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Wikipedia:Alain A. Lewis#0 | Alain A. Lewis (born 1947) is an American mathematician. A student of the mathematical economist Kenneth Arrow, Lewis is credited by the historian of economics Philip Mirowski with making Arrow aware of computational limits to economic agency. == Life == Lewis gained his BA in philosophy, economics and statistics from ... |
Wikipedia:Alain Goriely#0 | Alain Goriely is a Belgian mathematician, currently holding the statutory professorship (chair) of mathematical modelling at the University of Oxford, Mathematical Institute. He is director of the Oxford Centre for Industrial Mathematics (OCIAM), of the International Brain and Mechanics Lab (IBMTL) and Professorial Fel... |
Wikipedia:Alain M. Robert#0 | Alain M. Robert is Honorary Professor at University of Neuchâtel. Robert received his PhD from the University of Neuchâtel in 1967, where he studied under Roger Bader. His dissertation Quelques Questions d'Espaces Vectoriels Topologiques concerned topological vector spaces. == Selected publications == Robert, Alain M.:... |
Wikipedia:Alain-Sol Sznitman#0 | Alain-Sol Sznitman (born 13 December 1955) is a French and Swiss mathematician who works as a professor of mathematics at ETH Zurich. His research concerns probability theory and mathematical physics. Within the field of percolation theory, Sznitman introduced the study of random interlacements. == Education and career... |
Wikipedia:Alan B. Tayler#0 | Alan Breach Tayler (1931–1995) was a British applied mathematician and pioneer of "industrial mathematics". He was a Founding Fellow of St Catherine's College, Oxford (1959-1995), the initiator of the Oxford Study Groups with Industry in 1968 (which developed into the European Study Groups with Industry), a driving for... |
Wikipedia:Alan Cobham (mathematician)#0 | Alan Belmont Cobham (4 November 1927 – 28 June 2011) was an American mathematician and computer scientist known for (with Jack Edmonds and Michael O. Rabin) inventing the notion of polynomial time and the complexity class P,[B] for Cobham's thesis stating that the problems that have practically usable computer solution... |
Wikipedia:Alan Gaius Ramsay McIntosh#0 | Alan Gaius Ramsay McIntosh (* 1942 in Sydney, † August 8, 2016) was an Australian mathematician who dealt with analysis (harmonic analysis, partial differential equations). He was a professor at the Australian National University in Canberra. McIntosh studied at the University of New England with a bachelor's degree in... |
Wikipedia:Albert Badrikian#0 | Albert Badrikian (born January 11, 1933 in Lyon; died July 31, 1994 in a crevasse of the Bossons Glacier in the Mont Blanc massif) was a French mathematician and professor of mathematics at the Blaise Pascal University. Badrikian co-founded the renowned and influential summer school École d’Été de Probabilités de Saint... |
Wikipedia:Albert Châtelet#0 | Albert Châtelet (24 October 1883 – 30 June 1960) was a French politician and mathematician. == Biography == Châtelet was a student at the École normale supérieure (Paris) from 1905 to 1908, succeeding to the Agrégation (a highly selective competitive examination for future high-school teachers) in 1908. After earning a... |
Wikipedia:Albert G. Howson#0 | Albert Geoffrey Howson (1931 – 1 November 2022) was a British mathematician and educationist. He started to work as algebraist and in 1954 published the Howson property of groups and proved it for some types of groups. Later he devoted himself to the mathematics education and participated in reforms of mathematics educ... |
Wikipedia:Albert Muchnik#0 | Albert Abramovich Muchnik (2 January 1934 – 14 February 2019) was a Russian mathematician who worked in the field of foundations and mathematical logic. == Biography == He received his Ph.D. from Moscow State Pedagogical Institute in 1959 under the advisorship of Pyotr Novikov. From there, he wrote his dissertation tit... |
Wikipedia:Albert Nijenhuis#0 | Albert Nijenhuis (November 21, 1926 – February 13, 2015) was a Dutch-American mathematician who specialized in differential geometry and the theory of deformations in algebra and geometry, and later worked in combinatorics. His high school studies at the gymnasium in Arnhem were interrupted by the evacuation of Arnhem ... |
Wikipedia:Albert Pfluger#0 | Albert Pfluger (13 October 1907, Oensingen – 14 September 1993, Zürich) was a Swiss mathematician, specializing in complex function theory. == Biography == Pfluger, the son of a farmer, attended secondary school in Stans. He then studied mathematics at ETH Zürich, where in 1935 he received his promotion (Ph.D) under Ge... |
