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Calculus

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This proven textbook provides an introduction to and practical applications of the basic concepts of calculus. The book's usefulness extends far beyond the classroom, as many students find that it serves as an excellent reference tool for advanced courses and graduate work. This edition contains more exercises requiring written responses, and more numerical examples and exercises. Each of these features is a result of the present-day teaching techniques, in which students are asked to contemplate the concepts more, and use technology where applicable. Calculus, 6e is ideal for students majoring in physical sciences, engineering, computer science or mathematics. As with earlier editions, the text fits a three-semester (four or five quarter) introductory calculus of one and several variables. It can also be used for a one-year course in single-variable calculus.

Hardcover

First published December 23, 2002

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About the author

Robert Ellis

150 books6 followers
Robert Mortimer Ellis (1926–2013) was an American mathematician, specializing in topological dynamics.

Ellis grew up in Philadelphia, served briefly in the U.S. Army, and then studied at the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his Ph.D. in 1953.[3] He was a postdoc at the University of Chicago from 1953 to 1955. He was at Pennsylvania State University from 1955 to 1957 an assistant professor and from 1957 to 1963 an associate professor and at Wesleyan University from 1963 to 1967 a full professor. At the University of Minnesota he was a full professor from 1967 to 1995, when he retired as professor emeritus.

He developed an algebraic approach to topological dynamics, leading to a strengthening with an alternate proof of the Furstenberg structure theorem.[4] He was the author or coauthor of about 40 research publications. In the year of his retirement, a conference was held in his honor at the University of Minnesota on April 5 and 6 1995; the conference proceedings were published in 1998 by the American Mathematical Society (AMS).[2][5] He was elected a Fellow of the AMS in 2012.

Ellis was predeceased by his wife. Upon his death he was survived by a grandchild, a daughter, and his son David, a professor of mathematics at Beloit College and a long-time collaborator with his father

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