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Education, Higher -- Research

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 314 Collections and/or Records:

1-dimensional sets that cannot be embedded in the plane, undated

 File — Box 3: [Barcode: 0112222277991], Folder: 6
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: undated

3-Manifold Notes, used in topics in geometric topology, 1975 Fall

 File — Box 7: [Barcode: 0112222277736], Folder: 8-9
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1975 Fall

“A Characterization of 3-Space by Partitionings,” Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 70, No. 1, pp. 15-27, 1951 January

 File — Box 6: [Barcode: 0112219893685], Folder: 11
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1951 January

“A Complete Elementary Proof that Hilbert Space is Homeomorphic to the Countable Infinite Product of Lines,” with R.D. Anderson, 1967 - 1968

 File — Box 5: [Barcode: 0112219893677], Folder: 7-9
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1967 - 1968

“A Convex Metric for a Locally Connected Continuum", 1948

 File — Box 4: [Barcode: 0112219893669], Folder: 4
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1948

“A Decomposition of E³ into Points and Tame Arcs Such That the Decomposition Space is Topologically Different from E³,” Annals of Mathematics, Vol. 65, No.3, 1957 May

 File — Box 6: [Barcode: 0112219893685], Folder: 15
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1957 May

"A Homeomorphism Between the 3-Sphere and the Sum of Two Solid Horned Spheres,” Annals of Mathematics, Vol. 56, No. 2, 1952 September

 File — Box 6: [Barcode: 0112219893685], Folder: 13
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1952 September

“A Simple Closed Curve That Pierces No Disk,” Journal de Mathematiques, 1956

 File — Box 6: [Barcode: 0112219893685], Folder: 12
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1956

“A Toroidal Decomposition of E³,” with Steve Armentrout, Fundementa Mathematicae, LX, 1967

 File — Box 5: [Barcode: 0112219893677], Folder: 12
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The R. H. Bing papers consist of research and conference notes, correspondence, and publications linked to his research in Geometric Topology while a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Texas at Austin. His research later produced figures reflecting his life’s works, such as the well known, “Dog Bone” model.

Dates: 1967