Combinatorics and physics
Appearance
Combinatorial physics or physical combinatorics is the area of interaction between physics and combinatorics.
"Combinatorial Physics is an emerging area which unites combinatorial and discrete mathematical techniques applied to theoretical physics, especially Quantum Theory."[1].
"Physical combinatorics might be defined naively as combinatorics guided by ideas or insights from physics"[2].
See also
References
- ^ 2007 International Conference on Combinatorial physics
- ^ Physical Combinatorics, Masaki Kashiwara, Tetsuji Miwa, Springer, 2000, ISBN 0817641750
Further reading
- Some Open Problems in Combinatorial Physics, G. Duchamp, H. Cheballah
- One-parameter groups and combinatorial physics, G. Duchamp, K.A. Penson, A.I. Solomon, A.Horzela, P.Blasiak
- Combinatorial Physics, Normal Order and Model Feynman Graphs, A.I. Solomon, P. Blasiak, G. Duchamp, A. Horzela, K.A. Penson
- Discrete and Combinatorial Physics
- Bit-String Physics: a Novel "Theory of Everything", H. Pierre Noyes
- Combinatorial Physics, Ted Bastin, Clive William Kilmister, World Scientific, 1995, ISBN 9810222122
- Physical Combinatorics and Quasiparticles, Giovanni Feverati, Paul A. Pearce, Nicholas S. Witte
- Physical Combinatorics of Non-Unitary Minimal Models, Hannah Fitzgerald
- Paths, Crystals and Fermionic Formulae, G.Hatayama, A.Kuniba, M.Okado, T.Takagi, Z.Tsuboi
- On powers of Stirling matrices, Istvan Mezo