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A sangaku dedicated to Konnoh Hachimangu (Shibuya, Tokyo) in 1859.Sangaku or san gaku (Japanese: 算額, lit. 'calculation tablet') are Japanese geometrical problems or theorems on wooden tablets which were placed as offerings at Shinto shrines or Buddhist temples during the Edo period by members of all social classes.
Japanese mathematics (和算, wasan) denotes a distinct kind of mathematics which was developed in Japan during the Edo period (1603–1867). The term wasan , from wa ("Japanese") and san ("calculation"), was coined in the 1870s [ 1 ] and employed to distinguish native Japanese mathematical theory from Western mathematics (洋算 yōsan ).
Fractional calculus was introduced in one of Niels Henrik Abel's early papers [3] where all the elements can be found: the idea of fractional-order integration and differentiation, the mutually inverse relationship between them, the understanding that fractional-order differentiation and integration can be considered as the same generalized ...
Fractional Calculus and Applied Analysis is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal published by Walter de Gruyter. It covers research on fractional calculus , special functions , integral transforms , and some closely related areas of applied analysis .
Kiryakova won the 1996 Academic Prize for Mathematical Sciences of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. [1] In 2012, at the 5th Symposium on Fractional Differentiation and its Applications, she was given the FDA Dissemination Award, for her "dissemination of fractional calculus among the scientific community, industry and society" over the previous five years.
The primary concept behind fractional calculus of sets is the characterization of fractional calculus elements using sets due to the plethora of fractional operators available. [3] [4] [5] This methodology originated from the development of the Fractional Newton-Raphson method [6] and subsequent related works. [7] [8] [9] [10]
International Journal of Algebra and Computation; International Journal of Biomathematics; International Journal of Computational Geometry and Applications; International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics; International Journal of Mathematics; International Journal of Mathematics and Computer Science
The first seven chapters of the book concern perspectivity, while its final two concern fractals and their geometry. [1] [2] Topics covered within the chapters on perspectivity include coordinate systems for the plane and for Euclidean space, similarity, angles, and orthocenters, one-point and multi-point perspective, and anamorphic art.