PREFACE
To describe the scope of this work, I must go back to when Stan
Gibilisco, editorial advisor of the dictionary series, asked me to be
in charge of this volume. I appreciated the idea of a compendium of
mathematical terms used in the sciences and engineering for two
reasons. Firstly, mathematical definitions are not easily located; when
I need insight on a technical term, I turn to the analytic index of a
monograph that seems related; recently I was at a loss when trying to
find “Vi`ete’s formulas *,” a term used by an Eastern-European student
in his homework. I finally located it in the Encyclopaedic Dictionary
of Mathematics, and that brought home the value of a collection of
esoteric terms, put together by many people acquainted with different
sectors of the literature. Secondly, at this time we do not yet have a
tradition of cross-disciplinary terms; in fact, much interaction
between mathematics and other scientific areas is in the making, and
times (and timing) could not be more exciting. The EPSRC**
newsletter Newsline (available on the web at www.epsrc.ac.uk), devoted
to mathematics, in July 2001 rightly states “Even amongst fellow
scientists, mathematicians are often viewed with suspicion as being
interested in problems far removed from the realworld. But . . . things
are changing.” Rapidly, though, my enthusiasm turned to dismay upon
realizing that any strategy I could devise was doomed to fail the test
of “completeness.” What is a dictionary? At best, a rapidly superseded
record of word/symbol usage by some groups of people; the only really
complete achievement in that respect is, in my view, the OED. Not only
was such an undertaking beyond me, the very attempt at bridging
disciplines and importing words from one to another is still an
ill-defined endeavor — scientists themselves are unsure how to
translate a term into other disciplines. As a consequence what service
I can hope this book to provide, at best, is that of a pocket manual
with which a voyager can at least get by in a basic fashion in a
foreign-speaking country. I also hope that it will have the small
virtue to be a first of its kind, a path-breaker that will prompt
others to follow. Not being an applied mathematician myself, I relied
on the generosity of the following team of authors: Lorenzo Fatibene,
Mauro Francaviglia, and Rudolf Schmid, experts of mathematical physics;
Toni Kazic, a biologist with broad and daring interdisciplinary
experience; Hong Qian, a mathematical biologist; and Ralf Hiptmair, who
works on numerical solution of differential equations. For operations
research, Giovanni Andreatta (University of Padua, Italy), directed me
to H.J. Greenberg’s web glossary, and Toni Kazic referred me to the
most extensive web glossary in chemistry, authored by A.D. McNaught and
A.Wilkinson. To all these people I owe much more than thanks for their
work. I know the reward that would most please them is for this book to
have served its readers well: please write me any comments or
suggestions, and I will gratefully try to put them to
future use.
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