In contrast to the positive definite Helmholtz equation, thedeceivingly similar looking indefinite Helmholtz equation is difficultto solve using classical iterative methods. Applying directly a Krylovmethod to the discretized equations without preconditioning leads ingeneral to stagnation and very large iteration counts. Using classicalincomplet...
Creator:
Gander, Martin J. (Universite de Geneve)
Created:
2010-11-29
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.
Minnesota Issues was a half-hour weekly television program produced by University Media Resources of the University of Minnesota that was broadcast on public television channel KTCA, St. Paul. The program was produced and hosted by former Minneapolis mayor and University public affairs professor Arthur Naftalin from 1976 to 1988.
Creator:
University of Minnesota. University Media Resources
Contributor:
Naftalin, Arthur; Marlow, Andrew (Producer); Danyluk (Engineer)
Created:
1977-11-02
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, University Archives.
Woman and child wearing traditional Belgian dress, the woman is holding a jug of milk. Tthe child drinks from a bowl of milk. Belgian flag provides a backdrop.
Creator:
Sherwood, William Anderson, 1875-1951
Created:
1917
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Upper Midwest Literary Archives.
Why People Laugh, or, When Did Laughter Meet the Sense of Humor? Animals don't laugh. A guffawing cow has reality only on a label for processed cheese. By contrast, people have always laughed: at births and at funerals, in joy and in sorrow, while viewing scenes of cruelty and acts of kindness, or simply when tickled. But one day laughter became...
Creator:
Institute for Advanced Study
Contributor:
Liberman, Anatoly
Created:
2014-04-10
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Advanced Study.
Why People Laugh, or, When Did Laughter Meet the Sense of Humor? Animals don't laugh. A guffawing cow has reality only on a label for processed cheese. By contrast, people have always laughed: at births and at funerals, in joy and in sorrow, while viewing scenes of cruelty and acts of kindness, or simply when tickled. But one day laughter became...
Creator:
Institute for Advanced Study
Contributor:
Liberman, Anatoly
Created:
2014-04-10
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Advanced Study.