Darrin D. Frey

Professor of Mathematics, Department of Science and Math, Cedarville University

Address:

Office:  ENS  368
Phone: 937-766-7643
e-mail: freyd@cedarville.edu

Consider doing an REU (Research Experience for Undergraduates)

Here is a link to some.

Other websites of interest to math majors

For internships

Soche (Southwestern Ohio Council for Higher Education)
Department of Homeland Security

Other General Interest

Mathematical Association of America
Plus Magazine
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Class Links:


MATH 4410 Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometries:
   MATH 4410 Syllabus

   MATH 4410 Tentative Homework Schedule

   Historical Exercises

My schedule this semester

A TeX reference page

If you want to do more in TeX visit Mr. Schumacher's pages on the s: drive, scroll down a bit and visit some of the links.  Mr. Schumacher also offers a course in TeX (actually, his course now covers LaTeX, a variation of TeX)

Education

Biography:

Mathematical Interests:

I am currently studying conjugacy of embeddings of alternating groups and their nonsplit central extensions into exceptional complex Lie groups.

My thesis work is in that area and is now one volume (Volume 133 NO. 634) in the Memoirs of the AMS.  I have two other papers in this area which have appeared in the Journal of Algebra (both in 1998) and another which has appeared in the Journal of Group Theory (in 2001).  My vita (see link above) has my papers' references.

I am also interested in learning about monstrous moonshine. Monstrous moonshine is a collection of extraordinary and unexpected facts about the monster simple group. First, I'll explain a little about the monster and then about moonshine.

The classification of finite simple groups says that any finite simple group is either a cyclic group of prime order, an alternating group of degree at least 5, a group of Lie type, or one of 26 simple groups that don't fall into any of the other (infinite) categories. These 26 groups are called "sporadic". Five of them were discovered in the 1860's by Mathieu and the other 21 were discovered between 1965 and 1975. Three of the latter type were discovered by University of Michigan faculty. The Higman-Sims group was discovered and constructed (in one day!) in 1968 by Don Higman of the U of M and Charles Sims of Rutgers University. It has 44,352,000 elements. The McLaughlin group was discovered by Jack McLaughlin in 1968. It has 898,128,000 elements. The monster group is the largest of the sporadic groups. It was discovered independently by Bernd Fischer and Robert Griess in 1973 and was constructed by Griess in 1980. The monster has 808,017,424,794,512,875,886,459,904,961,710,757,005,754,368,000,000,000 elements. I have written a short introduction to monstrous moonshine which is aimed at non-algebraists. There are two parts to it, the first part introduces some background material, and the second part actually talks about moonshine. The material in what I have written uses material from the following sources very heavily and I want to give due credit: