 Kumamoto Akita
Hatsukaichi High School 0-4 Shinko Seiko FC Clair
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 3-0 Hyogo University of Teacher Education
Nissan FC 1-0 Kobe FC
Shimizudaihachi SC 5-0 Sagamihara LSC
Takatsuki FC 1-0 Shinko Seiko FC Clair
Semifinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 5-0 Nissan FC
Shimizudaihachi SC 0-3 Takatsuki FC
Final
Yomiuri SC Beleza 2-0 Takatsuki FC
Yomiuri SC Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1988 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1989 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Takatsuki FC won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Shimizu FC Ladies 10-0 Toyama Ladies SC
Tokyo Women's College of Physical Education 2-0 Sapporo Habatake
Nissan FC 2-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Akita FC 0-3 Shinko Seiko FC Clair
Tasaki-Shinju Kobe 3-0 Uwajima Minami High School
Jonan Ladies 0-8 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Takatsuki FC 5-0 Seiwa Gakuen SC
Urawa Motobuto 0-7 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Quarterfinals
Shimizu FC Ladies 4-0 Tokyo Women's College of Physical Education
Nissan FC 0-0 (pen 2-3) Shinko Seiko FC Clair
Tasaki-Shinju Kobe 0-0 (pen 3-1) Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Takatsuki FC 0-0 (pen 2-4) Yomiuri SC Beleza
Semifinals
Shimizu FC Ladies 5-0 Shinko Seiko FC Clair
Tasaki-Shinju Kobe 0-1 Takatsuki FC
Final
Shimizu FC Ladies 0-1 Takatsuki FC
Takatsuki FC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1989 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1990 season.
Overview
It was contested by 16 teams, and Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
Results
1st Round
Yomiuri SC Beleza 5-0 Seiwa Gakuen SC
Ota Gal 1-1 (pen 3-4) Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 4-0 Shibecha Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 0-0 (pen 4-1) Nissan FC
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-1 Hiroshima Minami FC
Nawashiro Ladies 0-5 Takatsuki FC
Tasaki-Shinju Kobe 5-0 Shimizudaihachi SC
Akita FC 0-9 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 6-3 Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 0-1 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-1 Takatsuki FC
Tasaki-Shinju Kobe 0-2 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Semifinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 0-0 (pen 2-4) Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 0-1 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Final
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-3 (pen 4-1) Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1990 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1947%E2%80%9348%20FK%20Partizan%20season | The 1947–48 season was the second season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and matches that the club played during the 1947–48 season.
Players
Friendlies
Competitions
Yugoslav First League
Matches
Yugoslav Cup
See also
List of FK Partizan seasons
References
External links
Official website
Partizanopedia 1947-48 (in Serbian)
FK Partizan seasons
Partizan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumihiro | Sumihiro (written: 澄博 or 純熈) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include:
, Japanese daimyō
, Japanese alpine skier
See also
Sumihiro's theorem, a theorem in algebraic geometry
Japanese masculine given names
Masculine given names |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri%20Gillet | Henri Antoine Gillet (born 8 July 1953, Tangier) is an American mathematician, specializing in arithmetic geometry and algebraic geometry.
Education and career
Gillet received in 1974 his bachelor's degree from King’s College London and in 1978 his Ph.D. from Harvard University under David Mumford with thesis Applications of Algebraic K-Theory to Intersection Theory. As a postdoc he was an instructor and from 1981 an assistant professor at Princeton University. He became in 1984 an assistant professor, in 1986 an associate professor, and in 1988 a full professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he was from 1996 to 2001 the head of the department of mathematics, statistics, and computer science. He was a visiting scholar at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (2006), the Institute for Advanced Study (1987), the IHES (1985, 1986, 1988), in Barcelona, at the Fields Institute in Toronto and at the Isaac Newton Institute (1998).
Gillet's research deals with differential geometry, algebraic und arithmetic geometry, in particular Arakelov theory and algebraic K-theory. He collaborated with Christophe Soulé and Jean-Michel Bismut. Gillet and Soulé proved in 1992 an arithmetic Riemann–Roch theorem.
Gillet was in 2008 a Senior Fellow at the Clay Mathematics Institute and from 1986 to 1989 a Sloan Fellow. He was an Invited Speaker with talk A Riemann-Roch theorem in arithmetic geometry at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyōto in 1990. He was from 1994 to 1999 an editor for the American Journal of Mathematics, from 1995 to 1998 for the International Mathematics Research Notices, and from 2003 to 2007 for the Illinois Journal of Mathematics.
Selected publications
with Christophe Soulé: Direct images of Hermitian holomorphic bundles Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. vol. 15, 1986, 209–212
with Jean-Michel Bismut and Christophe Soulé: Analytic torsion and holomorphic determinant bundles 1-3, Comm. Math. Phys., vol. 115, 1988, pp. 49–78 , 79–126 , 301–351
with Soulé: Arithmetic intersection theory, Pub. Math. IHES, vol. 72, 1990, p. 94–174
with Bismut and Soulé: Complex immersions and Arakelov Geometry, in Pierre Cartier et al. (eds.): Grothendieck Festschrift, vol. 1, 1990, Birkhäuser, pp. 249–331
with Soulé: An arithmetic Riemann-Roch Theorem, Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 110, 1992, pp. 473–543
K-theory and intersection theory in Eric Friedlander, Daniel Grayson (eds.): Handbook of K-theory, Springer 2005, pp. 235–293
References
1953 births
Living people
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
Alumni of King's College London
Harvard University alumni
University of Illinois Chicago faculty |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1991 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies won the championship.
Results
1st round
Toyama Ladies SC 0-3 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Ishinomaki Women's Commercial High School 1-0 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Ube Super Ladies 0-4 Ozu High School
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 0-0 (pen 3-0) Shiroki FC Serena
2nd round
Yomiuri SC Beleza 3-0 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Sagamihara LSC 1-2 Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Nissan FC 11-0 Shibecha Ladies
Ishinomaki Women's Commercial High School 0-5 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 7-0 Ozu High School
Uwajima Minami High School 0-2 Tasaki Kobe
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 0-0 (pen 4-2) Nippon Sport Science University
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 0-3 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 3-0 Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Nissan FC 2-1 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 3-1 Tasaki Kobe
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 0-5 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Semifinals
Yomiuri SC Beleza 4-0 Nissan FC
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 0-1 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Final
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 3-1 Yomiuri SC Beleza
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1991 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1992%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1992 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
Results
1st round
Gifu Ladies FC 0-4 Tasaki Kobe
Toyama Ladies SC 3-1 FC Sera Fuchu
Sapporo Linda 3-2 Ozu High School
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 10-0 Ota Gal
2nd round
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 6-1 Tasaki Kobe
Fujita Tendai SC Mercury 2-0 Ishinomaki Women's Commercial High School
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 5-0 Nippon Sport Science University
Toyama Ladies SC 0-8 Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 11-0 Sapporo Linda
Shiroki FC Serena 0-3 Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Nissan FC 4-0 Takatsuki FC
Shinko Seiko FC Clair 0-1 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 2-1 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 1-1 (pen 6-5) Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 7-0 Asahi Kokusai Bunnys
Nissan FC 0-1 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Semifinals
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 1-1 (pen 4-3) Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-3 (pen 5-3) Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Final
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 0-1 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1992 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1993 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Ota Gal 1-2 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Urawa Motobuto 6-1 Ishinomaki Women's Commercial High School
Shimizudaihachi SC 4-0 Sapporo Daiichi
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 10-0 Ozu High School
2nd round
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 3-0 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Tasaki Perule FC 0-0 (pen 4-3) Tokyo Shidax LSC
Shiroki FC Serena 6-0 Hatsukaichi High School
Urawa Motobuto 0-7 Nissan FC
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 6-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Nawashiro Ladies 0-6 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Asahi Kokusai Bunnys 1-0 Nippon Sport Science University
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 1-1 (pen 4-3) Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 5-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Shiroki FC Serena 1-1 (pen 5-3) Nissan FC
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 0-2 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Asahi Kokusai Bunnys 0-2 Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina
Semifinals
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 2-1 Shiroki FC Serena
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 1-0 Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina
Final
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza 2-0 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Yomiuri Nippon SC Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1993 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1994%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1994 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
Results
1st round
Nippon Sport Science University 1-4 Urawa FC
Toyama Ladies SC 1-2 Akita FC
Socius Amigo 1-8 Seiwa Gakuen SC
Asahi Kokusai Bunnys 2-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
2nd round
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 5-0 Urawa FC
Hatsukaichi High School 0-6 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 11-0 Sapporo Linda
Akita FC 0-9 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 7-0 Seiwa Gakuen SC
Tasaki Perule FC 2-0 Shiroki FC Serena
Tokyo Shidax LSC 8-0 JEF United Ichihara
Asahi Kokusai Bunnys 0-1 Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza
Quarterfinals
Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina 1-3 Fujita Tendai SC Mercury
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 1-0 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 3-0 Tasaki Perule FC
Tokyo Shidax LSC 0-4 Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza
Semifinals
Fujita Tendai SC Mercury 1-2 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 1-0 Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza
Final
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 1-4 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1994 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1995%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1995 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Fujita SC Mercury won the championship.
Results
1st round
OKI Lady Thunders 1-3 Takarazuka Bunnys
Chukyo Women's University 4-1 FC Shibecha
Jonan Ladies 3-4 Akita FC
Tokyo Shidax LSC 6-0 Socius Amigo
2nd round
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-1 Takarazuka Bunnys
Ishinomaki Women's Commercial High School 1-9 Tasaki Perule FC
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 13-1 Toyama Ladies SC
Chukyo Women's University 0-9 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 11-0 Akita FC
Japan Women's College of Physical Education 0-8 Fujita SC Mercury
Shiroki FC Serena 7-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Ragazza
Tokyo Shidax LSC 1-0 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Quarterfinals
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 4-0 Tasaki Perule FC
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 1-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 2-2 (pen 1-3) Fujita SC Mercury
Shiroki FC Serena 0-0 (pen 2-3) Tokyo Shidax LSC
Semifinals
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 1-1 (pen 3-4) Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza
Fujita SC Mercury 1-0 Tokyo Shidax LSC
Final
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 2-3 Fujita SC Mercury
Fujita SC Mercury won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1995 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1996 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
Results
1st round
Akita FC 0-3 OKI FC Winds
Kochi JFC Rosa 0-6 Yomiuri Menina
Toyama Ladies SC 0-4 Shimizudaihachi SC
Shiroki FC Serena 5-0 Takarazuka Bunnys Junior
2nd round
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 4-0 OKI FC Winds
Scramble FC 0-11 Fujita SC Mercury
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 7-0 Sapporo Linda
Yomiuri Menina 2-3 Takarazuka Bunnys
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 8-0 Shimizudaihachi SC
Morioka Zebla LFC 0-8 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Tasaki Perule FC 2-0 Urawa FC
Shiroki FC Serena 1-5 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Quarterfinals
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-1 Fujita SC Mercury
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 8-5 Takarazuka Bunnys
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 2-1 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Tasaki Perule FC 3-4 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Semifinals
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-2 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 3-2 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Final
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-0 Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1996 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1997 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Kochi JFC Rosa 0-7 Shiroki FC Serena
Mothers Kumamoto Rainbow 1-0 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Ragazza 4-1 Sapporo Linda
Takarazuka Bunnys 4-1 Nippon Sport Science University
2nd round
Nawashiro Ladies 0-4 OKI FC Winds
Tasaki Perule FC 9-0 AS Elfen FC
Shimizudaihachi SC 0-6 Fujita SC Mercury
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 13-0 Scramble FC
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 4-1 Shiroki FC Serena
Mothers Kumamoto Rainbow 0-5 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 10-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Ragazza
Takarazuka Bunnys 1-2 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Quarterfinals
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 2-0 OKI FC Winds
Tasaki Perule FC 0-3 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-0 Fujita SC Mercury
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 1-5 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Semifinals
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 3-0 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 2-2 (pen 2-4) Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Final
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 1-0 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1997 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1998 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
Results
1st round
Yokosuka Seagulls FC 1-2 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Sapporo Linda 1-7 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Ragazza
OKI FC Winds 2-0 Shimizudaihachi SC
Scramble FC 0-5 Fujita SC Mercury
2nd round
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 11-0 Toyama Ladies SC
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 0-4 Takarazuka Bunnys
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 7-1 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Ragazza
Fukuoka First Lady Eleven 0-16 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Tasaki Perule FC 4-0 Nippon Sport Science University
OKI FC Winds 1-5 Yomiuri Beleza
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 1-0 Fujita SC Mercury
Socius Amigo 0-6 Shiroki FC Serena
Quarterfinals
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 3-0 Shiroki FC Serena
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 3-1 Takarazuka Bunnys
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 3-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Tasaki Perule FC 2-1 Yomiuri Beleza
Semifinals
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 1-1 (pen 4–1) Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-0 Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 0-1 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1998 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 1999 season.
Overview
It was contested by 18 teams, and Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
Results
1st round
JEF United Ichihara 1-3 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 4-2 NTV Menina
2nd round
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 3-0 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Urawa Reinas FC 3-1 Sapporo Linda
OKI FC Winds 5-0 Toyama Ladies SC
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 11-0 Hiroshima Oko FC
NTV Beleza 16-0 Socius Amigo
Takarazuka Bunnys 1-0 Fukuoka Jogakuin FC
Nippon Sport Science University 0-1 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 0-4 Tasaki Perule FC
Quarterfinals
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 5-0 Urawa Reinas FC
OKI FC Winds 1-3 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
NTV Beleza 3-1 Takarazuka Bunnys
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 0-2 Tasaki Perule FC
Semifinals
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 6-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
NTV Beleza 1-1 (pen 3-4) Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 0-0 (pen 2-4) Tasaki Perule FC
Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
1999 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2000 season.
Overview
It was contested by 19 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Seiwa Gakuen High School 1-0 Kamimura Gakuen High School
Sapporo Linda 0-2 Shimizudaihachi SC
Saibi High School 0-7 Nippon Sport Science University
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 8-0 Seiwa Gakuen High School
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 0-3 JEF United Ichihara
Speranza FC Takatsuki 7-0 Nawashiro Ladies
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 5-0 Nippon TV Menina
Tasaki Perule FC 10-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 0-1 Urawa Reinas FC
Takarazuka Bunnys 3-0 Scramble FC
Nippon Sport Science University 0-3 Iga FC Kunoichi
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 3-0 JEF United Ichihara
Speranza FC Takatsuki 2-1 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Tasaki Perule FC 4-0 Urawa Reinas FC
Takarazuka Bunnys 0-4 Iga FC Kunoichi
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 5-1 Speranza FC Takatsuki
Tasaki Perule FC 1-0 Iga FC Kunoichi
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 2-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2000 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2001%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2001 season.
Overview
It was contested by 20 teams, and Iga FC Kunoichi won the championship.
Results
1st round
Fujimi FC Angels 1-2 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 2-1 Tokyo Women's College of Physical Education
Saibi High School 0-6 Kyoto Shiko SC
Fukuoka Jogakuin FC Anclas 1-3 Seiwa Gakuen High School
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 12-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
JEF United Ichihara 1-2 Takarazuka Bunnys
Urawa Reinas FC 5-0 Hiroshima Minami High School
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 0-6 Iga FC Kunoichi
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 3-0 Kyoto Shiko SC
AS Elfen FC 0-3 Shimizudaihachi SC
Speranza FC Takatsuki 4-0 Renaissance Kumamoto FC
Seiwa Gakuen High School 0-10 Tasaki Perule FC
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 Takarazuka Bunnys
Urawa Reinas FC 0-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 4-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Speranza FC Takatsuki 0-3 Tasaki Perule FC
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 1-2 Iga FC Kunoichi
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 1-3 Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Iga FC Kunoichi won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2001 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2002 season.
Overview
It was contested by 21 teams, and Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
Results
1st round
Fukuoka Jogakuin FC Anclas 0-4 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Ragazza FC Takatsuki Speranza 1-2 Nippon Sport Science University
Iga FC Fraulein 2-5 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Nippon TV Menina 3-0 Seiwa Gakuen High School
J. Sea Gull 2-0 Kochi JFC Rosa
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 1-0 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
JEF United Ichihara 3-1 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Takarazuka Bunnys 1-3 Nippon Sport Science University
Okayama Yunogo Belle 1-4 Saitama Reinas FC
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-1 Nippon TV Menina
Shimizudaihachi SC 0-4 YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Speranza FC Takatsuki 8-0 Renaissance Kumamoto FC
J. Sea Gull 0-4 Tasaki Perule FC
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 JEF United Ichihara
Nippon Sport Science University 0-2 Saitama Reinas FC
Iga FC Kunoichi 1-1 (pen 0-3) YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers
Speranza FC Takatsuki 0-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 1-0 Saitama Reinas FC
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 1-3 Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 0-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2002 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White%20noise%20analysis | In probability theory, a branch of mathematics, white noise analysis, otherwise known as Hida calculus, is a framework for infinite-dimensional and stochastic calculus, based on the Gaussian white noise probability space, to be compared with Malliavin calculus based on the Wiener process. It was initiated by Takeyuki Hida in his 1975 Carleton Mathematical Lecture Notes.
The term white noise was first used for signals with a flat spectrum.
White noise measure
The white noise probability measure on the space of tempered distributions has the characteristic function
Brownian motion in white noise analysis
A version of Wiener's Brownian motion is obtained by the dual pairing
where is the indicator function of the interval . Informally
and in a generalized sense
Hilbert space
Fundamental to white noise analysis is the Hilbert space
generalizing the Hilbert spaces to infinite dimension.
Wick polynomials
An orthonormal basis in this Hilbert space, generalizing that of Hermite polynomials, is given by the so-called "Wick", or "normal ordered" polynomials with and
with normalization
entailing the Itô-Segal-Wiener isomorphism of the white noise Hilbert space with Fock space:
The "chaos expansion"
in terms of Wick polynomials correspond to the expansion in terms of multiple Wiener integrals. Brownian martingales are characterized by kernel functions depending on only a "cut-off":
Gelfand triples
Suitable restrictions of the kernel function to be smooth and rapidly decreasing in and give rise to spaces of white noise test functions , and, by duality, to spaces of generalized functions of white noise, with
generalizing the scalar product in . Examples are the Hida triple, with
or the more general Kondratiev triples.
T- and S-transform
Using the white noise test functions
one introduces the "T-transform" of white noise distributions by setting
Likewise, using
one defines the "S-transform" of white noise distributions by
It is worth noting that for generalized functions , the S-transform is just
Depending on the choice of Gelfand triple, the white noise test functions and distributions are characterized by corresponding growth and analyticity properties of their S- or T-transforms.
Characterization theorem
The function is the T-transform of a (unique) Hida distribution iff for all the function is analytic in the whole complex plane and of second order exponential growth, i.e. where is some continuous quadratic form on .The same is true for S-transforms, and similar characterization theorems hold for the more general Kondratiev distributions.
Calculus
For test functions , partial, directional derivatives exist:
where may be varied by any generalized function . In particular, for the Dirac distribution one defines the "Hida derivative", denoting
Gaussian integration by parts yields the dual operator on distribution space
An infinite-dimensional gradient
i |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2003 season.