Wikipedia:Albert Shiryaev#0 | Albert Nikolayevich Shiryaev (Russian: Альбе́рт Никола́евич Ширя́ев; born October 12, 1934) is a Soviet and Russian mathematician. He is known for his work in probability theory, statistics and financial mathematics. == Career == He graduated from Moscow State University in 1957. From that time until now he has been wo... |
Wikipedia:Albert Wilansky#0 | Albert "Tommy" Wilansky (13 September 1921, St. John's, Newfoundland – 3 July 2017, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania) was a Canadian-American mathematician, known for introducing Smith numbers. == Biography == Wilansky was educated as an undergraduate at Dalhousie University, where he received an M.A. in mathematics in 1944. Fr... |
Wikipedia:Alberto Fujimori#0 | Alberto Kenya Fujimori Inomoto (26 July 1938 – 11 September 2024) was a Peruvian politician, professor, and engineer who served as the 54th president of Peru from 1990 to 2000. Born in Lima, Fujimori was the country's first president of Japanese descent, and was an agronomist and university rector prior to entering pol... |
Wikipedia:Alberto González Domínguez#0 | Alberto González Domínguez (11 April 1904 in Buenos Aires – 14 September 1982 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine mathematician working on analysis, probability theory and quantum field theory. González Domínguez received his Ph.D. from the University of Buenos Aires in 1939 under the direction of Julio Rey Pastor. That ... |
Wikipedia:Alberto Tognoli#0 | Alberto Tognoli (born 26 July 1937, Brescia, died 3 March 2008 in Rapallo) was an Italian mathematician, who worked on algebraic geometry. Tognoli received his Ph.D. (Laurea) in 1960 from the University of Pisa. From 1970 he became full professor at the same university, and he also taught in Cosenza, Ferrara, Paris and... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandar Nikolov (computer scientist)#0 | Aleksandar Nikolov is a Bulgarian and Canadian theoretical computer scientist working on differential privacy, discrepancy theory, and high-dimensional geometry. He is a professor at the University of Toronto. Nikolov obtained his Ph.D. from Rutgers University in 2014 under the supervision of S. Muthukrishnan (Thesis: ... |
Wikipedia:Aleksander Axer#0 | Aleksander Axer (10 October 1880 – 4 October 1948) was a Polish mathematician from Przemyśl who introduced Axer's theorem. He died suddenly of complications from pharyngitis in Zurich, shortly before his 68th birthday. == References == |
Wikipedia:Aleksander Rajchman#0 | Aleksander Michał Rajchman (13 November 1890 – July or August 1940) was a mathematician of the Warsaw School of Mathematics of the Interwar period. He had origins in the Lwów School of Mathematics and contributed to real analysis, probability and mathematical statistics. == Family background == Rajchman was born on 13 ... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandr Aleksandrov (mathematician)#0 | Aleksandr Danilovich Aleksandrov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Дани́лович Алекса́ндров, alternative transliterations: Alexandr or Alexander (first name), and Alexandrov (last name)) (4 August 1912 – 27 July 1999) was a Soviet/Russian mathematician, physicist, philosopher and mountaineer. == Personal life == Aleksandr Aleksandro... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandr Korkin#0 | Aleksandr Nikolayevich Korkin (Russian: Александр Николаевич Коркин; 3 March [O.S. 19 February] 1837 – 1 September [O.S. 19 August] 1908) was a Russian mathematician. He made contribution to the development of partial differential equations, and was second only to Chebyshev among the founders of the Saint Petersburg Ma... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandr Kurosh#0 | Aleksandr Gennadyevich Kurosh (Russian: Алекса́ндр Генна́диевич Ку́рош; January 19, 1908 – May 18, 1971) was a Soviet mathematician, known for his work in abstract algebra. He is credited with writing The Theory of Groups, the first modern and high-level text on group theory, published in 1944. He was born in Yartsevo,... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandr Lyapunov#0 | Aleksandr Mikhailovich Lyapunov (Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Ляпуно́в, 6 June [O.S. 25 May] 1857 – 3 November 1918) was a Russian mathematician, mechanician and physicist. He was the son of the astronomer Mikhail Lyapunov and the brother of the pianist and composer Sergei Lyapunov. Lyapunov is known for his development of t... |
