
Northern Arizona
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
link.springer.com | Anna Maria |Dipartimento di Matematica |Northern Arizona
AbstractA comprehensive Gröbner system for a parametric ideal I in K(A)[X] represents the collection of all Gröbner bases of the ideals I′ in K[X] obtained as the values of the parameters A vary in K. The recent algorithms for computing them consider the corresponding ideal J in K[A, X], and are based on stability of Gröbner bases of ideals under specializations of the parameters A.
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Jan 19, 2025 |
azdailysun.com | Mike Hartman |Northern Arizona
The fourth-ranked Flagstaff girls basketball team was down a key player on Saturday as it entered its crosstown rivalry game at home against the Coconino Panthers, so it turned to its depth. Carter Edison scored 12 points on four 3-pointers, Lexi Neal and Sunshine Begoody each added 10 and the Eagles cruised to a 63-28 victory over the Panthers, bouncing back from tough 62-27 loss Friday on the road against Phoenix Country Day. kAmq68@@5J[ 2 7C6D9>2?[ D4@C65 2== @7 96C A@:?ED :?
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Jan 19, 2025 |
azdailysun.com | Mike Hartman |Northern Arizona
Personalised advertising and content, advertising and content measurement, audience research and services developmentStore and/or access information on a deviceYou can choose how your personal data is used.
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Jan 15, 2025 |
newswise.com | Northern Arizona
In the years after the Great Recession, banks chose to keep some $420 billion in their reserves rather than loan it out to American people and businesses. While many tend to blame the banks themselves for that decision, one Wall Streeter-turned-academic is pointing the finger squarely at the Federal Reserve’s decision to pay interest on banks’ excess reserves. Raymond Kim, an assistant professor of finance at Northern Arizona University’s W. A.
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Jan 14, 2025 |
phys.org | Jill Kimball |Northern Arizona
In the years after the Great Recession, banks chose to keep some $420 billion in their reserves rather than loan it out to American people and businesses. While many tend to blame the banks themselves for that decision, one Wall Streeter-turned-academic is pointing the finger squarely at the Federal Reserve's decision to pay interest on banks' excess reserves.
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