Overview
It was contested by 23 teams, and Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
Results
1st round
Honda FC 1-6 Kanagawa University
Albirex Niigata 2-1 Renaissance Kumamoto FC
Bucchigiri FC 0-8 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School 4-1 Kibi International University
JEF United Ichihara 1-5 Nippon Sport Science University
Shimizudaihachi SC 0-5 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 1-2 Hoo High School
2nd round
Tasaki Perule FC 5-0 Kanagawa University
Albirex Niigata 0-2 Speranza FC Takatsuki
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 4-0 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School 0-7 Saitama Reinas FC
Nippon TV Beleza 5-0 Nippon Sport Science University
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 1-3 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Okayama Yunogo Belle 3-1 Takarazuka Bunnys
Hoo High School 1-5 Iga FC Kunoichi
Quarterfinals
Tasaki Perule FC 3-0 Speranza FC Takatsuki
YKK Tohoku LSC Flappers 0-2 Saitama Reinas FC
Nippon TV Beleza 3-1 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Okayama Yunogo Belle 1-5 Iga FC Kunoichi
Semifinals
Tasaki Perule FC 1-0 Saitama Reinas FC
Nippon TV Beleza 3-0 Iga FC Kunoichi
Final
Tasaki Perule FC 2-2 (pen 5-3) Nippon TV Beleza
Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2003 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2004 season.
Overview
It was contested by 24 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School 5-1 Toyama Ladies SC
Okayama Yunogo Belle 3-1 Tokyo Women's College of Physical Education
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 1-0 Bucchigiri FC
JEF United Ichihara 0-3 Hoo High School
Nagoya FC 4-6 Shimizudaihachi SC
AS Elfen Sayama FC 1-6 Kanagawa University
Albirex Niigata 9-0 Hiroshima Fujita SC
INAC Leonessa 3-2 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
2nd round
Saitama Reinas FC 6-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Okayama Yunogo Belle 3-1 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
YKK AP Tohoku LSC Flappers 5-0 Renaissance Kumamoto FC
Hoo High School 0-5 Iga FC Kunoichi
Tasaki Perule FC 13-0 Shimizudaihachi SC
Kanagawa University 0-1 Takarazuka Bunnys
Speranza FC Takatsuki 1-2 Albirex Niigata
INAC Leonessa 1-3 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
Saitama Reinas FC 6-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
YKK AP Tohoku LSC Flappers 0-0 (pen 3-4) Iga FC Kunoichi
Tasaki Perule FC 5-0 Takarazuka Bunnys
Albirex Niigata 0-5 Nippon TV Beleza
Semifinals
Saitama Reinas FC 1-1 (pen 4-3) Iga FC Kunoichi
Tasaki Perule FC 1-3 Nippon TV Beleza
Final
Saitama Reinas FC 1-3 Nippon TV Beleza
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2004 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2005 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Nippon TV Beleza 7-0 Kamimura Gakuen High School
Seiwa Gakuen High School 0-2 Waseda University
INAC Leonessa 10-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 1-1 (pen 5–3) Takarazuka Bunnys
Urawa Reds 13-0 Toyama Ladies SC
Iga FC Fraulein 0-3 AS Elfen Sayama FC
JEF United Chiba 3-0 Hiroshima Fujita SC
Musashigaoka College 0-1 TEPCO Mareeze
Iga FC Kunoichi 3-2 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
Nagoya FC 2-1 Shimizudaihachi SC
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 1-0 Fukuoka Jogakuin FC Anclas
Urawa Motobuto 0-3 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Speranza FC Takatsuki 1-0 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Kanagawa University 1-5 Albirex Niigata
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 1-2 Kibi International University
Kochi JFC Rosa 0-8 Tasaki Perule FC
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 5-0 Waseda University
INAC Leonessa 6-0 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Urawa Reds 5-0 AS Elfen Sayama FC
JEF United Chiba 0-4 TEPCO Mareeze
Iga FC Kunoichi 4-0 Nagoya FC
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 0-2 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Speranza FC Takatsuki 3-0 Albirex Niigata
Kibi International University 0-8 Tasaki Perule FC
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 8-0 INAC Leonessa
Urawa Reds 1-0 TEPCO Mareeze
Iga FC Kunoichi 1-4 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Speranza FC Takatsuki 2-3 Tasaki Perule FC
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 2-0 Urawa Reds
Okayama Yunogo Belle 0-4 Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 4-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2005 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2006 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
Results
1st round
Nagoya FC 0-3 Kibi International University
FC Adooma 0-4 Waseda University
Libelta Tokushima FC 0-6 Kagoshima Kamoike FC Asahina
Kamimura Gakuen High School 3-1 Kanagawa University
FC Re've 0-14 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 2-1 Seiwa Gakuen High School
Fujieda Junshin High School 1-0 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
Nippon TV Menina 3-2 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
2nd round
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 0-2 Kibi International University
Waseda University 1-0 Albirex Niigata
JEF United Chiba 6-0 Kagoshima Kamoike FC Asahina
Kamimura Gakuen High School 0-2 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Bunnys Kyoto SC 3-2 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 1-4 Fukuoka J. Anclas
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 5-0 Fujieda Junshin High School
Nippon TV Menina 2-0 Shimizudaihachi SC
3rd round
Nippon TV Beleza 9-0 Kibi International University
Waseda University 0-2 TEPCO Mareeze
INAC Leonessa 4-1 JEF United Chiba
AS Elfen Sayama FC 1-2 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Tasaki Perule FC 6-1 Bunnys Kyoto SC
Fukuoka J. Anclas 2-3 Iga FC Kunoichi
Speranza FC Takatsuki 0-2 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Nippon TV Menina 0-4 Urawa Reds
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 TEPCO Mareeze
INAC Leonessa 1-1 (pen 3-5) Okayama Yunogo Belle
Tasaki Perule FC 2-0 Iga FC Kunoichi
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 0-4 Urawa Reds
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 0-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Tasaki Perule FC 2-2 (pen 4-3) Urawa Reds
Final
Okayama Yunogo Belle 0-2 Tasaki Perule FC
Tasaki Perule FC won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2006 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2007 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Briosita Akita 2006 0-1 Kibi International University
Kochi Ganador FC 0-7 Nippon Sport Science University
Iga FC Fraulein 0-8 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Menina 8-0 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
Shimizudaihachi Pleiades 4-0 Hiroshima Bunkyo Women's University High School
Fujieda Junshin High School 0-1 Hoo High School
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 0-1 TEPCO Mareeze
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 0-1 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
2nd round
Fukuoka J. Anclas 0-0 (pen 0-3) Kibi International University
Nippon Sport Science University 1-1 (pen 3-5) Speranza FC Takatsuki
Bunnys Kyoto SC 1-2 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Menina 11-0 Kagoshima Kamoike FC Asahina
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 3-2 Shimizudaihachi Pleiades
Hoo High School 0-1 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School 0-2 TEPCO Mareeze
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 2-3 Urawa Reds Junior Youth
3rd round
Tasaki Perule FC 1-0 Kibi International University
Speranza FC Takatsuki 2-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
INAC Leonessa 4-1 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Menina 0-4 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Urawa Reds 3-1 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
AS Elfen Sayama FC 1-2 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Albirex Niigata 1-0 TEPCO Mareeze
Urawa Reds Junior Youth 0-3 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
Tasaki Perule FC 2-0 Speranza FC Takatsuki
INAC Leonessa 2-0 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Urawa Reds 4-0 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Albirex Niigata 0-9 Nippon TV Beleza
Semifinals
Tasaki Perule FC 2-1 INAC Leonessa
Urawa Reds 0-3 Nippon TV Beleza
Final
Tasaki Perule FC 0-2 Nippon TV Beleza
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2007 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2008 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Nagoya FC 1-2 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Nippon Sport Science University 4-0 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 1-6 Nippon TV Menina
Fukuoka J. Anclas 2-6 Shimizudaihachi Pleiades
Bucchigiri FC 0-8 Waseda University
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 3-1 Shizuoka Sangyo University
JFA Academy Fukushima 2-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Anclas FC Paso Dorad 1-2 Sakuyo High School
2nd round
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 1-0 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Nippon Sport Science University 3-0 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
Kibi International University 0-0 (pen 3-5) Nippon TV Menina
Shimizudaihachi Pleiades 1-5 JEF United Chiba
AS Elfen Sayama FC 2-3 Waseda University
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 0-1 Speranza FC Takatsuki
Bunnys Kyoto SC 6-5 JFA Academy Fukushima
Sakuyo High School 0-7 Hoo High School
3rd round
Nippon TV Beleza 3-0 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Nippon Sport Science University 0-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
TEPCO Mareeze 7-0 Nippon TV Menina
JEF United Chiba 1-1 (pen 5-6) Okayama Yunogo Belle
Urawa Reds 3-0 Waseda University
Speranza FC Takatsuki 0-2 Tasaki Perule FC
Albirex Niigata 6-1 Bunnys Kyoto SC
Hoo High School 1-4 INAC Leonessa
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 Iga FC Kunoichi
TEPCO Mareeze 3-2 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Urawa Reds 0-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Albirex Niigata 1-3 INAC Leonessa
Semifinals
Tasaki Perule FC 1-4 INAC Leonessa
Nippon TV Beleza 3-1 TEPCO Mareeze
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 4-1 INAC Leonessa
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2008 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2009 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 3-7 Waseda University
Je Vrille Kagoshima 1-4 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
AS Elfen Sayama FC 11-0 Oita Trinita
Bunnys Kyoto SC 1-6 Kanagawa University
Shimizudaihachi Pleiades 5-0 ASC Adooma
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-0 Osaka Toin High School
JFA Academy Fukushima 7-1 Renaissance Kumamoto FC
Ehime Women's College 0-3 Fukuoka J. Anclas
2nd round
Ohara Gakuen JaSRA 1-1 (pen 4-3) Waseda University
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 3-1 Fujieda Junshin High School
Nippon TV Menina 0-1 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Kanagawa University 2-0 Tokoha University Tachibana High School
Sakuyo High School 3-1 Shimizudaihachi Pleiades
Iga FC Kunoichi 1-0 Kibi International University
