De Gruyter and United Nations cooperate on open access book project

Syndicated from http://www.stm-publishing.com/

December 18, 2017

De Gruyter and the United Nations are cooperating on the publication of two open access books on mathematics. The UN promotes international cooperation in the peaceful use and exploration of outer space, and among its responsibilities are the UN-affiliated Regional Centers for Space Science and Technology Education (located in India, Morocco, Nigeria, Mexico/Brazil, Jordan and China). The Regional Centers are responsible for the development of skills and knowledge for university educators and research and applications scientists. To do this, they use rigorous theory, research, applications, field exercises, and pilot projects in those aspects of space science and technology that can contribute to sustainable development in each respective region.

Both books are open access titles accessible to anyone, anywhere and will form the basis of the mathematics foundation courses within the curricula of the Regional Centers. Both are designed for physicists and engineers. The first volume covers Linear Algebra and the second volume focuses on Probability and Statistics.

“We are very pleased to have had the opportunity of working with the UN to help support the valuable work they do and to help contribute to accessible, timely information for researchers,” said Dr. Anke Beck, Managing Director, De Gruyter. “As one of the largest open access book publishers, we are especially pleased to add to the corpus of quality research available to anyone on degruyter.com.”

“The two titles substantially support education curricula on remote sensing and geographic information systems, space and atmospheric science, satellite meteorology and global climate, satellite communications and global navigation satellite systems which have been developed over a long period of time by the UN-affiliated Regional Centers and their academic host institutions,” said Professor Dr. Hans Joachim Haubold of the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs.

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