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  2. Schaum's Outlines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schaum's_Outlines

    Schaum's Outlines (/ ʃ ɔː m /) is a series of supplementary texts for American high school, AP, and college-level courses, currently published by McGraw-Hill Education Professional, a subsidiary of McGraw-Hill Education.

  3. Seymour Lipschutz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seymour_Lipschutz

    Seymour Saul Lipschutz (born 1931 died March 2018) was an author of technical books on pure mathematics and probability, including a collection of Schaum's Outlines. [1] Lipschutz received his Ph.D. in 1960 from New York University's Courant Institute. [2] He received his BA and MA degrees in Mathematics at Brooklyn College.

  4. Law of total probability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_total_probability

    Schaum's Outline of Probability, Second Edition, by John J. Schiller, Seymour Lipschutz, McGraw–Hill Professional, 2010, page 89. A First Course in Stochastic Models, by H. C. Tijms, John Wiley and Sons, 2003, pages 431–432. An Intermediate Course in Probability, by Alan Gut, Springer, 1995, pages 5–6.

  5. Murray R. Spiegel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murray_R._Spiegel

    Murray Ralph Spiegel (1923-1991) was an author of textbooks on mathematics, including titles in a collection of Schaum's Outlines. [1]Spiegel was a native of Brooklyn and a graduate of New Utrecht High School.

  6. Frank J. Ayres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_J._Ayres

    Frank Ayres, Jr. (/ ɛər z /; 10 December 1901, Rock Hall, Maryland – June 1994) was a mathematics professor, best known as an author for the popular Schaum's Outlines. Frank J. Ayres Born

  7. Lipschutz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipschutz

    Gerdi E. Lipschutz (1923–2010), New York politician; S. Lipschütz (1863–1905), US chess champion; Seymour Lipschutz (born 1931), American mathematician; Dr. Lipschutz, a fictional character in the animated TV series: Rugrats

  8. Goldberg–Seymour conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldberg–Seymour_conjecture

    In 2019, an alleged proof was announced by Chen, Jing, and Zang in the paper. [3] Part of their proof was to find a suitable generalization of Vizing's theorem (which says that for simple graphs ′ ⁡ + ⁡) to multigraphs.

  9. Robertson–Seymour theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robertson–Seymour_theorem

    The Robertson–Seymour theorem is named after mathematicians Neil Robertson and Paul D. Seymour, who proved it in a series of twenty papers spanning over 500 pages from 1983 to 2004. [3] Before its proof, the statement of the theorem was known as Wagner's conjecture after the German mathematician Klaus Wagner , although Wagner said he never ...