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A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory Joseph H Silverman

A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory By Joseph H Silverman

A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory by Joseph H Silverman


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Condition - Well Read
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Summary

For courses in Elementary Number Theory for non-maths majors, Mathematics/Number Theory for mathematics education students, Number Theory and Computer Science. This is an introductory undergraduate text designed to entice non-maths majors into learning some mathematics, while teaching them to think mathematically at the same time.

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A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory Summary

A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory by Joseph H Silverman

For courses in Elementary Number Theory for non-math majors, for mathematics education students, and for Computer Science students.

This is an introductory undergraduate text designed to entice non-math majors into learning some mathematics, while teaching them to think mathematically at the same time. Starting with nothing more than basic high school algebra, the reader is gradually led from basic algebra to the point of actively performing mathematical research while getting a glimpse of current mathematical frontiers. The writing style is informal and includes many numerical examples, which are analyzed for patterns and used to make conjectures. The emphasis is on the methods used for proving theorems rather than on specific results.

Table of Contents



1. What Is Number Theory?


2. Pythagorean Triples.


3. Pythagorean Triples and the Unit Circle.


4. Sums of Higher Powers and Fermat's Last Theorem.


5. Divisibility and the Greatest Common Divisor.


6. Linear Equations and the Greatest Common Divisor.


7. Factorization and the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic.


8. Congruences.


9. Congruences, Powers, and Fermat's Little Theorem.


10. Congruences, Powers, and Euler's Formula.


11. Euler's Phi Function.


12. Prime Numbers.


13. Counting Primes.


14. Mersenne Primes.


15. Mersenne Primes and Perfect Numbers.


16. Powers Modulo m and Successive Squaring.


17. Computing kth Roots Modulo m.


18. Powers, Roots, and Unbreakable Codes.


19. Euler's Phi Function and Sums of Divisors.


20. Powers Modulo p and Primitive Roots.


21. Primitive Roots and Indices.


22. Squares Modulo p.


23. Is -1 a Square Modulo p? Is 2?


24. Quadratic Reciprocity.


25. Which Primes Are Sums of Two Squares?


26. Which Numbers Are Sums of Two Squares?


27. The Equation X4 + Y4 = Z4.


28. Square-Triangular Numbers Revisited.


29. Pell's Equation.


30. Diophantine Approximation.


31. Diophantine Approximation and Pell's Equation.


32. Primality Testing and Carmichael Numbers


33. Number Theory and Imaginary Numbers.


34. The Gaussian Integers and Unique Factorization.


35. Irrational Numbers and Transcendental Numbers.


36. Binomial Coefficients and Pascal's Triangle.


37. Fibonacci's Rabbits and Linear Recurrence Sequences.


38. Generating Functions.


39. Sums of Powers.


40. Cubic Curves and Elliptic Curves.


41. Elliptic Curves with Few Rational Points.


42. Points on Elliptic Curves Modulo p.


43. Torsion Collections Modulo p and Bad Primes.


44. Defect Bounds and Modularity Patterns.


45. Elliptic Curves and Fermat's Last Theorem.


Further Reading.


Appendix A: Factorization of Small Composite Integers.


Appendix B: List of Primes.


Index.

Additional information

CIN0130309540A
9780130309549
0130309540
A Friendly Introduction to Number Theory by Joseph H Silverman
Used - Well Read
Hardback
Pearson Education (US)
20010202
400
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

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