Wikipedia:Aleksandrov–Rassias problem#0 | The theory of isometries in the framework of Banach spaces has its beginning in a paper by Stanisław Mazur and Stanisław M. Ulam in 1932. They proved the Mazur–Ulam theorem stating that every isometry of a normed real linear space onto a normed real linear space is a linear mapping up to translation. In 1970, Aleksandr... |
Wikipedia:Aleksei Markushevich#0 | Aleksei Ivanovich Markushevich (Russian: Алексей Иванович Маркушевич; 2 April [O.S. 20 March] 1908, Petrozavodsk – 7 June 1979, Moscow) was a Soviet mathematician, mathematical educator, and historian of mathematics. He is known for the Farrell–Markushevich theorem. == Biography == Markushevich's father worked as a jun... |
Wikipedia:Alena Varmužová#0 | Alena Varmužová (24 April 1939 – 7 August 1997) was a Czech mathematician. She was specialized in creating teaching systems for mathematics education of young students. == Life and work == Alena Varmužová was born on 24 April 1939 in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm. She graduated from the Faculty of Science in Olomouc, having com... |
Wikipedia:Alena Šolcová#0 | Alena Šolcová (born 26 March 1950) is a Czech mathematician and science historian. She is the founder of the Kepler Museum, an astronomy museum in Prague. == Life and work == Between 1968 and 1973, Šolcová studied mathematics at the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics and Philosophy at Charles University. Between 2002 a... |
Wikipedia:Alessandra Carbone#0 | Alessandra Carbone is an Italian mathematician and computer scientist. She is a professor in the computer science department of the Pierre and Marie Curie University. Since 2009 she has headed the laboratory of computational and quantitative biology. == Career == She gained her PhD in mathematics in 1993 at the Graduat... |
Wikipedia:Alessandra Iozzi#0 | Alessandra Iozzi (born 25 January 1959) is an Italian-born mathematician known for her research in geometric group theory. Originally from Rome, she holds Italian, Swiss, and American citizenships, and works as an adjunct professor of mathematics at ETH Zurich. == Education and career == Iozzi obtained a laurea at the ... |
Wikipedia:Alessandra Lunardi#0 | Alessandra Lunardi (born 1958) is an Italian mathematician specializing in mathematical analysis. She is a professor in the department of mathematics and computer science at the University of Parma. She is particularly interested in Kolmogorov equations and free boundary problems. == Education and career == Lunardi was... |
Wikipedia:Alessandra Sarti#0 | Alessandra Sarti (born 1974) is an Italian mathematician specializing in algebraic geometry. She is the namesake of the Sarti surface, and has also published research on K3 surfaces. She works in France as a professor at the University of Poitiers and deputy director of the Institut national des sciences mathématiques ... |
Wikipedia:Alessandro Padoa#0 | Alessandro Padoa (14 October 1868 – 25 November 1937) was an Italian mathematician and logician, a contributor to the school of Giuseppe Peano. He is remembered for a method for deciding whether, given some formal theory, a new primitive notion is truly independent of the other primitive notions. There is an analogous ... |
Wikipedia:Alessio Corti#0 | Alessio Corti (born 1965) is a Professor of Mathematics at Imperial College London working in Algebraic Geometry. Corti studied at the University of Pisa and Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, where he gained a diploma (Laurea) in 1987. He obtained his PhD in 1992 at the University of Utah under the supervision of János... |
Wikipedia:Alex James (mathematician)#0 | Alex James is a British and New Zealand applied mathematician and mathematical biologist whose research involves the mathematical modelling of wildlife behaviour, gender disparities in academia, and the epidemiology of COVID-19. She is a professor in the school of mathematics and statistics at the University of Canterb... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Abrosimov#0 | Alexánder Víktorovich Abrósimov (Russian: Александр Викторович Абросимов; November 16, 1948 – June 20, 2011) was a Russian mathematician and teacher. == Life == Dr. Abrosimov was born in 1948 in the city of Kuibyshev (now Samara). In 1971, he graduated from the Department of Mechanics and Mathematics of State Universit... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Anderson (mathematician)#0 | Alexander Anderson (c. 1582 in Aberdeen – c. 1620 in Paris) was a Scottish mathematician. == Life == He was born in Aberdeen, possibly in 1582, according to a print which suggests he was aged 35 in 1617. It is unknown where he was educated, but it is likely that he initially studied writing and philosophy (the "belles ... