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Selected Works II: Probability Theory and Mathematical Statistics

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The creative work of Andrei N. Kolmogorov is exceptionally wide-ranging. In his studies on trigonometric and orthogonal series, the theory of measure and inte­gral, mathematical logic, approximation theory, geometry, topology, functional analysis, classical mechanics, ergodic theory, superposition of functions, and in­ formation theory, he solved many conceptual and fundamental problems and posed new questions which gave rise to a great deal of further research. Kolmogorov is one of the founders of the Soviet school of probability theory, mathematical statistics, and the theory of turbulence. In these areas he obtained a number of central results, with many applications to mechanics, geophysics, linguistics and biology, among other subjects. This edition includes Kolmogorov's most important papers on mathematics and the natural sciences. It does not include his philosophical and ped­agogical studies, his articles written for the "Bolshaya Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya", his papers on prosody and applications of mathematics or his publications on general questions. The material of this edition was selected and compiled by Kolmogorov himself. The first volume consists of papers on mathematics and also on turbulence and classical mechanics. The second volume is devoted to probability theory and mathematical statistics. The focus of the third volume is on information theory and the theory of algorithms.

615 pages, Paperback

First published February 7, 1899

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About the author

A.N. Kolmogorov

42 books21 followers
Dr. Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov, Ph.D. (Moscow State University, 1929; Russian: Андре́й Никола́евич Колмого́ров) was a Soviet mathematician and professor at the Moscow State University where he became the first chairman of the department of probability theory two years after the 1933 publication of his book which laid the modern axiomatic foundations of the field. He was a Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and winner of many awards, including the Stalin Prize (1941), the Lenin Prize (1965), the Wolf Prize (1980), and the Lobachevsky Prize (1986).

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