Kamimura Gakuen High School 1-5 JFA Academy Fukushima
Fukuoka J. Anclas 1-0 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
3rd round
Urawa Reds 4-0 Ohara Gakuen JaSRA
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 0-2 JEF United Chiba
Speranza FC Takatsuki 1-3 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Kanagawa University 0-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
TEPCO Mareeze 8-0 Sakuyo High School
Iga FC Kunoichi 0-2 Albirex Niigata
Okayama Yunogo Belle 4-0 JFA Academy Fukushima
Fukuoka J. Anclas 0-5 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
Urawa Reds 2-0 JEF United Chiba
AS Elfen Sayama FC 0-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
TEPCO Mareeze 1-0 Albirex Niigata
Okayama Yunogo Belle 1-5 Nippon TV Beleza
Semifinals
Urawa Reds 3-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
TEPCO Mareeze 1-2 Nippon TV Beleza
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 2-0 Urawa Reds
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2009 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2010 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Je Vrille Kagoshima 1-0 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
AC Nagano Parceiro 2-3 Fujieda Junshin High School
Renaissance Kumamoto FC 0-3 Nippon TV Menina
Seiwa Gakuen High School 1-2 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Nippon Sport Science University 4-2 Bunnys Kyoto SC
Musashigaoka College 2-4 Speranza FC Takatsuki
Ehime Women's College 0-6 JFA Academy Fukushima
Aguilas Kobe 0-2 Kamimura Gakuen High School
2nd round
Tokiwagi Gakuen High School LSC 6-0 Je Vrille Kagoshima
Fujieda Junshin High School 1-1 (pen 4-2) AS Elfen Sayama FC
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 1-2 Nippon TV Menina
Shizuoka Sangyo University 2-0 Norddea Hokkaido
Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School 0-1 Nippon Sport Science University
Speranza FC Takatsuki 2-2 (pen 4-5) Kibi International University
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-0 JFA Academy Fukushima
Kamimura Gakuen High School 4-3 Shimizudaihachi Pleiades
3rd round
Nippon TV Beleza 0-0 (pen 4-5) Tokiwagi Gakuen High School LSC
Fujieda Junshin High School 2-2 (pen 6-5) Fukuoka J. Anclas
Okayama Yunogo Belle 2-1 Nippon TV Menina
Shizuoka Sangyo University 0-6 INAC Kobe Leonessa
TEPCO Mareeze 5-0 Nippon Sport Science University
Kibi International University 0-4 Albirex Niigata
JEF United Chiba 2-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
Kamimura Gakuen High School 0-6 Urawa Reds
Quarterfinals
Tokiwagi Gakuen High School LSC 2-0 Fujieda Junshin High School
Okayama Yunogo Belle 2-3 INAC Kobe Leonessa
TEPCO Mareeze 2-3 Albirex Niigata
JEF United Chiba 0-1 Urawa Reds
Semifinals
Tokiwagi Gakuen High School LSC 0-5 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Albirex Niigata 1-3 Urawa Reds
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-1 (pen 3-2) Urawa Reds
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2010 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2011 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Jumonji High School 2-2 (pen 5–4) Fujieda Junshin High School
AC Nagano Parceiro 1-4 Kanto Gakuen University
Ehime FC 5-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 2-1 Japan Soccer College
Tokuyama University 2-1 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Musashigaoka College 0-3 Kibi International University
Himeji Dokkyo University 1-3 Norddea Hokkaido
Sendai University 1-2 Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto FC
2nd round
Waseda University 6-2 Jumonji High School
Kanto Gakuen University 0-3 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Je Vrille Kagoshima 0-1 Ehime FC
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 2-4 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
Hoo High School 4-2 Tokuyama University
Kibi International University 4-2 Speranza FC Takatsuki
JFA Academy Fukushima 5-0 Norddea Hokkaido
Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto FC 2-7 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
3rd round
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 Waseda University
AS Elfen Sayama FC 1-0 Fukuoka J. Anclas
JEF United Chiba 2-0 Ehime FC
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 1-3 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Albirex Niigata 7-0 Hoo High School
Kibi International University 3-4 Urawa Reds
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-0 JFA Academy Fukushima
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 0-5 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
Iga FC Kunoichi 0-1 Nippon TV Beleza
JEF United Chiba 0-2 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Albirex Niigata 1-0 Urawa Reds
INAC Kobe Leonessa 2-0 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Semifinals
INAC Kobe Leonessa 4-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Albirex Niigata 2-1 Nippon TV Beleza
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 3-0 Albirex Niigata
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2011 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2012 season.
Overview
It was contested by 32 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School 0-3 Waseda University
Japan Soccer College 3-1 Seiwa Gakuen High School
JFA Academy Fukushima 2-1 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Ehime FC 2-3 Nippon Sport Science University
Nojima Stella Kanagawa 4-1 Melsa Kumamoto FC
Himeji Dokkyo University 0-1 Kamimura Gakuen High School
Kanto Gakuen University 4-2 Sakuyo High School
Niigata University of Health and Welfare 1-3 Fujieda Junshin High School
2nd round
Hokkaido Otani Muroran High School 1-5 Waseda University
Japan Soccer College 0-1 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 0-3 JFA Academy Fukushima
Nippon Sport Science University 0-6 Vegalta Sendai
Kochi ganador FC 0-10 Nojima Stella Kanagawa
Kamimura Gakuen High School 2-1 Kibi International University
Fukuoka J. Anclas 2-1 Kanto Gakuen University
Fujieda Junshin High School 0-2 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
3rd round
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 Waseda University
AS Elfen Sayama FC 2-1 Speranza FC Takatsuki
Albirex Niigata 1-2 JFA Academy Fukushima
Vegalta Sendai 0-2 Urawa Reds
Okayama Yunogo Belle 9-0 Nojima Stella Kanagawa
Kamimura Gakuen High School 0-6 Iga FC Kunoichi
JEF United Chiba 4-0 Fukuoka J. Anclas
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 0-6 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
INAC Kobe Leonessa 4-0 AS Elfen Sayama FC
JEF United Chiba 2-2 (pen 4–2) Nippon TV Beleza
JFA Academy Fukushima 0-3 Urawa Reds
Okayama Yunogo Belle 1-2 Iga FC Kunoichi
Semifinals
Iga FC Kunoichi 1-1 (pen 3–4) JEF United Chiba
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 Urawa Reds
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 JEF United Chiba
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2012 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2013 season.
Overview
It was contested by 36 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences 2-2 (pen 4-5) Nippon Sport Science University
Fukuoka J. Anclas 1-4 Ehime FC
Kanto Gakuen University 3-1 Fujieda Junshin High School
Nojima Stella Kanagawa 1-2 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Naruto Uzushio High School 0-3 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
Hoo High School 2-0 Cerezo Osaka Sakai
AC Nagano Parceiro 0-5 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Angeviolet Hiroshima 2-3 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Kamimura Gakuen High School 3-0 Hokkaido Bunkyo University Meisei High School
Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto FC 0-6 JFA Academy Fukushima
Waseda University 3-0 Sendai University
Shimizudaihachi Pleiades 1-2 Japan Soccer College
2nd round
Nippon Sport Science University 1-4 Ehime FC
Kanto Gakuen University 2-8 Kibi International University
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 0-6 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School 1-2 Hoo High School
AS Elfen Sayama FC 2-0 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Kamimura Gakuen High School 1-6 Sfida Setagaya FC
Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki 4-1 JFA Academy Fukushima
Waseda University 4-0 Japan Soccer College
3rd round
INAC Kobe Leonessa 10-0 Ehime FC
Kibi International University 2-1 Urawa Reds
Iga FC Kunoichi 3-1 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Hoo High School 0-10 Vegalta Sendai
Okayama Yunogo Belle 4-3 AS Elfen Sayama FC
Sfida Setagaya FC 2-5 JEF United Chiba
Albirex Niigata 3-0 Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki
Waseda University 0-4 Nippon TV Beleza
Quarterfinals
INAC Kobe Leonessa 7-0 Kibi International University
Iga FC Kunoichi 2-1 Vegalta Sendai
Okayama Yunogo Belle 2-0 JEF United Chiba
Albirex Niigata 1-0 Nippon TV Beleza
Semifinals
Albirex Niigata 1-0 Okayama Yunogo Belle
INAC Kobe Leonessa 3-2 Iga FC Kunoichi
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 2-2 (pen 4-3) Albirex Niigata
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2013 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2014 season.
Overview
It was contested by 36 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
1st round
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 3-2 Sakuyo High School
Naruto Uzushio High School 0-2 Seiwa Gakuen High School
Shizuoka Sangyo University 1-2 JEF United Chiba U-18
AS Harima ALBION 3-0 Shimizudaihachi Pleiades
Sfida Setagaya FC 6-2 Niigata University of Health and Welfare
Fujieda Junshin High School 5-0 Himeji Dokkyo University
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 1-3 Ehime FC
JFA Academy Fukushima 3-0 Fukuoka J. Anclas
Albirex Niigata U-18 0-6 Tokiwagi Gakuken High School
Daisho Gakuen High School 5-1 Kamimura Gakuen High School
Japan Soccer College 0-2 Nippon Sport Science University
Angeviolet Hiroshima 2-1 Norddea Hokkaido
2nd round
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 3-1 Seiwa Gakuen High School
JEF United Chiba U-18 0-4 Iga FC Kunoichi
Urawa Reds Youth 0-0 (pen 3-4) AS Harima ALBION
Sfida Setagaya FC 0-1 Fujieda Junshin High School
Ehime FC 3-2 JFA Academy Fukushima
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 3-2 Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki
Kibi International University 2-2 (pen 7-8) Angeviolet Hiroshima
Daisho Gakuen High School 0-1 Nippon Sport Science University
3rd round
Urawa Reds 6-0 Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara
Iga FC Kunoichi 3-1 AS Elfen Saitama
INAC Kobe Leonessa 4-0 AS Harima ALBION
Fujieda Junshin High School 0-4 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Beleza 9-0 Ehime FC
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 0-4 Albirex Niigata
Vegalta Sendai 5-0 Angeviolet Hiroshima
Nippon Sport Science University 1-3 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Quarterfinals
Urawa Reds 2-0 Iga FC Kunoichi
INAC Kobe Leonessa 0-1 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Beleza 3-0 Albirex Niigata
Vegalta Sendai 6-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Semifinals
Urawa Reds 3-1 JEF United Chiba
Nippon TV Beleza 2-0 Vegalta Sendai
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 1-0 Urawa Reds
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2014 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2015 season.
