Nikolai Luzin Université Montpellier II nikolai luzin nikolai M Krylov nikolai luzin (1883-1950). Cette image et la biographie complète en anglais http://ens.math.univ-montp2.fr/SPIP/article.php3?id_article=1494
Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky Université Montpellier II nikolai Brashman nikolai Chebotaryov nikolai EgorovichZhukovskii nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky nikolai luzin nikolai M Krylov http://ens.math.univ-montp2.fr/SPIP/article.php3?id_article=1480
Extractions: Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (M) Last revision: March 20, 2005 MACLAURIN'S SERIES is named for Colin Maclaurin Maclaurin's theorem appears in 1820 in Collection of Examples of the Applications of the Differential and Integral Calculus by G. Peacock [Mark Dunn]. In 1849, An Introduction to the Differential and Integral Calculus, 2nd ed., by James Thomson has: "A particular case of this formula is commonly called Maclaurin's theorem, because it was first made generally known by that writer. It had been given previously, however, by Stirling, another Scotch mathematician; and therefore, if a particular case of Taylor's general theorem should be named after any other mathematician, this ought to be called Stirling's theorem. " Thomson subsequently uses the term Stirling's theorem throughout the book. McLaurin's formula is found in English in 1855 in Elements of the differential and integral calculus by Albert Ensign Church [University of Michigan Digital Library]. Nouv. Ann. Maclaurin's series is found in English in 1831 in the second edition of Elements of the Differential Calculus (1836) by John Radford Young: "All that is meant is, that the function in
MY MATHEMATICAL GENEOLOGY Dimitri Fedorowitsch Egorov (1901) nikolai Nikolayevich luzin (1915) Andrei Nikolayevich Kolmogorov (1925) Israil Moiseivich Gelfand (? http://www.calstatela.edu/faculty/rcooper2/geneology.html
Extractions: by Karen Shenfeld Due west of the Kremlin, beyond the ring road that separates Moscow's inner and outer cities, the east-west Kalinina Prospekt bends slightly to the south, heading across the River Moskva, just where it snakes around the gargantuan Hotel Ukraine. Stretching away from the Kalinina Bridge, on the western bank of the river, the avenue continues, now called Kutuzovski Prospekt. It was given this name in 1957 in honour of Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov, who led the Russian forces against Napoleon in the War of 1812. Following the course of the ancient road to Smolensk, Kutuzovski Prospect veers gently toward a rise of land called the Poklonnaya Gora; the Russian name translates as "the hill you bow to," recalling a custom once observed by travellers arriving in Moscow from this direction. It was on this height, which years ago commanded a view of the city, that Napoleon stood, waiting to receive official word of Moscow's surrender. Alexander Vladimirovich Arhangel'skii lives on Kutuzovski Prospekt with his wife, Olga Constantinovna, and their 27-year-old son, Vladimir Alexandrovich. (The Arhangel'skiis also have a 31-year-old daughter, Tatiana Alexanderovna; she is married and lives in Moscow with her husband and eight-year-old son.) Arhangel'skii enjoys its relative proximity to M.S.U. He also appreciates the fact that from the Kutuzovskaya Metro Station, near the western end of Kutuzovski Prospekt, it is only a two-stop subway ride to the Kievskaya Station. From there, he can board an Elektrishke, an electrical commuter train, and, in less than a half an hour, be walking (or, in winter, cross-country skiing) through a forest of birch. It is not much farther from the Kutuzovskaya station to the Kurski station, from where he can catch another train, and, in roughly an hour's time, arrive in the village of Saltykovskaya, where his mother resides.
