Math 203 Contemporary Mathematics Home Page
Math 203 Contemporary Mathematics Home Page
Spring, 1999
Mark Brittenham

This page is devoted to materials and links specific to Mark Brittenham's Math 203 class for Spring, 1999. Here you may find lists of homework assignments, dates for exams, as well as lists of topics covered by these exams, an html-ized copy of the course summary, and anything else that might come up.

Some links related to material from the course:

A site at the University of Tennessee at Martin includes some pages on graph theory, including a tutorial on Euler and Hamiltonian circuits. It includes an interesting story on the origin of the phrase `Hamiltonian circuit'.

An explanation (using too much mathematical notation?) of minimal spanning trees (I'm looking for a better one..)

Another page on minimal spanning trees...still too much math...

A page about greedy algorithms, e.g., Kruskal's algorithm; again, a bit too much notation...

Some links that might be of general interest:

A site called SOS Math at the Univ. of Texas at El Paso offers pages of material on topics ranging from polynomial long division, the quadratic formula, and trigonometric identities, to Taylor polynomials, the Cauchy-Riemann equations, and Matrix algebra.
Another site covering similar material, including solved homework problems for you to practice on, is kept in Belgium.

Dan Sloughter has a web page containing Java programs for visualizing various mathematical concepts. My favorite is one which will draw the Taylor polynomial approximations for y=sin(x) .

Forget a geometry formula? Check this page at Trinity College.

A Java-enabled page for generating Pascal's triangle (or rather, the last two digits of each entry, which is good enough through the 24th line). What's the pattern of the even numbers in the triangle?!