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Barvinok#0 | Alexander I. Barvinok (born March 27, 1963) is a Russian American mathematician and a professor of mathematics at the University of Michigan. Barvinok received his Ph.D. from St. Petersburg State University in 1988 under the supervision of Anatoly Moiseevich Vershik. In 1999, Barvinok received the Presidential Early Ca... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Braverman#0 | Alexander Braverman (born June 8, 1974) is an Israeli mathematician. == Life and work == Braverman was born in Moscow.. He earned in 1993 a BA degree in mathematics from the University of Tel Aviv, where in 1998 he received a Ph.D. (Kazhdan-Laumon Representations of Finite Chevalley Groups, Character Sheaves and Some G... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Brown (mathematician)#0 | Alexander Brown FRSE FRSSAf (1878–1947) was a Scottish-born mathematician and educator in South Africa. He contributed to the study of the ratio of incommensurables in geometry and relations between the distances of a point from three vertices of a regular polygon. == Career == Brown was born in Dalkeith, near Edinburg... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Dranishnikov#0 | Alexander Nikolaevich Dranishnikov (Александр Николаевич Дранишников, born 5 February 1958) is a Russian-American mathematician, focusing in geometry and topology, currently a Distinguished Professor at the University of Florida. In 1998 he was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Berli... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Dyakonov#0 | Alexander Dyakonov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Генна́дьевич Дья́конов) (born 1979) is a Russian mathematician, Professor, Dr.Sc., a professor at the Faculty of Computer Science at the Moscow State University. Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Multiple winner of international competitions in applied data analysis. ... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Furman#0 | Alexander Furman (Hebrew: אלכסנדר פורמן) is a mathematician at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Furman received his bachelor's degree in mathematics and computer science from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1986, later earning his master's degree and PhD in mathematics in 1989 and 1996, respectively, from the... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Gammerman#0 | Alexander Gammerman (born 2 November 1944) is a British computer scientist, and professor at Royal Holloway University of London. He is the co-inventor of conformal prediction. He is the founding director of the Centre for Machine Learning at Royal Holloway, University of London, and a Fellow of the Royal Statistical S... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Givental#0 | Alexander Givental (Russian: Александр Борисович Гивенталь) is a Russian-American mathematician who is currently Professor of Mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. His main contributions have been in symplectic topology and singularity theory, as well as their relation to topological string theories. G... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Goncharov#0 | Alexander B. Goncharov (born April 7, 1960) is a Soviet American mathematician and the Philip Schuyler Beebe Professor of Mathematics at Yale University. He won the EMS Prize in 1992. Goncharov won a gold medal at the International Mathematical Olympiad in 1976. He attained his doctorate at Lomonosov Moscow State Unive... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Gorban#0 | Alexander Nikolaevich Gorban (Russian: Александр Николаевич Горба́нь) is a scientist of Russian origin, working in the United Kingdom. He is a professor at the University of Leicester, and director of its Mathematical Modeling Centre. Gorban has contributed to many areas of fundamental and applied science, including st... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Grothendieck#0 | Alexander Grothendieck, later Alexandre Grothendieck in French (; German: [ˌalɛˈksandɐ ˈɡʁoːtn̩ˌdiːk] ; French: [ɡʁɔtɛndik]; 28 March 1928 – 13 November 2014), was a German-born French mathematician who became the leading figure in the creation of modern algebraic geometry. His research extended the scope of the field ... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Kirillov Jr.#0 | Alexander Alexandrovich Kirillov Jr. (Russian: Александр Александрович Кириллов) is a Russian-born American mathematician, working in the area of representation theory and Lie groups. He is a son of Russian mathematician Alexandre Kirillov. == Biography == Kirillov received his master's degree from Moscow State Univers... