Before the featured portal process ceased in 2017, this had been designated as a featured portal.

Portal:Mathematics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Mathematics Portal


Mathematics is the study of numbers, quantity, space, pattern, structure, and change. Mathematics is used throughout the world as an essential tool in many fields, including natural science, engineering, medicine, and the social sciences. Applied mathematics, the branch of mathematics concerned with application of mathematical knowledge to other fields, inspires and makes use of new mathematical discoveries and sometimes leads to the development of entirely new mathematical disciplines, such as statistics and game theory. Mathematicians also engage in pure mathematics, or mathematics for its own sake, without having any application in mind. There is no clear line separating pure and applied mathematics, and practical applications for what began as pure mathematics are often discovered.

Refresh with new selections below (purge)

Selected article


Mollweide-projection.jpg
An example of a map projection: the area-preserving Mollweide projection of the earth.
Image credit: NASA

A map projection is any method used in cartography (mapmaking) to represent the dimensional surface of the earth or other bodies. The term "projection" here refers to any function defined on the earth's surface and with values on the plane, and not necessarily a geometric projection.

Flat maps could not exist without map projections, because a sphere cannot be laid flat over a plane without distortions. One can see this mathematically as a consequence of Gauss's Theorema Egregium. Flat maps can be more useful than globes in many situations: they are more compact and easier to store; they readily accommodate an enormous range of scales; they are viewed easily on computer displays; they can facilitate measuring properties of the terrain being mapped; they can show larger portions of the earth's surface at once; and they are cheaper to produce and transport. These useful traits of flat maps motivate the development of map projections.

View all selected articles Read More...

Selected image

three-dimensional rendering of a pink, translucent Klein bottle
Credit: Wridgers

A Klein bottle is an example of a closed surface (a two-dimensional manifold) that is non-orientable (no distinction between the "inside" and "outside"). This image is a representation of the object in everyday three-dimensional space, but a true Klein bottle is an object in four-dimensional space. When it is constructed in three-dimensions, the "inner neck" of the bottle curves outward and intersects the side; in four dimensions, there is no such self-intersection (the effect is similar to a two-dimensional representation of a cube, in which the edges seem to intersect each other between the corners, whereas no such intersection occurs in a true three-dimensional cube). Also, while any real, physical object would have a thickness to it, the surface of a true Klein bottle has no thickness. Thus in three dimensions there is an inside and outside in a colloquial sense: liquid forced through the opening on the right side of the object would collect at the bottom and be contained on the inside of the object. However, on the four-dimensional object there is no inside and outside in the way that a sphere has an inside and outside: an unbroken curve can be drawn from a point on the "outer" surface (say, the object's lowest point) to the right, past the "lip" to the "inside" of the narrow "neck", around to the "inner" surface of the "body" of the bottle, then around on the "outer" surface of the narrow "neck", up past the "seam" separating the inside and outside (which, as mentioned before, does not exist on the true 4-D object), then around on the "outer" surface of the body back to the starting point (see the light gray curve on this simplified diagram). In this regard, the Klein bottle is a higher-dimensional analog of the Möbius strip, a two-dimensional manifold that is non-orientable in ordinary 3-dimensional space. In fact, a Klein bottle can be constructed (conceptually) by "gluing" the edges of two Möbius strips together.

Did you know…

Did you know...
  • ...that Auction theory was successfully used in 1994 to sell FCC airwave spectrum, in a financial application of game theory?
  • ...work in artificial intelligence makes use of Swarm intelligence, which has foundations in the behavorial examples found in nature of ants, birds, bees, and fish among others?
  • ...that statistical properties dictated by Benford's Law are used in auditing of financial accounts as one means of detecting fraud?
  • ...that Modular arithmetic has application in at least ten different fields of study, including the arts, computer science, and chemistry in addition to mathematics?
  • ... that according to Kawasaki's theorem, an origami crease pattern with one vertex may be folded flat if and only if the sum of every other angle between consecutive creases is 180º?
  • ... that, in the Rule 90 cellular automaton, any finite pattern eventually fills the whole array of cells with copies of itself?

                         

Showing 7 items out of 75

WikiProjects

The Mathematics WikiProject is the center for mathematics-related editing on Wikipedia. Join the discussion on the project's talk page.

WikiProjects

Project pages

Essays

Subprojects

Related projects

Things you can do

Subcategories


Topics in mathematics

General Foundations Number theory Discrete mathematics
Nuvola apps bookcase.svg
Set theory icon.svg
Nuvola apps kwin4.png
Nuvola apps atlantik.png


Algebra Analysis Geometry and topology Applied mathematics
Arithmetic symbols.svg
Source
Nuvola apps kpovmodeler.svg
Gcalctool.svg

Index of mathematics articles

ARTICLE INDEX: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z (0–9)
MATHEMATICIANS: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Related portals

Portal:Algebra Portal:Arithmetic Portal:Category theory Portal:Computer science Portal:Cryptography Portal:Discrete mathematics Portal:Geometry
Algebra Arithmetic Category
theory
Computer
science
Cryptography Discrete
mathematics
Geometry
Portal:Logic Portal:Mathematical analysis Portal:Mathematics Portal:Number theory Portal:Physics Portal:Science Portal:Set theory Portal:Statistics Portal:Topology
Logic Mathematical analysis Mathematics Number
theory
Physics Science Set theory Statistics Topology


In other Wikimedia projects

The following Wikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject:

Wikibooks
Books

Commons
Media

Wikinews 
News

Wikiquote 
Quotations

Wikisource 
Texts

Wikiversity
Learning resources

Wiktionary 
Definitions

Wikidata 
Database