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Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.

168 results for "women mathematics" — page 9 of 9

V_2_13 Mathematics & Information

V_2_13 — Measure Theory and Integration

Measure theory provides the rigorous mathematical foundation for the concepts of length, area, volume, and probability — and the integration theory built upon them. Developed primarily by Henri Lebesgue (1902), it resolv

measure theory Lebesgue measure sigma algebra Borel set measurable function Lebesgue integral
V_2_15 Mathematics & Information

V_2_15 — Galois Theory and Field Extensions

Galois theory, developed by Évariste Galois (1811-1832) in the last years of his tragically short life, is one of the great triumphs of abstract algebra — a theory connecting field extensions to group theory that definit

Galois theory field extension polynomial roots solvability by radicals quintic equation group theory
V_2_01 Mathematics & Information

V_2_01 — Prime Numbers — Patterns, Mysteries, and the Riemann Hypothesis

Prime numbers — integers greater than 1 divisible only by 1 and themselves — have fascinated mathematicians since Euclid proved their infinitude (~300 BCE). Despite appearing randomly distributed, primes follow deep stat

prime numbers Riemann hypothesis zeta function Euclid RSA cryptography twin primes
V_2_11 Mathematics & Information

V_2_11 — Abstract Algebra: Groups, Rings, and Fields

Abstract algebra is the study of algebraic structures — sets equipped with operations satisfying specific axioms — that generalize familiar arithmetic operations to reveal deep structural patterns across mathematics and

abstract algebra group theory ring theory field theory symmetry Galois theory
V_2_05 Mathematics & Information

V_2_05 — Calculus & Infinitesimals: Newton, Leibniz & the Kerala School

Calculus — the mathematics of continuous change — is arguably the most powerful intellectual tool ever created, enabling the scientific revolution, modern physics, engineering, economics, and computation.

calculus Newton Leibniz Kerala school Madhava infinitesimal
V_2_03 Mathematics & Information

V_2_03 — History of Algebra: Al-Khwarizmi to Group Theory

Algebra — the generalization of arithmetic to unknown quantities and their relationships — has a 4,000-year documented history, from Babylonian equation-solving tablets (c. 1800 BCE) through Brahmagupta's Indian treatise

algebra Al-Khwarizmi equation quadratic cubic Brahmagupta
V_2_14 Mathematics & Information

V_2_14 — Differential Topology and Manifolds

Differential topology studies smooth manifolds — spaces that locally resemble Euclidean $\mathbb{R}^n$ with smooth (infinitely differentiable) transition maps — and the smooth maps between them, classified up to diffeomo

differential topology manifold smooth manifold diffeomorphism tangent bundle vector field
V_2_12 Mathematics & Information

V_2_12 — Algebraic Geometry

Algebraic geometry — the study of geometric objects defined by polynomial equations — is one of the most central and technically demanding branches of modern mathematics, connecting algebra, geometry, topology, and numbe

algebraic geometry variety scheme polynomial equation projective space elliptic curve