Jonathan M. Borwein
Commemorative Conference
25—29 September, 2017
◄Experimental Mathematics and Visualisation►
Theme chaired by David Bailey
Keynote talk:
Computer discovery and analysis of large Poisson polynomials

Gamma and Factorial in the Monthly

This is joint work with the late Jonathan M. Borwein.
New Ramanujan Mock Theta Function Identities
In his last letter to Hardy, Ramanujan defined ten mock theta functions of order 5 and three of order 7. He stated that the three mock theta functions of order 7 are
not related. We show how we discovered and proved new identities for the fifth order functions and that there are actually surprising relationships between the order 7
functions.
On the Computation of Mathematical Constants and the Implications of HPC Trends
In preparation for Pi Day celebrations at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) in 2013, David Bailey, Jon Borwein, Glenn Wightwick and the
presenter engaged in an exercise to compute far-flung digits of $\pi^2$ and Catalan's constant utilising BBP formulae for each. A brief review will be
presented of this effort and the resulting paper, which was awarded the 2017 Levi L Conant Prize by the American Mathematical Society. Recent trends in
High-Performance Computing (HPC) will be explored, as they have implications for similar experimental mathematics computations in the future.
Phase Portraits of Hyperbolic Geometry

Sums of Palindromes: An Approach via Automata

How to turn a fractal inside out and discover theorems
I will describe recent results, and the role that visualization played, in the discovery of a simple method for turning an attractor of a graph directed iterated function system inside out.
The resulting approach to tiling theory provides insight into very sophisticated theorems of others concerning aperiodic tilings. This is joint work with A. Vince and A. Grant. An article on the topic will appear in the December issue of the Math Monthly.
A magnetic double integral
In a recent study of how the output voltage of a Hall plate is affected by the shape of the plate and the size of its contacts, Udo Ausserlechner has come up with a
remarkable double integral that can be viewed as a generalization of the classical elliptic "AGM" integral. In my talk I will discuss transformation properties of the
integral, which were experimentally observed by Ausserlechner, as well as its analytical and arithmetic features including connections to the AGM and other special
functions.
This is joint work with David Broadhurst (Open University, UK).
This is joint work with David Broadhurst (Open University, UK).