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[1] [2] The portal is a joint project of the Steklov Mathematical Institute and the Russian Academy of Sciences. Access to information in the portal is generally free, except for the full-text sources of certain publications which have elected to make their content available on a fee basis. [3] The website can be read in either Russian or English.
Archives of the Russian originals are available online through the All-Russian Mathematical Portal. [ 3 ] Uspekhi Matematicheskikh Nauk successfully overcame the economic difficulties of the 90s and today it is an active publication - one of the leading mathematical journals in the world.
George Cain's list of online math texts — diverse books of mathematics compiled by George Cain Home Page J. S. Milne - contains e-books and course notes The Jahrbuch Project: Electronic Research Archive for Mathematics — extensive archive of 17,772 links to facsimiles of (mainly German) publications from 1868–1942.
The first meeting of the society was 27 September [O.S. 15 September] 1864.Nikolai Brashman was the first president of MMO.. The Moscow Mathematical Society was first created in 1810 by extended members of the Muraviev family, but it closed down the year after.
Anatoly Moiseevich Vershik (Russian: Анато́лий Моисе́евич Ве́ршик; 28 December 1933 – 14 February 2024) was a Soviet and Russian mathematician. He is most famous for his joint work with Sergei V. Kerov on representations of infinite symmetric groups and applications to the longest increasing subsequences .
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Fedor Alekseyevich Bogomolov (born 26 September 1946) (Фёдор Алексеевич Богомолов) is a Russian and American mathematician, known for his research in algebraic geometry and number theory. Bogomolov worked at the Steklov Institute in Moscow before he became a professor at the Courant Institute in New York.
The St. Petersburg Mathematical Society was founded in 1890 and was the third founded mathematical society in Russia after those of Moscow (1867) and Khar'kov (1879). [1] [2] Its founder and first president was Vasily Imshenetskii, [1] who also had founded earlier the Khar'kov Mathematical Society.