Hello. I am an unemployed white male whom is interested in physics and mathematics. I have edited and created a lot of pages here on Wikipedia, but the vast majority of said creations is as an anon user, since I am in general too lazy to sign in.

My pride and joy is the page on Perfect Squares. ^_^

The list of unsolved problems is also useful.

I guess I consider myself a WikiGnome/WikiFaerie. All is good.

I hold research interests in Black Hole Thermodynamics, Quantum Field Theories, Four dimensional wakes and waves, Cosmological/ Big Bang theories, Prime numbers, the Navier-Stokes equations, Dirichlet L functions, Dirichlet characters with generalized Zeta functions, the Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture, and faster then light travel. Limits, epsilon-delta proofs, and Goldbach's conjecture are the bane of my existence.

Missouri University of Science & Technology Math 209 edit

Very Quick Introduction to Sets edit

A set is a collection of mathematical objects, often referred to as elements. For example,

A = {2,3,5,7,11)

is a set, as is

B = (blue, purple, green).

Examples of Sets edit

 , the set of all prime numbers,  , the set of all natural numbers,  , the set of all integers,  , the set of all real numbers, and  , denoting the set of all complex numbers. We also have the empty set, which has no elements in it; and the null set, which contains only the null element ø.

Membership edit

To say an element 'm' is in 'M', we use  

 , and  

Other edit

  The upside down A is read 'for all'.
  The backwards E is read 'there exists'.
 , x has two or fewer digits.
  means there is some element x, less then all the elements y in our set. This is of course the definition of lower bound.

Boolian Logic edit

T = true, F = false
  = AND (logical conjunction)
  = OR (logical disjunction)
  = IF-THEN
  IFF (IF AND ONLY IF), equivalent to XNOR (exclusive nor).
           
F F F F T T
F T F T F T
T F F T F F
T T T T T T


Missouri University of Science & Technology Physics 322 edit