<p>Please list all resources where i can find difficult problems of
Computer science
Mathematics
Phaysics'
Unsolvable problems
Also tell where do u find problems?
Which types of problems do u use for practice?
PLZ guide me</p>
<p>I'm interested to see how you're going to solve unsolvable problems for practice..? If you're really interested in unsolvable problems, I would point you in the direction of the Clay Mathematics Institute's Millennium Problems <a href="http://www.claymath.org/millennium/%5B/url%5D">http://www.claymath.org/millennium/</a></p>
<p>There's a number theory book by Arnol'd (I think), which has quite a lot of unsolved problems (although some of them might have been solved by now -- I don't know). In general, most number theory books give a list of unsolved problems.</p>
<p>As for other math problems, it totally depends on what you're looking for. Are you looking for olympiad-level problems? Some basic practice problems? Or are you looking for some hardcore problems, like something you would see on a graduate prelim? (For the last one, there's this nice book called Berkeley Problems in Mathematics. All the problems in it are taken from previous PhD quals at Berkeley.)</p>
<p>Same applies to comp sci & physics.</p>
<p>Btw dtc4253, I don't think describing the Clay problems as "unsolvable" is proper. ;) If you can indeed prove that they're unsolvable, then it's very probable that you will become one rich individual.</p>
<p>Haha alright, you got me there. What I meant was as of now, they have yet to be solved and are supposedly "unsolvable", just because of the fact that no one has ever solved them. I am not hypothesizing one way or the other as to whether or not they are actually solvable.</p>
<p>I am very thankful to you for ypur kind help
I am a freshman (i mean first year at university studying calculus by swokowski)
Please tell me name of books that contain problems related to calculus
2)secondly my teacher has challenged studentst to find amanual of this book
Thanks for yuor help
Very very thanks</p>