Number theorists

Robert Daniel Carmichael

Robert Daniel Carmichael (March 1, 1879 – May 2, 1967) was an American mathematician. (Wikipedia).

Robert Daniel Carmichael
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The 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry - Periodic Table of Videos

More Nobel Prize videos from us: http://bit.ly/periodicnobel The 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry is shared by Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt and Arieh Warshel for their work in the field of computational chemistry. Professor Martyn Poliakoff discusses. More chemistry at http://www.periodic

From playlist Nobel Prize - Periodic Videos

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Something special about 399 (and 2015) - Numberphile

It is the lowest Lucas-Carmichael Number... Featuring Ed Copeland. More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ More about Ed's real work: http://bit.ly/CopelandGoesLong With thanks to these Patreon supporters: Herschal Sanders (from Susan) Today I Found Out Lê OK Merli Alex Bozzi

From playlist Ed Copeland on Numberphile

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Lecture 13 | African-American Freedom Struggle (Stanford)

Lecture 13 of Clay Carson's Introduction to African-American History Course (HIST 166) concentrating on the Modern Freedom Struggle (Fall 2007). This lecture is entitled "Stokely Carmichael Defines Black Power". Recorded November 8, 2007 at Stanford University. This course introduces

From playlist Course | African-American History: Modern Freedom Struggle

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The High Schooler Who Solved a Prime Number Theorem

In his senior year of high school, Daniel Larsen proved a key theorem about Carmichael numbers — strange entities that mimic the primes. “It would be a paper that any mathematician would be really proud to have written,” said one mathematician. Read more at Quanta Magazine: https://www.qua

From playlist Discoveries

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Martin Luther King Jr. | A Crusader For Liberation | Biography

Martin Luther King Jr. was born in 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia. King, although he was an initial skeptic to religion he eventually became a Baptist minister, a civil-rights activist and had a seismic impact on race relations in the United States. Among his many efforts, King headed the Southe

From playlist Examine the Past | History

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Julian Bond: How did you choose to become a young activist?

In this clip, civil rights leader Julian Bond talks with Maxim Thorne and Yale students about how he became an activist. Julian Bond is currently a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at the American University in Washington, D.C., and a former History Professor at the University of Virgini

From playlist Philanthropy In Action

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Professor Robert H. Grubbs - 2005 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry

Learn more about: - Professor Grubbs' Research: https://www.cce.caltech.edu/content/robert-h-grubbs - The 2005 Nobel Prize in Chemistry: http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/2005/grubbs-facts.html Produced in partnership with Caltech Academic Media Technologies and

From playlist Research & Science

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John Norris Bahcall - Part I

A Celebration of the Life and Work of John Norris Bahcall October 29, 2005 Nathan Seiberg, Art McDonald, Wick Haxton and Carlos Pena-Garay John Norris Bahcall, Richard Black Professor of Astrophysics in the School of Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study, recipient of the

From playlist Natural Sciences

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Fermat’s HUGE little theorem, pseudoprimes and Futurama

A LOT of people have heard about Andrew Wiles solving Fermat's last theorem after people trying in vain for over 350 years. Today's video is about Fermat's LITTLE theorem which is at least as pretty as its much more famous bigger brother, which has a super pretty accessible proof and which

From playlist Recent videos

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Blue Lily Flower Power: The Sacred Medicine? | Real Stories Full-Length Documentary

The Blue Water Lily, now a rare flower, was once prized above all flowers in Ancient Egypt and may have previously unknown psychoactive properties. A mind opening series showing footage of human experiences never before seen on television. In four carefully monitored experiments, voluntee

From playlist Medical Stories

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Julian Bond: What is challenging about charismatic leaders?

In this clip, civil rights leader Julian Bond talks with Maxim Thorne and Yale students about the challenges sometimes encountered when working with charismatic leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Julian Bond is currently a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at the American University

From playlist Philanthropy In Action

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Racial/Ethnic Prejudice & Discrimination: Crash Course Sociology #35

We can’t talk about race without also discussing racism, so today we are going to define and explain prejudice, stereotypes, and racism. We’ll look at five theories for why prejudice exists. We’ll discuss discrimination and the legacies of institutional racism. We’ll also provide an overvi

From playlist Sociology

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The 2015 Nobel Prize in Chemistry - Periodic Table of Videos

The 2015 Nobel Prize in Chemistry is awarded "for mechanistic studies of DNA repair". The recipients are Paul L. Modrich, Tomas Lindahl and Aziz Sancar. Discussed by Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff. More chemistry Nobel Prize videos: http://bit.ly/periodicnobel And physics prizes: http:/

From playlist Nobel Prize - Periodic Videos

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Startup Showcase - Discoverful - Where 2012

Robert Mao, Co-Founder, Discoverful

From playlist Where 2012

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Jesse Jackson: Crash Course Black American History #44

Today, Clint Smith is teaching you about the Civil Rights activist and Icon, Reverend Jesse Jackson. Jackson began his career working with Martin Luther King in the 1960s, and in the 1970s he founded PUSH, an organization to advance the cause of urban, poor, and predominantly Black communi

From playlist Black American History

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Lecture 19. Black Power (continued)

American History: From Emancipation to the Present (AFAM 162) As the movement moved out of the South and away from a largely Christian orientation, it became clear that people were prepared to enlarge the struggle so that it became linked to international issues including the war in Vietn

From playlist American History: From Emancipation to the Present

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Season 8 Highlights — and a Host Reunion! | Women at Work | Podcast

Former co-hosts Sarah, Nicole, and Emily reunite with the Amys to discuss the insights and advice that most resonated with them from this season, from how they gained their team’s trust as a first-time manager to how they’re now thinking about retirement. They also talk about their related

From playlist Women at Work | Podcast

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THE REAL DALE PROTOTYPE | THE DALE FROM THE LADY AND THE DALE

The story of the Dale begins with the meeting of Liz Carmichael and Dale Clifft, both of whom worked at the United States Marketing Institute (USMI) during 1973, the year of the first OPEC oil embargo that brought about the first gas crisis. Seemingly the right car at the right time, Clif

From playlist Petersen Deep Dives

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The Greatest Skyscrapers Never Built

Once celebrated by their backers, but now forgotten and consigned to the footnotes of architectural history, these are the greatest skyscrapers never built. For more by The B1M subscribe now - http://ow.ly/GxW7y Read the full story on this video, including images and useful links, here:

From playlist Skyscrapers - The B1M

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The Skeptical Life of Martin Gardner (Dana Richards, Ph.D.)

Martin Gardner is well-known as the progenitor of the modern skeptical movement. How did he come to be the skeptic we know today? In this talk, original letters, interviews and early writings are discussed. Dana Richards received his PhD in Computer Science from the Univ. of Illinois and

From playlist Skepticism

Related pages

Prime number | Differential equation | Steiner system | Mathematics | Fermat pseudoprime | Carmichael function | Group theory | Carmichael's theorem | Carmichael's totient function conjecture | Number theory | Carmichael number