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Experimental Mathematics: A Computational Perspective
 
Matthew P. Richey St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN
Matthew L. Wright St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN
MAA Press: An Imprint of the American Mathematical Society
Softcover ISBN:  978-1-4704-7397-6
Product Code:  TEXT/74
List Price: $85.00
MAA Member Price: $63.75
AMS Member Price: $63.75
Not yet published - Preorder Now!
Expected availability date: August 20, 2025
Click above image for expanded view
Experimental Mathematics: A Computational Perspective
Matthew P. Richey St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN
Matthew L. Wright St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN
MAA Press: An Imprint of the American Mathematical Society
Softcover ISBN:  978-1-4704-7397-6
Product Code:  TEXT/74
List Price: $85.00
MAA Member Price: $63.75
AMS Member Price: $63.75
Not yet published - Preorder Now!
Expected availability date: August 20, 2025
  • Book Details
     
     
    AMS/MAA Textbooks
    Volume: 742025; Estimated: 364 pp
    MSC: Primary 97; 00

    This textbook is designed for an undergraduate course in computational or experimental mathematics. Many of the most interesting and important topics in theoretical mathematics are both motivated and illuminated by computation. By using a computer to explore and investigate mathematical phenomena, students are encouraged to conduct experiments and make their own discoveries.

    The explorations are motivated by rich and interesting mathematical examples drawn from diverse areas such as number theory, complex analysis, and probability. In this setting, students are exposed to key concepts from programming such as algorithms, recursion, and probabilistic sampling, allowing them to develop practical computational skills. Over 450 practice problems, exercises, and explorations are distributed regularly throughout the text, reinforcing the material and encouraging further investigations. A code repository, providing implementations of these examples, is available at the AMS webpage for the text.

    Thoroughly classroom tested and designed to show students how to combine mathematical and computational thinking, the book requires prior knowledge of only calculus and introductory linear algebra. Only minimal prior experience with computer programming is necessary, provided the reader has a computing environment, access to online documentation, and a willingness to experiment. Notably, the volume has been carefully prepared so that it may be used with almost any programming language.

    Readership

    Undergraduate students interested in experimental mathematics.

  • Table of Contents
     
     
    • Digits of $\pi$
    • Fibonacci sequence and its generalizations
    • Iterated functions
    • Primes
    • Probabilistic simulation
    • Markov chains
    • Image credits
    • Bibliography
    • Index
  • Requests
     
     
    Review Copy – for publishers of book reviews
    Accessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
Volume: 742025; Estimated: 364 pp
MSC: Primary 97; 00

This textbook is designed for an undergraduate course in computational or experimental mathematics. Many of the most interesting and important topics in theoretical mathematics are both motivated and illuminated by computation. By using a computer to explore and investigate mathematical phenomena, students are encouraged to conduct experiments and make their own discoveries.

The explorations are motivated by rich and interesting mathematical examples drawn from diverse areas such as number theory, complex analysis, and probability. In this setting, students are exposed to key concepts from programming such as algorithms, recursion, and probabilistic sampling, allowing them to develop practical computational skills. Over 450 practice problems, exercises, and explorations are distributed regularly throughout the text, reinforcing the material and encouraging further investigations. A code repository, providing implementations of these examples, is available at the AMS webpage for the text.

Thoroughly classroom tested and designed to show students how to combine mathematical and computational thinking, the book requires prior knowledge of only calculus and introductory linear algebra. Only minimal prior experience with computer programming is necessary, provided the reader has a computing environment, access to online documentation, and a willingness to experiment. Notably, the volume has been carefully prepared so that it may be used with almost any programming language.

Readership

Undergraduate students interested in experimental mathematics.

  • Digits of $\pi$
  • Fibonacci sequence and its generalizations
  • Iterated functions
  • Primes
  • Probabilistic simulation
  • Markov chains
  • Image credits
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review Copy – for publishers of book reviews
Accessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
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