ONLINE
RESEARCH GROUP
Himanshu Thapliyal has
formed a Vedic maths research group in Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=125003206773&ref=nf.
You are invited you to join the group.
RESEARCHERS
These researchers are listed
in alphapbetical order by surname. If you would like to be added please
let us know. We support those who are doing research into Vedic mathematics
and can put up material on research currently in progress and/or publish
in the Vedic Maths Newsletter.
Stewart Dickson
Visualization Research Programmer, Illinois Simulator Laboratory at
Urbana, Illinois, USA.
This is still pretty well
the definitive statement on Tactile, Vedic Maths
And the
video.
Make:
Online : Vedic math machines and 3D zoetropes at Makerspace Urbana
Alexander
Greene, BSc (Hons)
Freelance Author
Vedic Mathematics Tutor/Presenter
Glyndwr University Alumni Association Member and Ambassador
atgreene@hotmail.com
Tel: 07950 962650
LinkedIn: LinkedIn
I was using VM principles
whilst developing code while I was an undergraduate. The C++ code
I developed involved heavy number crunching. Nowadays, I work in Java
and HTML and CSS on web pages, but the basic processes are the same
when it comes to numbers, so I am working on creating mathematical
routines which deploy VM principles to see if they can work more efficiently
than current computerised mathematical engines allow.
Ashish
Joglekar, Ajinkya Kale and Shaunak Vaidya
Research
on speeding up programming time using Vedic techniques. See Issue
60 of the newsletter.
kaleajinkya@gmail.com
See also another article - here.
Dr
S K Kapoor
Dr Kapoor
has written many books on Vedic Mathematics. There appears to be a
proof of "Goldbach's
Conjecture" that has been created using Vedic Mathematics. The
proof has been further documented
in a book. Currently it seems to be waiting for peer review to confirm
the proof. We covered this in Issue
10 of the newsletter.
Brian McEnery
Vedic Mathematics and Natural Computation Research and Development
in Ireland includes a diverse range of topics, from developing a multimedia
approach to teaching using animations to exploring the language of
computation using natural language, to developing a deep correlation
between aspects of gaelic knowledge, modern computational physics,
and vedic knowledge. Recent research reveals that the integration
of these three great traditions of knowledge will point in the direction
to develop the Theory of Everything in Physics, with implications
for the Continuum Hypothesis in Mathematics, Completeness in Computation,
and a realisation of the goal of a simple and complete approach to
Knowledge.
Further information including
contact details is available at this link: http://bit.ly/bfeaBB
Andrew Nicholas
Interested in the special theory of relativity,
the foundations of geometry,
the solution of ordinary and partial, linear and non-linear differential
equations,
evaluation of determinants,
inversion of matrices
Himanshu Thapliyal
Currently working toward the Ph.D. degree at the Department of Computer
Science and Engineering, University of South Florida, Tampa. For one
year, he was a Research Assistant in the School of Computer Engineering,
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, where he was engaged
in reversible/adiabatic computing at metal-oxide-semiconductor level.
His current research interests include reversible logic, conservative
logic, emerging technologies, Vedic mathematics, design of efficient
arithmetic units, design of field-programmable gate array (FPGA) architectures
for emerging nanotechnologies, and FPGA-based system design.
hthapliy@cse.usf.edu
Kenneth Williams
Interested in promoting all aspects of Vedic Mathematics.
Specific research includes:
Unifying and simplifying arithmetic methods
The sixteen Sutras and sub-Sutras
Applications of Pythagorean Triples
Applications of Vedic Mathematics in Astronomy
kenneth.williams@vedicmaths.org