Table of Contents
- 1913. Paul Erdos
- 1914. Martin Gardner
- 1915. General relativity and the absolute differential
calculus
- 1916. Ostrowski's theorem
- 1917. Morse theory, but really Cantor
- 1918. Georg Cantor
- 1919. Brun's theorem
- 1920. Waring's problem
- 1921. Mordell's theorem
- 1922. Lindeberg condition
- 1923. The circle method
- 1924. The Banach-Tarski paradox
- 1925. The Schrodinger equation
- 1926. Ackermann's function
- 1927. William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition
- 1928. Random matrix theory
- 1929. Godel's incompleteness theorems
- 1930. Ramsey theory
- 1931. The ergodic theorem
- 1932. The $3x 1$ problem
- 1933. Skewes's number
- 1934. Khinchin's constant
- 1935. Hilbert's seventh problem
- 1936. Alan Turing
- 1937. Vinogradov's theorem
- 1938. Benford's law
- 1939. The power of positive thinking
- 1940. A mathematician's apology
- 1941. The Foundation triology
- 1942. Zeros of $zeta(s)$
- 1943. Breaking Enigma
- 1944. Theory of games and economic behavior
- 1945. The Riemann hypothesis in function fields
- 1946. Monte Carlo method
- 1947. The simplex method
- 1948. Elementary proof of the prime number theorem
- 1949. Beurling's theorem
- 1950. Arrow's impossibility theorem
- 1951. Tennenbaum's proof of the irrationality of
$sqrt{2}$
- 1952. NSA founded
- 1953. The Metropolis algorithm
- 1954. Kolmogorov-Arnold-Moser theorem
- 1955. Roth's theorem
- 1956. The GAGA principle
- 1957. The Ross program
- 1958. Smale's paradox
- 1959. $QR$ decomposition
- 1960. The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics
- 1961. Lorenz's nonperiodic flow
- 1962. The Gale-Shapely algorithm and the stable marriage
problem
- 1963. Continuum hypothesis
- 1964. Principles of mathematical analayis
- 1965. Fast Fourier transform
- 1966. Class number one problem
- 1967. The Langlands program
- 1968. Atiyah-Singer index theorem
- 1969. Erdos numbers
- 1970. Hilbert's tenth problem
- 1971. Society for American Baseball Research
- 1972. Zaremba's conjecture
- 1973. Transcendence of $e$ centennial
- 1974. Rubik's Cube
- 1975. Szemeredi's theorem
- 1976. Four color theorem
- 1977. RSA encryption
- 1978. Mandlebrot set
- 1979. TeX
- 1980. Hilbert's third problem
- 1981. The Mason-Stothers theorem
- 1982. Two envelopes problem
- 1983. Julia Robinson
- 1984. 1984
- 1985. The Jones polynomial
- 1986. Sudokus and Look and Say
- 1987. Primes, the zeta function, randomness, and physics
- 1988. Mathematica
- 1989. PROMYS
- 1990. The Monty Hall problem
- 1991. arXiv
- 1992. Monstrous moonshine
- 1993. The 15-theorem
- 1994. AIM
- 1995. Fermat's last theorem
- 1996. Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search (GIMPS)
- 1997. The Nobel Prize of Merton and Scholes
- 1998. The Kepler conjecture
- 1999. Baire category theorem
- 2000. R
- 2001. Colin Hughes founds Project Euler
- 2002. PRIMES in P
- 2003. Poincare conjecture
- 2004. Primes in arithmetic progression
- 2005. William Stein developed Sage
- 2006. The strong perfect graph theorem
- 2007. Flatland
- 2008. 100th anniversary of the $t$-test
- 2009. 100th anniversary of Brouwer's fixed-point theorem
- 2010. Carmichael numbers
- 2011. 100th anniversary of Egorov's theorem
- 2012. National Museum of Mathematics
- Index of people
- Index
About the Author
Stephan Ramon Garcia is WM Keck Distinguished
Service Professor and professor of mathematics at Pomona College.
He is the author of four books and over eighty research articles in
operator theory, complex analysis, matrix analysis, number theory,
discrete geometry, and other fields. He has coauthored dozens of
articles with students, including one that appeared in The Best
Writing on Mathematics: 2015. He is on the editorial boards of
Notices of the AMS, Proceedings of the AMS, American Mathematical
Monthly, Involve, and Annals of Functional Analysis. He received
four NSF research grants as principal investigator and five
teaching awards from three different institutions. He is a fellow
of the American Mathematical Society and was the inaugural
recipient of the Society's Dolciani Prize for Excellence in
Research.
Steven J. Miller is professor of mathematics at
Williams College and a visiting assistant professor at Carnegie
Mellon University. He has published five books and over one hundred
research papers, most with students, in accounting, computer
science, economics, geophysics, marketing, mathematics, operations
research, physics, sabermetrics, and statistics. He has served on
numerous editorial boards, including the Journal of Number Theory,
Notices of the AMS, and the Pi Mu Epsilon Journal. He is active in
enrichment and supplemental curricular initiatives for elementary
and secondary mathematics, from the Teachers as Scholars Program
and VCTAL (Value of Computational Thinking Across Grade Levels), to
numerous math camps (the Eureka Program, HCSSiM, the Mathematics
League International Summer Program, PROMYS, and the Ross Program).
He is a fellow of the American Mathematical Society, an at-large
senator for Phi Beta Kappa, and a member of the Mount Greylock
Regional School Committee, where he sees firsthand the challenges
of applying mathematics.