Skip to content

Alphabet R - Ring Mystery Cache

This cache has been archived.

Toa Norik: #This cache has been archived by a Swedish reviewer#

Hej Möjagumman!

För ett tag informerade vi dig om att allt inte verkade stå rätt till med din cache och bad dig då ta reda på hur det stod till, samt åtgärda eventuella problem. Då det inte syns några tecken på att du gjort det, kommer jag nu att arkivera din cache.

Jag ber dig plocka in ev. rester av din cache så att de inte ligger kvar och skräpar ner.

Hälsningar
Toa Norik, reviewer


Besök gärna Sveriges avdelning i Geocachings officiella wiki , där du hittar information för dig som cacheägare.

More
Hidden : 2/19/2011
Difficulty:
3.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


You do not find the cache at the location of the given coordinates!

In mathematics, ring theory is the study of rings – algebraic structures in which addition and multiplication are defined and have similar properties to those familiar from the integers. Ring theory studies the structure of rings, their representations, or, in different language, modules, special classes of rings (group rings, division rings, universal enveloping algebras), as well as an array of properties that proved to be of interest both within the theory itself and for its applications, such as homological properties and polynomial identities.

Commutative rings are much better understood than noncommutative ones. Due to its intimate connections with algebraic geometry and algebraic number theory, which provide many natural examples of commutative rings, their theory, which is considered to be part of commutative algebra and field theory rather than of general counterparts. A fairly recent trend, started in the 1980s with the development of noncommutative geometry and with the discovery of quantum groups, attempts to turn the situation around and build the theory of certain classes of noncommutative rings in a geometric fashion as if they were rings of functions on (non-existent) ‘noncommutative spaces’.

                                                                                                                                  Source: Wikipedia

 

N 59°   / 13 .  

 

E 018° 05 .     +    +  

 

 

 

 

 

 

You need additional info from the geochecker to find the cache!

 

 

Additional Hints (No hints available.)