Overview
It was contested by 48 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Diosa Izumo FC 0-4 Fujieda Junshin High School
Waseda University 1-0 Fukuoka J. Anclas
Niigata University of Health and Welfare 1-2 NGU Nagoya FC
Kanto Gakuen University 0-5 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Urawa Reds Youth 0-0 (pen 5-4) JFA Academy Fukushima
Chinzei Gakuin High School 2-3 Nippon TV Menina
Kamimura Gakuen High School 3-0 Clubfields Linda
Sfida Setagaya FC 9-0 Seiwa Gakuen High School
Japan Soccer College 1-0 Tokoha University Tachibana High School
Daito Bunka University 2-0 Norddea Hokkaido
Tokiwagi Gakuken High School 0-1 Yokohama FC Seagulls
Shizuoka Sangyo University 8-0 Ryukyu Deigos
Shikoku University 0-5 Yamato Sylphid
Kaishi Gakuen Japan Soccer College 0-4 Kibi International University
Hinomoto Gakuen High School 4-3 Tokuyama University
University of Tsukuba 1-1 (pen 3-4) Bunnys Kyoto SC
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 3-1 Fujieda Junshin High School
AS Harima ALBION 2-2 (pen 0-3) Waseda University
Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki 6-0 NGU Nagoya FC
Iga FC Kunoichi 3-0 Osaka University of Health and Sport Sciences
Albirex Niigata 5-0 Urawa Reds Youth
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 3-1 Nippon TV Menina
Nippon Sport Science University 5-1 Kamimura Gakuen High School
JEF United Chiba 1-0 Sfida Setagaya FC
Vegalta Sendai 3-0 Japan Soccer College
Ehime FC 2-3 Daito Bunka University
Urawa Reds 5-0 Yokohama FC Seagulls
AC Nagano Parceiro 6-1 Shizuoka Sangyo University
Okayama Yunogo Belle 3-1 Yamato Sylphid
AS Elfen Saitama 2-0 Kibi International University
Angeviolet Hiroshima 2-1 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
INAC Kobe Leonessa 4-0 Bunnys Kyoto SC
3rd round
Nippon TV Beleza 5-0 Waseda University
Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki 1-2 Iga FC Kunoichi
Albirex Niigata 2-1 Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara
Nippon Sport Science University 0-2 JEF United Chiba
Vegalta Sendai 4-1 Daito Bunka University
Urawa Reds 2-0 AC Nagano Parceiro
Okayama Yunogo Belle 2-6 AS Elfen Saitama
Angeviolet Hiroshima 0-5 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
Albirex Niigata 2-0 JEF United Chiba
Vegalta Sendai 0-0 (pen 5-3) Urawa Reds
AS Elfen Saitama 0-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 1-1 (pen 2-3) Albirex Niigata
Vegalta Sendai 0-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 Albirex Niigata
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2015 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016%20Empress%27s%20Cup | Statistics of Empress's Cup in the 2016 season.
Overview
It was contested by 48 teams, and INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
1st round
Hiroshima Bunkyo Women's University High School 0-3 Clubfields Linda
Fujieda Junshin High School 1-2 Sendai University
Tokuyama University 0-5 Nippatsu Yokohama FC Seagulls
JFA Academy Fukushima 8-1 Shikoku Gakuin University
NGU Nagoya FC 0-2 Orca Kamogawa FC
Norddea Hokkaido 1-4 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Shizuoka Sangyo University 1-0 Urawa Reds Youth
AS Harima ALBION 4-1 Nippon TV Menina
Kamimura Gakuen High School 3-2 Seiwa Gakuen High School
Cerezo Osaka Sakai 3-1 Fukui University of Technology Fukui High School
Fukuoka J. Anclas 0-5 Waseda University
Bunnys Kyoto SC 1-0 University of Tsukuba
Toyo University 3-0 Japan Soccer College
Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto FC 3-2 Tokoha University Tachibana High School
Tokyo International University 1-0 Angeviolet Hiroshima
Daisho Gakuen High School 1-0 Niigata University of Health and Welfare
2nd round
Nippon TV Beleza 12-0 Clubfields Linda
Ehime FC 5-0 Sendai University
Konomiya Speranza Osaka-Takatsuki 1-3 Nippatsu Yokohama FC Seagulls
JEF United Chiba 4-0 JFA Academy Fukushima
Albirex Niigata 4-1 Orca Kamogawa FC
Chifure AS Elfen Saitama 3-1 Hinomoto Gakuen High School
Nippon Sport Science University 5-0 Shizuoka Sangyo University
AC Nagano Parceiro 5-1 AS Harima ALBION
Vegalta Sendai 7-0 Kamimura Gakuen High School
Sfida Setagaya FC 3-0 Cerezo Osaka Sakai
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 3-2 Waseda University
Okayama Yunogo Belle 1-0 Bunnys Kyoto SC
Iga FC Kunoichi 4-0 Toyo University
Urawa Reds 6-0 Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto FC
Kibi International University 2-2 (pen 5-4) Tokyo International University
INAC Kobe Leonessa 1-0 Daisho Gakuen High School
3rd round
Nippon TV Beleza 8-1 Ehime FC
Nippatsu Yokohama FC Seagulls 1-2 JEF United Chiba
Albirex Niigata 1-0 Chifure AS Elfen Saitama
Nippon Sport Science University 1-2 AC Nagano Parceiro
Vegalta Sendai 5-1 Sfida Setagaya FC
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 3-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Iga FC Kunoichi 0-2 Urawa Reds
Kibi International University 0-3 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Quarterfinals
Nippon TV Beleza 1-0 JEF United Chiba
Albirex Niigata 2-0 AC Nagano Parceiro
Vegalta Sendai 2-0 Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara
Urawa Reds 0-1 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 0-1 Albirex Niigata
Vegalta Sendai 1-3 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 0-0 (pen 5-4) Albirex Niigata
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
References
Empress's Cup
2016 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996%20L.League%20Cup | Statistics of L. League Cup in the 1996 season.
Overview
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza won the championship.
Results
Preliminary round
East
West
Final round
Semifinals
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 2-1 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies 0-2 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Third place match
Konomiya Speranza Osaka-Takatsuki|Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 1-2 Suzuyo Shimizu FC Lovely Ladies
Final
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 0-0 (pen 4-3) Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
1996 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997%20L.League%20Cup | Statistics of L. League Cup in the 1997 season.
Overview
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
Results
Preliminary round
East
West
Final round
Semifinals
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 1-0 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
Nikko Securities Dream Ladies 2-3 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Third place match
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 2-1 Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
Final
Yomiuri-Seiyu Beleza 0-3 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
1997 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998%20L.League%20Cup | Statistics of L. League Cup in the 1998 season.
Overview
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi won the championship.
Results
Preliminary round
East
West
Final round
Semifinals
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-1 OKI FC Winds
Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina 2-1 Yomiuri Beleza
Final
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 2-1 Matsushita Electric Panasonic Bambina
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
1998 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999%20L.League%20Cup | Statistics of L. League Cup in the 1999 season.
Overview
NTV Beleza won the championship.
Results
Preliminary round
East
West
First stage
Zone A
Zone B
Second stage
Zone High
Zone Low
Final round
Semifinals
OKI FC Winds 1-2 Prima Ham FC Kunoichi
Tasaki Perule FC 0-1 NTV Beleza
Third place match
OKI FC Winds 2-1 Tasaki Perule FC
Final
Prima Ham FC Kunoichi 0-1 NTV Beleza
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
1999 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2007 season.
Overview
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Group C
Group D
Final round
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 5-0 INAC Leonessa
Urawa Reds Ladies 1-1 (pen 4-2) TEPCO Mareeze
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 2-1 Urawa Reds Ladies
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2007 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2010 season.
Overview
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
Urawa Reds Ladies 3-2 INAC Kobe Leonessa
Nippon TV Beleza 1-0 TEPCO Mareeze
Final
Urawa Reds Ladies 2-3 Nippon TV Beleza
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2010 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2012 season.
Overview
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
2012
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
INAC Kobe Leonessa 5-1 Iga FC Kunoichi
Nippon TV Beleza 3-0 Albirex Niigata Ladies
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 2-3 Nippon TV Beleza
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2012 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2013 season.
Overview
INAC Kobe Leonessa won the championship.
Results
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
INAC Kobe Leonessa 2-1 JEF United Chiba Ladies
Nippon TV Beleza 0-2 Okayama Yunogo Belle
Final
INAC Kobe Leonessa 3-1 Okayama Yunogo Belle
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2013 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2016 season.
Overview
Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.
Results
Division 1
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 Urawa Reds Ladies
Vegalta Sendai Ladies 0-1 JEF United Chiba Ladies
Final
Nippon TV Beleza 4-0 JEF United Chiba Ladies
Division 2
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara 1-1 (pen 3-5) AS Harima ALBION
Cerezo Osaka Sakai Ladies 2-3 Nippon Sport Science University Fields Yokohama
Final
AS Harima ALBION 2-0 Nippon Sport Science University Fields Yokohama
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2016 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017%20Nadeshiko%20League%20Cup | Statistics of Nadeshiko League Cup in the 2017 season.
Overview
JEF United Chiba Ladies won the championship.