Extractions: Back to the index page for this document. In The Neighborhood of Mathematical Space (an interview with Alexander V. Arhangelskii) Karen Shenfeld Interview from volume 1 # 1 of TopCom Exclusive reprint in Topology Atlas from the Summer 1993 issue of The Idler with kind permission of the publisher. Alexander Vladimirovich Arhangel'skii walked briskly up a tree-lined avenue toward the tiered "Stalinist Gothic" towers of Moscow State University. "Topology," he said, slightly out of breath, "is the study of absolute nearness . . . the absolute, infinite nearness of `a point' to `a set.' Consider, if you will, the present moment as a topologist would: it is, simply put, `a point' in time, which is infinitely near to `the set of all points' in the past, and infinitely near, without the slightest gap, to `the set of all points' in the future. A topologist can represent, with mathematical rigour, the essence of the present moment. He has only to recall the topological structure of `the real line.' " It seemed ironic that, even as he was speaking of the infinite nearness of points in time, the eminent Russian mathematician should be running 15 minutes late for the seminar he teaches at six o'clock on Monday evenings. An hour earlier, he had been standing at the door of his apartment, changing out of his slippers and into his oxfords, when the telephone had rung. An old friend was on the line, and Alexander Vladimirovich had sat down on a rickety wooden chair in the entrance hall for a chat. He might have cut the conversation short had he known that he would have to wait longer than usual for the Lomonosovskii-Prospekt bus.
Alec Mihailovs' Mathematical Ancestors Asymptotic Properties of Certain Ordinary Differential Equations with Applicationsto Boundary Value and Expansion Problems. nikolai Nikolayevich luzin http://webpages.shepherd.edu/amihailo/ancestors.htm
Chapter II The Russian mathematician nikolai Nilolaevich luzin used to say in his lecturesthat the advantages of the decimal system are zoological, not mathematical. http://kr.cs.ait.ac.th/~radok/math/mat4/m42.htm
Extractions: Chapter II Formation of Continued Fractions Expansion of a Real Number into a Continued Fraction Algorithm of Expansion into a Continued Fraction Forget for the time being the decimal system. The Russian mathematician Nikolai Nilolaevich Luzin used to say in his lectures that the advantages of the decimal system are zoological, not mathematical. If we had eight fingers on our two hands instead of ten, mankind would operate in the octal system . Indeed, the decimal system is very convenient in practice, but it is inappropriate for a discussion of theoretical aspects of arithmetic. Forget about any decimal and positional number system, that is, take Archimedes place and ask yourself: What would be the most natural approach to estimating a real number? This question is answered without hesitation: The first step is to indicate the integers between which our number lies. For example, 61/27 lies between 2 and 3,
New Dictionary Of Scientific Biography Translate this page luzin, nikolai nikolaievich Lyapunov, Aleksandr Mikhailovich Macaulay, FrancisSowerby McColl, Hugh Maclaurin, Colin MacMahon, Percy Alexander http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/math.html
List Of Scientists By Field Translate this page luzin, nikolai nikolaievich. Lyapunov, Aleksandr Mikhailovich. Lyapunov, AleksandrMikhailovich. Lyell, Charles. Lyell, Charles http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/l.html
Extractions: La Brosse, Guy de La Brosse, Guy de La Brosse, Guy de La Condamine, Charles-Marie de La Condamine, Charles-Marie de La Faille, Charles de La Hire, Gabriel-Philippe de La Hire, Gabriel-Philippe de La Hire, Gabriel-Philippe de La Hire, Philippe de La Hire, Philippe de La Hire, Philippe de La Hire, Philippe de La Mettrie, Julien Offray de La Mettrie, Julien Offray de La Mettrie, Julien Offray de La Mettrie, Julien Offray de La Rive, Arthur-Auguste de La Rive, Charles-Gaspard de La Rive, Charles-Gaspard de La Rive, Charles-Gaspard de La Roche, Estienne de Lacaille, Nicolas-Louis de Lacaille, Nicolas-Louis de Lack, David Lambert Lacroix, Alfred Ladenburg, Albert Ladenburg, Rudolf Walther Lagny, Thomas Fantet de Lagny, Thomas Fantet de Lagrange, Joseph Louis Lagrange, Joseph Louis Lagrange, Joseph Louis Laguerre, Edmond Nicolas Lalla Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste-Pierre- Antoine De Monet de Lamb, Horace Lamb, Horace Lamb, Horace Lambert, Johann Heinrich Lambert, Johann Heinrich Lambert, Johann Heinrich Lambert, Johann Heinrich Lamont, Johann von Lamont, Johann von