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Kuznetsov (mathematician)#0 | Alexander Gennadyevich Kuznetsov (Russian: Александр Геннадьевич Кузнецов, born November 1, 1973) is a Russian mathematician working at the Steklov Mathematical Institute and the Interdisciplinary Scientific Center J.-V. Poncelet, Moscow, and head of the Laboratory of Algebraic Geometry and its Applications of the High... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Merkurjev#0 | Aleksandr Sergeyevich Merkurjev (Russian: Алекса́ндр Сергее́вич Мерку́рьев, born September 25, 1955) is a Russian-American mathematician, who has made major contributions to the field of algebra. Currently Merkurjev is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. == Work == Merkurjev's work focuses on alge... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Mielke#0 | Alexander Mielke (born 14 September 1958.) is a German mathematician working in the areas of nonlinear partial differential equations and applied analysis. He is a professor of applied analysis at the Humboldt University of Berlin and heads the research group on partial differential equations at the Weierstrass Institu... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Moiseevich Olevskii#0 | Alexander Moiseevich Olevskii (Russian: Александр Моисеевич Олевский, born February 12, 1939, in Moscow) is a Russian-Israeli mathematician at Tel Aviv University, specializing in mathematical analysis. As of July 2021, he is a professor emeritus. He graduated in 1963 with a Candidate of Sciences degree (PhD) from Mosc... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Molev#0 | Alexander Ivanovich Molev (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ива́нович Мо́лев) (born 1961) is a Russian-Australian mathematician. He completed his Ph.D. in 1986 under the supervision of Alexandre Kirillov at Moscow State University. He was awarded the Australian Mathematical Society Medal in 2001 and became a Fellow of the Australia... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Myller#0 | Alexander Myller (1879–1965) was a Romanian mathematician and professor at the Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași. == References == |
Wikipedia:Alexander Nabutovsky#0 | Alexander Nabutovsky is a leading Canadian mathematician specializing in differential geometry, geometric calculus of variations and quantitative aspects of topology of manifolds. He is a professor at the University of Toronto Department of Mathematics. Nabutovsky earned a Ph.D. degree from the Weizmann Institute of Sc... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Olshanskii#0 | Alexander Yu. Olshanskii (Russian: Александр Юрьевич Ольшанский; born 19 January 1946) is a Russian-American mathematician renowned for his contributions to combinatorial and geometric group theory. He is particularly noted for constructing infinite groups with unusual properties and for developing geometric methods in... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Ostrowski#0 | Alexander Markowich Ostrowski (Ukrainian: Олександр Маркович Островський; Russian: Алекса́ндр Ма́ркович Остро́вский; 25 September 1893 – 20 November 1986) was a mathematician. == Biography == His father Mark having been a merchant, Alexander Ostrowski attended the Kiev College of Commerce, not a high school, and thus h... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Provan Robertson#0 | Alexander Provan Robertson FRSE FIMA (16 June 1925 – 31 January 1995) was a 20th century Scottish mathematician who emigrated to Australia. == Life == He was born on 16 June 1925 in Glasgow the only child of an assistant railway station master. He was educated at Shawlands Academy and won a bursary to Glasgow Universit... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Ramm#0 | Alexander G. Ramm (born 1940 in St. Petersburg, Russia) is an American mathematician. His research focuses on differential and integral equations, operator theory, ill-posed and inverse problems, scattering theory, functional analysis, spectral theory, numerical analysis, theoretical electrical engineering, signal esti... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Razgulin#0 | Alexander Razgulin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Вита́льевич Разгу́лин) (born 1963) is a Russian mathematician, Professor, Dr.Sc., a professor at the Faculty of Computer Science at the Moscow State University. He defended the thesis «Stable method for solving linear equations with noncompact operators and its applications to co... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Samarskii#0 | Alexander Andreyevich Samarskii (Russian: Александр Андреевич Самарский; 19 February 1919, Amvrosiivka, metropolitan Donetsk, Yekaterinoslav Governorate – 11 February 2008, Moscow) was a Soviet and Russian mathematician and academician (Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union, Russian Academy of Sciences), specializing... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Schrijver#0 | Alexander (Lex) Schrijver (born 4 May 1948 in Amsterdam) is a Dutch mathematician and computer scientist, a professor of discrete mathematics and optimization at the University of Amsterdam and a fellow at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica in Amsterdam. Since 1993 he has been co-editor in chief of the journal Combinat... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Shapiro#0 | Alexander Shapiro is an A. Russell Chandler III Chair and Professor in H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech. He was editor-in-chief of the journal Mathematical Programming, Series A and was an area editor of the journal Operations Research. Shapiro graduated with M.Sc. degree i... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Skopin#0 | Alexander Ivanovich Skopin (Александр Иванович Скопин) (1927–2003) was a Russian mathematician known for his contributions to abstract algebra. == Biography == Skopin was born on October 22, 1927, in Leningrad, the son of Ivan Alexandrovich Skopin, who was himself also a number theorist and a student of Ivan Matveyevic... |
Wikipedia:Alexander V. Karzanov#0 | Alexander Viktorovich Karzanov (Russian: Александр Викторович Карзанов, born 1947) is a Russian mathematician known for his work in combinatorial optimization. He is the inventor of preflow-push based algorithms for the maximum flow problem, and the co-inventor of the Hopcroft–Karp–Karzanov algorithm for maximum matchi... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Varchenko#0 | Alexander Nikolaevich Varchenko (Russian: Александр Николаевич Варченко, born February 6, 1949) is a Soviet and Russian mathematician working in geometry, topology, combinatorics and mathematical physics. == Education and career == From 1964 to 1966 Varchenko studied at the Moscow Kolmogorov boarding school No. 18 for ... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Vasin#0 | Alexander Vasin (Russian: Алекса́ндр Алексе́евич Ва́син) (born 1952) is a Russian mathematician, Professor, Dr.Sc., a professor at the Faculty of Computer Science at the Moscow State University. Specialist in the field of the theory of non-cooperative games and its applications to economics and biology. He defended the... |
Wikipedia:Alexander Volberg#0 | Alexander Volberg (Russian: Александр Львович Вольберг) is a Russian mathematician. He is working in operator theory, complex analysis and harmonic analysis. He received the Salem Prize in 1988 for his work in harmonic analysis. Also he received the Lars Onsager medal in 2004. He is currently a University Distinguished... |
Wikipedia:Alexander horned sphere#0 | The Alexander horned sphere is a pathological object in topology discovered by J. W. Alexander (1924). It is a particular topological embedding of a two-dimensional sphere in three-dimensional space. Together with its inside, it is a topological 3-ball, the Alexander horned ball, and so is simply connected; i.e., every... |
Wikipedia:Alexandra Bellow#0 | Alexandra Bellow (née Bagdasar; previously Ionescu Tulcea; August 30, 1935 – May 2, 2025) was a Romanian-American mathematician, who made contributions to the fields of ergodic theory, probability and analysis. == Biography == Bellow was born in Bucharest, Romania, on August 30, 1935, as Alexandra Bagdasar. Her parents... |
Wikipedia:Alexandra Seceleanu#0 | Alexandra Seceleanu is a Romanian mathematician specializing in commutative algebra. She is an associate professor of mathematics at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. She was awarded the 2024–2025 Ruth I. Michler Memorial Prize. == Education and career == Seceleanu graduated from the University of Bucharest, and in 2... |
Wikipedia:Alexandre Eremenko#0 | Alexandre Emanuilovych Eremenko (born 1954) is a Ukrainian-American mathematician who works in the fields of complex analysis and dynamical systems. == Academic career == Eremenko was born into a medical family in Kharkiv, Ukraine. His father was a pathophysiologist, professor and head of the Department of pathophysiol... |