Results
Division 1
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final round
Semifinals
Nippon TV Beleza 2-2 (pen 4-5) Urawa Reds Ladies
INAC Kobe Leonessa 0-1 JEF United Chiba Ladies
Final
Urawa Reds Ladies 0-1 JEF United Chiba Ladies
Division 2
Qualifying round
Group A
Group B
Final
Nippon Sport Science University Fields Yokohama 1-1 (pen 4-5) Cerezo Osaka Sakai Ladies
References
Nadeshiko League Cup
2017 in Japanese women's football |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20M.%20Friedberg | Richard M. Friedberg (born October 8, 1935) is a theoretical physicist who has contributed to a wide variety of problems in mathematics and physics. These include mathematical logic, number theory, solid state physics, general relativity, particle physics, quantum optics, genome research, and the foundations of quantum physics.
Early life
Friedberg was born in Manhattan on Oct 8, 1935, the child of cardiologist Charles K. Friedberg, and playwright Gertrude Tonkonogy.
Academic work
Friedberg's most well-known work dates back to the mid-1950s. As an undergraduate at Harvard, he published several papers over a period of 2–3 years. The first paper introduced the priority method, a common technique in computability theory, in order to prove the existence of recursively enumerable sets with incomparable degrees of unsolvability.
In 1968, Friedberg proved independently what became known as Bell’s inequality, not knowing that J. S. Bell had proved it a few years earlier. He showed it to the physicist and historian Max Jammer, who somehow managed to insert it into his book “The Conceptual Development of Quantum Mechanics”, although the latter bears the publication date 1966. This caused Friedberg some embarrassment later when classmates at Harvard, knowing of the result only through Jammer’s book, supposed that Friedberg was the first discoverer.
(A letter from Friedberg to Jammer dated May 1971 begins, “It was nice of you to remember what I showed you in 1968. I finally got around to writing it up in 1969, but just then I found out about Bell’s 1964 paper (Physics 1, 195) which had anticipated my ‘discovery’ by three years. So I did not publish.”) More recently, Friedberg worked on the foundations of quantum mechanics in collaboration with the late Pierre Hohenberg.
Friedberg is also known for his love of music and poetry. He wrote poems in several letters
to cognitive scientist and writer Douglas Hofstadter in 1989. The last letter contains two sonnets ”The Electromagnetic Spectrum” and "Fermions and Bosons". These letters also include critiques and analyses of topics in Metamagical Themas, a collection of articles that Hofstadter wrote for Scientific American during the early 1980s.
Friedberg wrote an informal book on number theory titled "An Adventurer's Guide to Number Theory". In the book, he states, "The difference between the theory of numbers and arithmetic is like the difference between poetry and grammar."
Selected publications
"Two Recursively Enumerable Sets Not Recursive in Each Other", Richard Friedberg, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. vol. 43, p. 236 (1957) [communicated by K. Gödel].
"A criterion for completeness of degrees of unsolvability", Richard. M. Friedberg, Journal of Symbolic Logic, Volume 22, Issue 2 June 1957, pp. 159–160.
"A Learning Machine: Part I", R.M. Friedberg, IBM Journal of Research and Development (Volume: 2, Issue: 1, Jan. 1958).
"Three theorems on recursive enumeration. I. Decomposition. II. Maximal set. III |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borna%20%C4%86ori%C4%87%20career%20statistics | This is a list of main career statistics of Croatian professional tennis player Borna Ćorić. All statistics are according to the ATP Tour and ITF websites.
Performance timelines
Only main-draw results in ATP Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Davis Cup/ATP Cup/United Cup/Laver Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.
Singles
Current through the 2023 French Open.
Doubles
Significant finals
ATP Masters 1000 tournaments
Singles: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)
ATP career finals
Singles: 8 (3 titles, 5 runner-ups)
ATP Challengers and ITF Futures finals
Singles: 9 (8 titles, 1 runner-up)
Doubles: 2 (2 runner-ups)
Junior Grand Slam finals
Singles: 1 (1 title)
Best Grand Slam results details
Record against other players
Record against top-10 players
Ćorić's record against those who have been ranked in the top 10, with active players in boldface:
Wins over top 10 players
Ćorić has a record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10.
Notes
References
External links
Ćorić, Borna |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack%20Sock%20career%20statistics | This is a list of main career statistics of American former professional tennis player Jack Sock. All statistics are according to the ATP World Tour and ITF website.
Performance timelines
Singles
Doubles
Mixed doubles
Significant finals
Grand Slams
Doubles: 3 (3 titles)
Mixed doubles: 1 (1 title)
Year-end championships
Doubles: 1 (1 title)
Masters tournaments
Singles: 1 (1 title)
Doubles: 10 (4 titles, 6 runner-ups)
Olympic Medal Matches
Doubles: 1 (1 Bronze)
Mixed doubles: 1 (1 Gold)
ATP career finals
Singles: 8 (4 titles, 4 runner-ups)
Doubles: 27 (17 titles, 10 runner-ups)
ATP Challenger and ITF Futures finals
Singles: 11 (6–5)
Doubles: 13 (3–10)
Junior Grand Slam finals
Singles: 1 (1 title)
National and international representation
Team competitions finals: 6 (2 titles, 4 runner-ups)
Team Tennis Leagues
League finals: 1 (1 championship)
*(HC): Head Coach, (F): Franchise Player, (W): Wildcard Player, (R): Roster Player, (S): Substitute Player
Record against top 10 players
Sock's match record against players who have been ranked world No. 10 or higher, with those who are active in boldface.
Only ATP Tour main draw and Davis Cup matches are considered.
Statistics correct .
Top 10 wins
Sock had a record against players who were, at the time the match was played, ranked in the top 10.
References
External links
Sock, Jack |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Ferencv%C3%A1rosi%20TC%20records%20and%20statistics | Ferencvárosi Torna Club is a Hungarian professional association football club, based in Budapest, Hungary.
Honours
Hungarian League
Winners (31) 12: 1903, 1905, 1906–07, 1908–09, 1909–10, 1910–11, 1911–12, 1912–13, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1927–28, 1931–32, 1933–34, 1937–38, 1939–40, 1940–41, 1948–49, 1962–63, 1964, 1967, 1968, 1975–76, 1980–81, 1991–92, 1994–95, 1995–96, 2000–01, 2003–04, 2015–16, 2018–19, 2019–20
Hungarian Cup
Winners (23) 13: 1912–13, 1921–22, 1926–27, 1927–28, 1932–33, 1934–35, 1941–42, 1942–43, 1943–44, 1955–58, 1971–72, 1973–74, 1975–76, 1977–78, 1990–91, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1994–95, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17
Hungarian Super Cup
Winners (6): 1993, 1994, 1995, 2004, 2015, 2016
Hungarian League Cup
Winners (2): 2012–13, 2014–15
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
Winners (1): 1964–65
Runners-up (1): 1967–68
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
Runners-up (1): 1974–75
Mitropa Cup
Winners (2): 1928, 1937
Runners-up (4): 1935, 1938, 1939, 1940
Challenge Cup
Winner (1): 1909
Runners-up (1): 1911
UEFA Champions League winners 1984-1985
Notes
Note 12: more than any other Hungarian football club.
Note 13: more than any other Hungarian football club.
Players
Most appearances
Top scorers
Notes
Note 22: co-top scorer of the Hungarian League.
Note 23: also played for Stadler FC.
Note 24: in the Hungarian League 2.
Award winners
Ballon d'Or
The following players have won the Ballon d'Or while playing for Ferencvárosi TC:
Flórián Albert – 1967
Transfer records
Record departures
Record arrivals
Managerial records
Longest-serving manager: Tibor Nyilasi 4 years
Team records
First Matches
First Nemzeti Bajnokság I match: Ferencvárosi TC 3-5 Műegyetemi AFC, 1901 Nemzeti Bajnokság I, 21 April 1901
Biggest wins
Magyar Kupa
Biggest win: Szekszárdi UFC 0-10 Ferencváros (29 October 2013) (2013–14 Magyar Kupa)
Biggest win: Nagyecsed 0–10 Ferencváros (14 October 2014) (2015–16 Magyar Kupa)
European Cup
Biggest win: Ferencváros 9–0 Keflavík ÍF (8 September 1965) (1965–66 European Cup)
Cup Winners' Cup
Biggest win: Ferencváros 6–0 Floriana F.C. (27 September 1972) (1972–73 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup)
UEFA Cup
Biggest win: Ferencváros 6–0 Panionios F.C. (20 October 1971) (1971–72 UEFA Cup)
Goals
Most league goals scored in a season: 140 – 1940–41 Nemzeti Bajnokság I
Points
Attendances
highest league average attendance - 48 846 in 1959/60 season
highest league home game attendance - 85 000 20 July 1958 against MTK on Népstadion.
References
Ferencvárosi TC
Hungarian football club statistics |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf%20Weiler | Adolf Weiler (1851–1916) was a Swiss mathematician.
Life and work
After his studies in the Department of Mathematics Teachers of the Polytechnicum of Zurich, he went to study at university of Göttingen and university of Erlangen under Alfred Clebsch and Felix Klein. He was awarded doctor in 1874 with a dissertation on quadratic line complexes. Some years before, in 1872, he constructed a model of the Clebsch's diagonal surface.
Returned to Switzerland, he was mathematics professor at Ryffel Institute and he obtained the venia legendi both at Polytechnicum as the University of Zurich. His main research was in algebraic geometry.
References
Bibliography
External links
19th-century Swiss mathematicians
20th-century Swiss mathematicians
1851 births
1916 deaths |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Brighton%20%26%20Hove%20Albion%20F.C.%20records%20and%20statistics | Brighton & Hove Albion Football Club is a professional football club based in the city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England.
This list encompasses the records set by the club and players.
