Fibonacci Quarterly

The Fibonacci Quarterly is a scientific journal on mathematical topics related to the Fibonacci numbers, published four times per year. It is the primary publication of The Fibonacci Association, which has published it since 1963. Its founding editors were Verner Emil Hoggatt Jr. and Alfred Brousseau;[1] the present editor is Professor Curtis Cooper of the Mathematics Department of the University of Central Missouri.

Fibonacci Quarterly
DisciplineMathematics
LanguageEnglish
Edited byCurtis Cooper
Publication details
History1963–present
Publisher
Fibonacci Association (United States)
FrequencyQuarterly
All except for the five latest volumes
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Fibonacci Q.
MathSciNetFibonacci Quart.
Indexing
ISSN0015-0517
LCCN68126420
Links

The Fibonacci Quarterly has an editorial board of nineteen members and is overseen by the nine-member board of directors of The Fibonacci Association. The journal includes research articles, expository articles, Elementary Problems and Solutions, Advanced Problems and Solutions, and announcements of interest to members of The Fibonacci Association. Occasionally, the journal publishes special invited articles by distinguished mathematicians.

An online Index to The Fibonacci Quarterly covering Volumes 1-55 (1963–2017) includes a Title Index, Author Index, Elementary Problem Index, Advanced Problem Index, Miscellaneous Problem Index, and Quick Reference Keyword Index. The Fibonacci Quarterly is available online to subscribers; on December 31, 2017, online volumes ranged from the current issue back to volume 1 (1963).

Many articles in The Fibonacci Quarterly deal directly with topics that are very closely related to Fibonacci numbers, such as Lucas numbers, the golden ratio, Zeckendorf representations, Binet forms, Fibonacci polynomials, and Chebyshev polynomials. However, many other topics, especially as related to recurrences, are also well represented. These include primes, pseudoprimes, graph colorings, Euler numbers, continued fractions, Stirling numbers, Pythagorean triples, Ramsey theory, Lucas-Bernoulli numbers, quadratic residues, higher-order recurrence sequences, nonlinear recurrence sequences, combinatorial proofs of number-theoretic identities, Diophantine equations, special matrices and determinants, the Collatz sequence, public-key crypto functions, elliptic curves, fractal dimension, hypergeometric functions, Fibonacci polytopes, geometry, graph theory, music, and art.

Notes

References

  • Bicknell-Johnson, Marjorie (1987), "A short history of The Fibonacci Quarterly", The Fibonacci Quarterly, 25: 2–5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.