Wikipedia:Alexandre Proutiere#0 | Alexandre Proutiere is a professor of Electrical Engineering at KTH, the Royal Institute of Technology. He received an engineering degree from Ecole Nationale Superieure des Telecoms (Paris) and then, from 1998 to 2000, he worked in the radio communication department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Paris. He rece... |
Wikipedia:Alexandru Ghika#0 | Alexandru Ghika (June 22, 1902 – April 11, 1964) was a Romanian mathematician, founder of the Romanian school of functional analysis. == Life == He was born in Bucharest, into the Ghica family, the son of Ioan Ghika (1873–1949) and Elena Metaxa (1870–1951), and great-great-grandson of Grigore IV Ghica, Prince of Wallac... |
Wikipedia:Alexei Gvishiani#0 | Alexei Dzhermenovich Gvishiani (Russian: Алексей Джерменович Гвишиани; 29 October 1948) is a well-known Russian scientist, full member (academician) of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS). Chief scientist of the Geophysical Center of RAS. Member of the Scientific Coordinating Council of the Federal Agency of Scientif... |
Wikipedia:Alexei Kostrikin#0 | Alexei Ivanovich Kostrikin (Russian: Алексей Иванович Кострикин) (12 February 1929 – 22 September 2000) was a Russian mathematician, specializing in algebra and algebraic geometry. == Life == Kostrikin graduated from the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics at Moscow State University in 1952. In 1960, he earned a Docto... |
Wikipedia:Alexei Venkov#0 | Alexei Borisovich Venkov (Алексей Борисович Венков, born 1946) is a Russian mathematician, specializing in the spectral theory of automorphic forms. Venkov graduated from Leningrad State University in 1969 and received there in 1973 his Russian candidate degree (Ph.D.) under Ludvig Faddeev. He then became an academic a... |
Wikipedia:Alexey Ivakhnenko#0 | Alexey Ivakhnenko (Ukrainian: Олексíй Григо́рович Іва́хненко; 30 March 1913 – 16 October 2007) was a Soviet and Ukrainian mathematician most famous for developing the group method of data handling (GMDH), a method of inductive statistical learning, for which he is considered as one of the founders of deep learning. == ... |
Wikipedia:Alexey Izmailov#0 | Alexey Feridovich Izmailov (Russian: Алексе́й Фери́дович Измаи́лов) (born 1967) is a Russian mathematician who is a professor at the Faculty of Computer Science at the Moscow State University. He defended the thesis Stable methods of finding special solutions of non-linear problems for the degree of Doctor of Physical ... |
Wikipedia:Alexey Stakhov#0 | Alexey Petrovich Stakhov (Russian: Алексей Петрович Стахов Ukrainian: Олексій Петрович Стахов; May 7, 1939 – January 25, 2021) is a Ukrainian mathematician, inventor and engineer, who has made contributions to the theory of Fibonacci numbers and the "Golden Section" and their applications in computer science and measur... |
Wikipedia:Alexis Vasseur#0 | Alexis Vasseur is a French-American mathematician, specializing in fluid mechanics. He is currently the John T. Stuart III Professor at University of Texas at Austin. In 2015 he was named as a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society. Vasseur earned bachelor's and master's degrees from the Ecole Normale Supérieure i... |
Wikipedia:Alfio Quarteroni#0 | Alfio Quarteroni (born 30 May 1952) is an Italian mathematician. He is Professor Emeritus at the Politecnico of Milan (Italy), and Professor Emeritus at the EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology). He has been the director of the Chair of Modelling and Scientific Computing at the EPFL (Swiss Federal Institute of T... |
Wikipedia:Alfonso Sorrentino (mathematician)#0 | Alfonso Sorrentino (Rome, 27 November 1979) is an Italian mathematician, currently full professor of Mathematical analysis at University of Rome Tor Vergata (Italy). His main scientific interests are in the field of dynamical systems, specifically, in the study of Hamiltonian dynamical systems by means of variational m... |
Wikipedia:Alfred Errera#0 | Alfred Errera (1886 – 1960) was a Belgian mathematician. Errera studied at the Université libre de Bruxelles, where he received his Ph.D. in 1921 with dissertation Du coloriage des cartes et de quelques questions d'analysis situs. In his dissertation he introduced what is now called the Errera graph, which is a counter... |
Wikipedia:Alfred Frölicher#0 | Alfred Frölicher (often misspelled Fröhlicher) was a Swiss mathematician (8 October 8 1927 – 1 July 2010). He was a full professor at the Université de Fribourg (1962–1965), and then at the Université de Genève (1966–1993). He introduced the Frölicher spectral sequence and the Frölicher–Nijenhuis bracket and Frölicher ... |