Team records
Highest overall league finish
6th place, 2022–23 Premier League
Record wins
14–2 v Brighton Amateurs, FA Cup Q1, 4 October 1902
10–1 v Wisbech Town, FA Cup R1, 13 November 1965 (FA Cup)
9–1 v Newport County, FL D3(S), 18 April 1951;
9–1 v Southend United, FL D3, 27 November 1965 (Football League)
Record defeats
0–18 v Norwich City, wartime, 25 December 1940
0–9 v Middlesbrough, FL D2, 23 August 1958 (Football League)
Streaks
Longest run unbeaten 22 games, May – December 2015
Player records
Goalscorers
Most goals in a season: Peter Ward, 36 goals (1976–77)
Most goals in the Premier League: Pascal Groß, 28 goals
Most goals in European competition: João Pedro, 4 goals
Top goalscorers
Tommy Cook is officially recognised by the club as their top scorer, with 123 goals scored in 209 appearances between 1922 and 1929.
Bert Stephens scored 174 goals between 1935 and 1948, however only 87 of these were scored in competitive matches. The remainder were scored during wartime fixtures when competitive football was suspended.
Competitive, professional matches only.
Most appearances
Ernie “Tug” Wilson has the most appearances for the club, playing a total of 566 matches between 1922 and 1936.
Transfers
Record transfer fees paid
Record transfer fees received
References
Records and statistics
Brighton and Hove Albion |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uwe%20Jannsen | Uwe Jannsen (born 11 March 1954) is a German mathematician, specializing in algebra, algebraic number theory, and algebraic geometry.
Education and career
Born in Meddewade, Jannsen studied mathematics and physics at the University of Hamburg with Diplom in mathematics in 1978 and with Promotion (PhD) in 1980 under Helmut Brückner and Jürgen Neukirch with thesis Über Galoisgruppen lokaler Körper (On Galois groups of local fields). In the academic year 1983–1984 he was a postdoc at Harvard University. From 1980 to 1989 he was an assistant and then docent at the University of Regensburg, where he received in 1988 his habilitation. From 1989 to 1991 he held a research professorship at the Max-Planck-Institut für Mathematik in Bonn. In 1991 he became a full professor at the University of Cologne and since 1999 he has been a professor at the University of Regensburg.
Jannsen's research deals with, among other topics, the Galois theory of algebraic number fields, the theory of motives in algebraic geometry, the Hasse principle (local–global principle), and resolution of singularities. In particular, he has done research on a cohomology theory for algebraic varieties, involving their extension in mixed motives as a development of research by Pierre Deligne, and a motivic cohomology as a development of research by Vladimir Voevodsky. In the 1980s with Kay Wingberg he completely described the absolute Galois group of p-adic number fields, i.e. in the local case.
In 1994 he was an Invited Speaker with talk Mixed motives, motivic cohomology and Ext-groups at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich.
He was elected in 2009 a full member of the Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften and in 2011 a full member of the Academia Europaea.
His doctoral students include Moritz Kerz.
Selected publications
Continuous étale cohomology, Mathematische Annalen vol. 280, no. 2 1988, pp. 207–245
"On the ℓ-adic cohomology of varieties over number fields and its Galois cohomology." In Galois Groups over , pp. 315–360. Springer, New York, NY, 1989.
Mixed motives and algebraic K-theory, Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol. 1400, Springer Verlag 1990 (with appendices by C. Schoen and Spencer Bloch).
with Steven Kleiman and Jean-Pierre Serre (eds.): Motives, Proc. Symposium Pure Mathematics vol. 55, 2 vols., American Mathematical Society 1994 (Conference University of Washington, Seattle, 1991) vol. 2
Motives, numerical equivalence and semi-simplicity, Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 107 1992, pp. 447–452
References
External links
Homepage in Regensburg
Bericht seiner Forschungsgruppe in Regensburg
20th-century German mathematicians
21st-century German mathematicians
University of Hamburg alumni
Academic staff of the University of Regensburg
Academic staff of the University of Cologne
1954 births
Living people |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuto%20Kawachi | is the assistant coach of the San-en NeoPhoenix in the Japanese B.League.
Career statistics
|-
| align="left" | 2008-09
| align="left" | Hamamatsu
| 8 || || 2.1|| .400 || .333 || .000 || 0.5 || 0.1|| 0.5 || 0.0 || 0.6
|-
Head coaching record
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Sendai 89ers
| style="text-align:left;"|2013-14
| 52||24||28|||| style="text-align:center;"|8th in Eastern|||-||-||-||
| style="text-align:center;"|-
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Sendai 89ers
| style="text-align:left;"|2014-15
| 52||37||15|||| style="text-align:center;"|3rd in Eastern|||2||0||2||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in 1st round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Sendai 89ers
| style="text-align:left;"|2015-16
| 52||37||15|||| style="text-align:center;"|2nd in Eastern|||4||2||2||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in 2nd round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|San-en NeoPhoenix
| style="text-align:left;"|2019-20
| 41||5||36|||| style="text-align:center;"|6th in Central|||-||-||-||
| style="text-align:center;"|-
|-
References
1985 births
Living people
Japanese basketball coaches
San-en NeoPhoenix coaches
San-en NeoPhoenix players
Sendai 89ers coaches |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markov%20odometer | In mathematics, a Markov odometer is a certain type of topological dynamical system. It plays a fundamental role in ergodic theory and especially in orbit theory of dynamical systems, since a theorem of H. Dye asserts that every ergodic nonsingular transformation is orbit-equivalent to a Markov odometer.
The basic example of such system is the "nonsingular odometer", which is an additive topological group defined on the product space of discrete spaces, induced by addition defined as , where . This group can be endowed with the structure of a dynamical system; the result is a conservative dynamical system.
The general form, which is called "Markov odometer", can be constructed through Bratteli–Vershik diagram to define Bratteli–Vershik compactum space together with a corresponding transformation.
Nonsingular odometers
Several kinds of non-singular odometers may be defined.
These are sometimes referred to as adding machines.
The simplest is illustrated with the Bernoulli process. This is the set of all infinite strings in two symbols, here denoted by endowed with the product topology. This definition extends naturally to a more general odometer defined on the product space
for some sequence of integers with each
The odometer for for all is termed the dyadic odometer, the von Neumann–Kakutani adding machine or the dyadic adding machine.
The topological entropy of every adding machine is zero. Any continuous map of an interval with a topological entropy of zero is topologically conjugate to an adding machine, when restricted to its action on the topologically invariant transitive set, with periodic orbits removed.
Dyadic odometer
The set of all infinite strings in strings in two symbols has a natural topology, the product topology, generated by the cylinder sets. The product topology extends to a Borel sigma-algebra; let denote that algebra. Individual points are denoted as
The Bernoulli process is conventionally endowed with a collection of measures, the Bernnoulli measures, given by and , for some independent of . The value of is rather special; it corresponds to the special case of the Haar measure, when is viewed as a compact Abelian group. Note that the Bernoulli measure is not the same as the 2-adic measure on the dyadic integers! Formally, one can observe that is also the base space for the dyadic integers; however, the dyadic integers are endowed with a metric, the p-adic metric, which induces a metric topology distinct from the product topology used here.
The space can be endowed with addition, defined as coordinate addition, with a carry bit. That is, for each coordinate, let
where and
inductively. Increment-by-one is then called the (dyadic) odometer. It is the transformation given by , where . It is called the odometer due to how it looks when it "rolls over": is the transformation . Note that and that is -measurable, that is, for all
The transformation is non-singular for every . Recall that a me |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szabolcs%20Barna | Szabolcs Barna (born 27 April 1996) is a Hungarian footballer.
Club statistics
Updated to games played as of 15 May 2021.
References
External links
1996 births
Living people
Footballers from Debrecen
Hungarian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Debreceni VSC players
Báránd KSE footballers
Nyíregyháza Spartacus FC players
MTK Budapest FC players
Győri ETO FC players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Nemzeti Bajnokság II players |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball%20Champions%20League%20records%20and%20statistics | This page details statistics of the Basketball Champions League. Unless notified these statistics concern all seasons since inception of the Champions League in the 2016–17 season, including qualifying rounds of the Basketball Champions League as per "Competition facts"; all matches before regular season count as "qualifying matches".
General performances
By club
By nation
Basketball Champions League Country Ranking
Basketball Champions League Top-50 Club Ranking
Number of participating clubs in the Basketball Champions League
The following is a list of clubs that have played in or qualified for the Champions League group stage.
Bold: club advanced to the play-offs of a particular season.
