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The Canadian Journal of Mathematics (French: Journal canadien de mathématiques) is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the Canadian Mathematical Society. It was established in 1949 by H. S. M. Coxeter and G. de B. Robinson. [1] The current editors-in-chief of the journal are Henry Kim and Robert McCann. [2]
Canadian Journal of Mathematics; Canadian Mathematical Bulletin; Central European Journal of Mathematics; Chinese Annals of Mathematics, Series B; College Mathematics Journal; Combinatorica; Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici; Communications in Contemporary Mathematics; Communications in Mathematical Physics; Communications on Pure and Applied ...
The flagship publications of the CMS are the prominent, peer-reviewed research journals Canadian Journal of Mathematics, which is intended for full research papers, and the Canadian Mathematical Bulletin, which publishes shorter papers. All past issues except the last five volumes are free to download.
The second component was published by the Canadian Journal of Mathematics. [8] He later returned to biquaternions when in 1995 he contributed "If Hamilton had prevailed: Quaternions in Physics", which exhibited the Riemann–Silberstein bivector to express the free-space electromagnetic equations.
The journal was established in 1975, under the name Eureka, by the Carleton-Ottawa Mathematics Association, with Léo Sauvé as its first editor-in-chief. It took the name Crux Mathematicorum with its fourth volume, in 1978, to avoid confusion with another journal Eureka published by the Cambridge University Mathematical Society. The Canadian ...
The Canadian Mathematical Bulletin (French: Bulletin Canadien de Mathématiques) is a mathematics journal, established in 1958 and published quarterly by the Canadian Mathematical Society. The current editors-in-chief of the journal are Antonio Lei and Javad Mashreghi. [1]
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Canadian Journal of Mathematics; Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences;
After graduation, Fulkerson joined the mathematics department at the RAND Corporation. In 1956, he and L. R. Ford Jr. described the Ford–Fulkerson algorithm. [3] In 1962 they produced a book-length description of their method. [4] In 1971 he moved to Cornell University as the Maxwell Upson Professor of Engineering.