Wikipedia:Alfred Klose#0 | Wilhelm Rudolf Alfred Klose (September 19, 1895 in Görlitz – February 21, 1953 in Potsdam) was a German applied mathematician and astronomer. == Education and career == Klose studied at University of Breslau and University of Göttingen from 1916 and was an assistant at the observatory in Breslau from 1917. He received ... |
Wikipedia:Alfred Korzybski#0 | Alfred Habdank Skarbek Korzybski ( ; Polish: [ˈalfrɛt kɔˈʐɨpskʲi]; July 3, 1879 – March 1, 1950) was a Polish-American independent scholar who developed a field called general semantics, which he viewed as both distinct from, and more encompassing than, the field of semantics. He argued that human knowledge of the worl... |
Wikipedia:Alfred Tauber#0 | Alfred Tauber (5 November 1866 – 26 July 1942) was a mathematician, known for his contribution to mathematical analysis and to the theory of functions of a complex variable: he is the eponym of an important class of theorems with applications ranging from mathematical and harmonic analysis to number theory. He was born... |
Wikipedia:Alfredo Noel Iusem#0 | Alfredo Noel Iusem (born 10 November 1949, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine-born Brazilian mathematician working on mathematical optimization. He earned his Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1981 under the supervision of George Bernard Dantzig. He is a recipient of Brazil's National Order of Scientific Merit in mathema... |
Wikipedia:Algebra#0 | Algeria, officially the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria, is a country in the Maghreb region of North Africa. It is bordered to the northeast by Tunisia; to the east by Libya; to the southeast by Niger; to the southwest by Mali, Mauritania, and Western Sahara; to the west by Morocco; and to the north by the Medi... |
Wikipedia:Algebra & Number Theory#0 | Algebraic number theory is a branch of number theory that uses the techniques of abstract algebra to study the integers, rational numbers, and their generalizations. Number-theoretic questions are expressed in terms of properties of algebraic objects such as algebraic number fields and their rings of integers, finite f... |
Wikipedia:Algebra Colloquium#0 | Algebra Colloquium is a journal founded in 1994. It was initially published by Springer-Verlag Hong Kong Ltd. In 2005, from volume 12 onwards, publishing rights were taken over by World Scientific. The company now publishes the journal quarterly. The journal is jointly edited by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Sooc... |
Wikipedia:Algebra Project#0 | The Algebra Project is a national U.S. mathematics literacy program aimed at helping low-income students and students of color achieve the mathematical skills in high school that are a prerequisite for a college preparatory mathematics sequence. Founded by Civil Rights activist and Math educator Bob Moses in the 1980s,... |
Wikipedia:Algebra Universalis#0 | Algebra Universalis is an international scientific journal focused on universal algebra and lattice theory. The journal, founded in 1971 by George Grätzer, is currently published by Springer-Verlag. Honorary editors in chief of the journal included Alfred Tarski and Bjarni Jónsson. == External links == Algebra Universa... |
Wikipedia:Algebra bundle#0 | In mathematics, an algebra bundle is a fiber bundle whose fibers are algebras and local trivializations respect the algebra structure. It follows that the transition functions are algebra isomorphisms. Since algebras are also vector spaces, every algebra bundle is a vector bundle. Examples include the tensor-algebra bu... |
Wikipedia:Algebra i Logika#0 | Algebra i Logika (English: Algebra and Logic) is a peer-reviewed Russian mathematical journal founded in 1962 by Anatoly Ivanovich Malcev, published by the Siberian Fund for Algebra and Logic at Novosibirsk State University. An English translation of the journal is published by Springer-Verlag as Algebra and Logic sinc... |
Wikipedia:Algebra tile#0 | Algebra tiles, also known as Algetiles, or Variable Blocks, are mathematical manipulatives that allow students to better understand ways of algebraic thinking and the concepts of algebra. These tiles have proven to provide concrete models for elementary school, middle school, high school, and college-level introductory... |
Wikipedia:Algebraic closure (convex analysis)#0 | Algebraic closure of a subset A {\displaystyle A} of a vector space X {\displaystyle X} is the set of all points that are linearly accessible from A {\displaystyle A} . It is denoted by acl A {\displaystyle \operatorname {acl} A} or acl X A {\displaystyle \operatorname {acl} _{X}A} . A point x ∈ X {\displaystyle x\... |
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