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{{{Title: Experimental Mathematics and High-Performance Computing == Experimental Mathematics and High-Performance Computing ==
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Speaker: David H Bailey, Lawrence Berkeley Lab [[http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~dbailey/|David H Bailey]], Lawrence Berkeley Lab
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"experimental mathematician's toolkit".}}} "experimental mathematician's toolkit".

Experimental Mathematics and High-Performance Computing

David H Bailey, Lawrence Berkeley Lab

Abstract:

Recent developments in "experimental mathematics" have underscored the value of high-performance computing in modern mathematical research. The most frequent computations that arise here are high-precision (typically several-hundred-digit accuracy) evaluations of integrals and series, together with integer relation detections using the "PSLQ" algorithm. Some recent highlights in this arena include: (2) the discovery of "BBP"-type formulas for various mathematical constants, including pi and log(2); (3) the discovery of analytic evaluations for several classes of multivariate zeta sums; (4) the discovery of Apery-like formulas for the Riemann zeta function at integer arguments; and (5) the discovery of analytic evaluations and linear relations among certain classes of definite integrals that arise in mathematical physics. The talk will include a live demo of the "experimental mathematician's toolkit".

msri07/abstract/Bailey (last edited 2008-11-14 13:42:07 by anonymous)