Difference between revisions of "Mandelbrot Competition"

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Named in honor of [[Yale University]] [[mathematician]] [[Benoit Mandelbrot]], the '''Mandelbrot Competition''' is a highly challenging [[mathematics competition]] for primarily high school students. It is often regarded as a predecessor to the Olympiad-level American mathematics competitions.
 
Named in honor of [[Yale University]] [[mathematician]] [[Benoit Mandelbrot]], the '''Mandelbrot Competition''' is a highly challenging [[mathematics competition]] for primarily high school students. It is often regarded as a predecessor to the Olympiad-level American mathematics competitions.
  

Revision as of 12:20, 25 October 2007

Named in honor of Yale University mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot, the Mandelbrot Competition is a highly challenging mathematics competition for primarily high school students. It is often regarded as a predecessor to the Olympiad-level American mathematics competitions.

History

The Mandelbrot Competition was started in 1990 by Sandor Lehoczky, Richard Rusczyk, and Sam Vandervelde. Sam has written the tests and managed the contest on his own since 1997, and he has compiled two books consisting of past contests. Lehoczky now enjoys a successful career on Wall Street and Rusczyk runs the Art of Problem Solving.


Resources

See also