Clubs
Performance review
Classification
Performance
By Final Four appearances
By club
By nation
Game records
Biggest wins
The largest overall difference in a match is +59, by Canarias against Opava (97–38) in the regular season 2018–19
The largest difference in qualifying rounds is +43:
Riesen Ludwigsburg beat Bosna 59–102 (+43) in 2017–18
Nizhny Novgorod beat Porto 92–49 (+43) in 2018–19
Kataja beat Södertälje Kings 97–58 (+39) in 2016–17
Fribourg Olympic beat Inter Bratislava 89–50 (+39) in 2019–20
Aris beat Dinamo Tbilisi 92–54 (+38) in 2018–19
The following teams won a single match by 45 points or more in the regular season of the Basketball Champions League:
PAOK beat Opava 93–43 (+50) in 2018–19
Canarias beat Orlandina 59–106 (+47) in 2017–18
Nanterre 92 beat Bonn 103–56 (+47) in 2018–19
Canarias beat Mornar 103–57 (+46) in 2016–17
Nanterre 92 beat Opava 110–64 (+46) in 2018–19
The following teams won a single match by 20 points or more in the playoffs of the Basketball Champions League:
Monaco beat Zielona Góra 90–60 (+30) in 2017–18
Canarias beat PAOK 80–54 (+26) in 2016–17
Riesen Ludwigsburg beat Oldenburg 63–88 (+25) in 2017–18
Dinamo Sassari beat Nymburk 94–72 (+22) in 2016–17
Monaco beat Riesen Ludwigsburg 65–87 (+22) in 2017–18, the largest difference in a Final Four
AEK beat Juventus 75–54 (+21) in 2016–17
Nymburk beat Dinamo Sassari 84–63 (+21) in 2016–17
Karşıyaka beat Skyliners Frankfurt 72–52 (+20) in 2016–17
Biggest two leg wins
Nanterre 92 holds the overall record by beating Karhu 182–112 (+70) in the qualifying round in 2018–19. They beat the Finns by 54–91 and 91–58
Riesen Ludwigsburg has the second overall record by beating Bosna 187–118 (+69) in the qualifying round in 2017–18. They beat the Bosnians by 59–85 and 102–59
Aris has the third record by beating Dinamo Tbilisi 182–118 (+64) in the qualifying round in 2018–19. They beat the Georgians by 64–90 and 92–54
As for the regular season, record belongs to Canarias, who beat Orlandina 194–106 (+88, 88–47 at home, 59–106 away) in 2017–18
Monaco holds the biggest margin of overall home and away result in the Basketball Champions League era in playoffs. They beat Zielona Góra 174–142 (+32, 82–84 win away, 90–60, win at home) in the round of 16 in 2017–18
Most overtimes in |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edyairth%20Ortega | Edyairth Alberto Ortega Alatorre (born 23 January 1997) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Liga MX club Atlas.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Atlas
Liga MX: Apertura 2021, Clausura 2022
Campeón de Campeones: 2022
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
Mexican men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Atlas F.C. footballers
C.D.S. Tampico Madero footballers
Liga MX players
Ascenso MX players
Liga Premier de México players
Tercera División de México players
Footballers from Guadalajara, Jalisco |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Brock | Jeffrey Farlowe Brock (born June 14, 1970 in Bronxville, New York) is an American mathematician, working in low-dimensional geometry and topology. He is known for his contributions to the understanding of hyperbolic 3-manifolds and the geometry of Teichmüller spaces.
Since July 2018, Brock has been a Professor of Mathematics at Yale University, and in January 2019 he became the first FAS (Faculty of Arts and Sciences) dean of science at Yale. In July 2019, he was additionally appointed Dean of the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science.
Before joining Yale, he was a professor at Brown University, and also founding director of the Data Science Initiative at Brown University.
Biography
Brock obtained a BA (with distinction in Mathematics) from Yale University in 1992. He completed a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1997, under the supervision of Curtis T. McMullen.
Brock then held positions as (NSF-funded) Szego Assistant Professor at Stanford University (1997–2000), assistant professor at the University of Chicago (2000–2003), and Donald D. Harrington Faculty Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin (2003–2004). He became associate professor with tenure at Brown University in 2004, and a full professor in 2007. He was chair of the Mathematics Department from 2013 to 2017.
Brock has been associate director of ICERM since 2013. Previously, he had been deputy director between 2010 and 2013.
Since July 2018, Brock has been a Professor of Mathematics at Yale University, and in January 2019 he became the first FAS (Faculty of Arts and Sciences) dean of science at Yale. In July 2019, he was additionally appointed Dean of the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science.
Brock is also an accomplished jazz musician. He was the founding bassist of the Vijay Iyer Trio, led by the acclaimed jazz pianist Vijay Iyer.
He is married and has three children.
Research
Jeffrey Brock's research focuses on low-dimensional topology and geometry, particularly on spaces with hyperbolic geometry or negative curvature. His joint work with Richard Canary and Yair Minsky resulted in a solution to the "Ending Lamination Conjecture" of William Thurston, culminating in the geometric classification theorem for (topologically finite) hyperbolic 3-manifolds in terms of their fundamental group and the structure of their ends.
More recently, he has worked to understand applications of geometry and topology to the structure of massive and complex data sets and the risks and implications of the increasing use of 'black box' algorithms in science and society.
Honors and awards
Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, 2017.
Simons Fellowship (declined), 2016.
John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, 2008.
Donald D. Harrington Faculty Fellow, University of Texas at Austin, 2003–2004.
National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University, 1997–2000.
Alfred P. Sloan Doctoral Dissertation Fellow, U.C. Berkeley, 1996 |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duong%20Hong%20Phong | Duong Hong Phong (, born 30 August 1953, Nam Dinh, Vietnam) is an American mathematician of Vietnamese origin. He is a professor of mathematics at Columbia University. He is known for his research on complex analysis, partial differential equations, string theory and complex geometry.
Education and career
After graduating from Lycée Jean-Jacques Rousseau in Saigon, Phong attended a university year at the École Polytechnique Fédérale, Lausanne, Switzerland and then went to the United States as an undergraduate and then a graduate student at Princeton University.
In 1977, he defended his dissertation entitled "On Hölder and Lp Estimates for the Conjugate Partial Equation on Strongly Pseudo-Convex Domains" under the direction of Elias Stein.
For the academic year 1977–1978, Phong was a researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
Recognition
In 1994 he was an Invited Speaker at the ICM in Zurich. He was the second Vietnamese to receive the honor (after Frédéric Pham).
In 2009 Phong was awarded the Stefan Bergman Prize for his research on the operators involved in the Neumann d-bar problem and on pseudo-differential operators.
He was named to the 2021 class of fellows of the American Mathematical Society "for contributions to analysis, geometry, and mathematical physics".
Selected publications
with C. Fefferman: On positivity of pseudo-differential operators. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1978 Oct; 75(10): 4673–4674.
On integral representations for the Neumann operator. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1979 Apr; 76(4): 1554–1558.
with C. Fefferman: On the lowest eigenvalue of a pseudo-differential operator. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1979 Dec; 76(12): 6055–6056.
with C. Fefferman: On the asymptotic eigenvalue distribution of a pseudo-differential operator. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1980 Oct; 77(10): 5622–5625.
with C. Fefferman: Symplectic geometry and positivity of pseudo-differential operators. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1982 Jan; 79(2): 710–713.
with E. M. Stein: Singular integrals related to the Radon transform and boundary value problems. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1983 Dec; 80(24): 7697–7701.
with E. M. Stein. "Hilbert integrals, singular integrals, and Radon transforms I." Acta Mathematica 157, no. 1 (1986): 99–157.
with Eric D'Hoker: "The geometry of string perturbation theory." Reviews of Modern Physics 60, no. 4 (1988): 917
with E. M. Stein: "The Newton polyhedron and oscillatory integral operators." Acta Mathematica 179, no. 1 (1997): 105–152.
with Jacob Sturm: "Lectures on stability and constant scalar curvature." Current developments in mathematics 2007 (2009): 101–176.
with Jacob Sturm: Regularity of geodesic rays and Monge-Ampère equations. Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 138 (2010), 3637–3650.
with Jian Song and Jacob Sturm: "Complex Monge Ampere Equations." (2012).
with Pengfei Guan: Partial Legendre transforms of non-linear equations. Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 140 (2012), 3831-3842.
References
External links
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny%20Sabin | Jenny E. Sabin (born 1974) is an American architect, designer and artist who draws upon biology and mathematics to design material structures. Sabin is the Arthur L. and Isabel B. Wiesenberger Professor of Architecture in the Department of Architecture at Cornell University. She focuses on design and emerging technologies, with particular emphasis on the areas of computational design, data visualization and digital fabrication.
Career
Sabin completed both Bachelor of Fine Arts and Bachelor of Arts degrees at the University of Washington in 1998.
After working by day (as director of admissions at the Seattle Art Museum) and by night (in the studio) for several years, Sabin returned to school, completing a master's degree in Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania in 2005.
As of 2005, Sabin became the principal investigator of the Jenny Sabin Studio in Philadelphia.
As a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania in 2006, Sabin co-founded the Sabin+Jones LabStudio with Peter Lloyd Jones, a spatial biologist and pathologist. The studio focused on multi-disciplinary research and design, enabling architects, mathematicians, biologists and other scientists to apply ideas from biological systems to the ecological design of architecture.
Using the organizational structures of cells as inspiration, Sabin designed networks of sheets, tubes, and larger forms based on simple mathematical rules, to explore the aggregation of parts in greater wholes.
As of 2011, Sabin joined the Department of Architecture at Cornell University, and established the Sabin Design Lab at Cornell and the Jenny Sabin Studio in Ithaca.
Sabin is the Arthur L. and Isabel B. Wiesenberger Professor and the Director of Graduate Studies in Architecture. Sabin is involved in expanding the degree program to offer a degree in Architectural Science with a focus on Matter Design Computation.
“Digital ceramics” classes explore the generative fabrication of a wide variety of materials, and interest students from biology and biomedicine as well as architecture. Students use computers and 3D-printers to "sketch" their ideas, experimenting with powders for high-firing stoneware, and mixtures of powdered dry clay and organic materials. Students are faced with the experience of productive failure as they test their ideas. One student described it as “terrifying,” because of the “unforgiving nature of clay as a design material.”
Works
In 2011, Sabin created the Greenhouse and Cabinet Of Future Fossils as part of The Greenhouse Projects at the American Philosophical Society Museum.
The structure contained 110 removable and portable cold frames, required no electricity and was built of recyclable materials. In addition to edible and ornamental plants, the installation contained 3D-printed "artifacts" in its fossil cabinets.
Sabin's hanging structure PolyMorph (2013), on permanent installation at the FRAC Centre in France, is made up of 1400 hollow ceramic modules held together with stai |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1971.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1971 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1972.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1972 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1973.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1973 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1974%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1974.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1974 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1975.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1975 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1976.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1976 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1977.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1977 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1978.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1978 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1979.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1979 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1980.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1980 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1981.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1981 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1982%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1982.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1982 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1983.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1983 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1984%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1984.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1984 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1985.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1985 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1986.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1986 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1987%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1987.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1987 in Japanese football
Japan |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1988%20Japan%20national%20football%20team | This page records the details of the Japan national football team in 1988.
Results
Players statistics
External links
Japan Football Association
Japan national football team results
1988 in Japanese football
Japan |
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