Extractions: About Charles Scribner's Sons ... Z A Abailard, Pierre Abano, Pietro Abano, Pietro d' 'Abbas Ibn Firnas Abbe, Cleveland Abbe, Ernst Abel, John Jacob Abel, Niels Henrik Abel, Othenio Abetti, Antonio Abich, Otto Hermann Wilhelm Abney, William de Wiveleslie Abraham Bar Hiyya Ha-Nasi Abraham, Max Abreu, Aleixo Abreu, Aleixo de Abu Hamid al-Gharnati Abu Kamil Shuja' Ibn Aslam Ibn Muhammad Ibn Shuja' Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi, Ja'far Ibn Muhammad Abu'l-Barakat al-Baghdadi, Hibat Allah Abu'l-Fida' Isma'il Ibn 'Ali Ibn Mahmud Ibn . . . Ayyub, 'Imad al-Din Abu'l-Wafa' al-Buzjani, Muhammad Ibn Muhammad ~Ibn Yahya Ibn Isma'il Ibn al- 'Abbas Abu'l-Wafa' al-Buzjani, Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Yahya Ibn Isma'il Ibn al- 'Abbas Accum, Friedrich Christian Achard, Franz Karl Acharius, Erik Achillini, Alessandro Acosta, Cristobal Acosta, Jose Acosta, Jose de Acyuta Pisarati Adam of Bodenstein Adams, Frank Dawson Adams, John Couch Adams, Leason Heberling Adams, Roger Adams, Walter Sydney Adanson, Michel Addison, Thomas Adelard of Bath Adet, Pierre-Auguste
Extractions: Over US$180,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . The description on its description page there is copied below. Face of en:Image:Michelangelos David.jpg , created by Halibutt in GIMP for use as an icon with various stubs and tables. This file has been released into the public domain by the The following pages link to this file: Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:David_face.png Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages ... Permanent link This page was last modified 01:05, 11 January 2005. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see for details).
Things Krzys' Likes On The Web William Ewart Gladstone Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov Henri Lebesgue Claire Boothe Luce nikolai Nikolaevich luzin Stefan Mazurkiewicz (also here) http://www.math.ilstu.edu/krzysio/like.html
Extractions: due South (Clearly the best Canadian TV show ever made, both Benton Fraser and Ray Vecchio are My Kind of Heroes) Czterdziestolatek (Clearly, the best Polish TV show ever made, Dr. Karol Stelmach is My Kind of Hero) Chef! (Clearly, the best British TV show ever made, Gareth Blackstock is My Kind of Hero) Iron Chef (Clearly, the best Japanese TV show ever made) Monk (Captain Leland Stottlemeyer is My Kind of Hero) Nero Wolfe (Inspector Cramer is My Kind of Hero) Other People's Money (Lawrence Garfield is My Kind of Hero) Importance of Being Earnest (As far as I am concerned, the Greatest Play Ever Written, a glorious masterpiece and the greatest presentation of the essence of Western Civilization Merriman, the butler, is My Kind of Hero)
List Of Mathematicians - Art History Online Reference And Guide nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky (Russia, 1792 1856) 1842 - 1891);Jan Lukasiewicz (Poland, 1878-1956); nikolai luzin (Russia, 1883-1950) http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/List_of_mathematicians
Historia Matematica Mailing List Archive: [HM] Authors Sought F luzin, nikolai nikolaievich (18831950) Maclaurin, Colin (1698-1746) Markov,Andrei Andreevich (1856-1922) Robinson, Julia Bowman (1919-1985) http://sunsite.utk.edu/math_archives/.http/hypermail/historia/jun00/0204.html
Lorrin Wong, Bookseller At Antiqbook.com 40289 luzin, nikolai Nuclear Strategy and Common Sense 100637 LYALL, SUTHERLAND -The State of British Architecture 100484 LYLE, T. KEITH AG CROSS http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/won/books5000.shtml
Full Alphabetical Index Translate this page Lukacs, Eugene (1185*) Lukasiewicz, Jan (600*) Luke, Yudell (1143*) luzin,nikolai (2072*) Lyapunov, Aleksandr (75*) Lyndon, Roger (521*) http://www.maththinking.com/boat/mathematicians.html
Jonathan Kirby - Mathematical Genealogy nikolai Nikolayevich luzin Ph.D. Moscow State University 1915 Dissertation TheIntegral and Trigonometric Series. Dimitri Fedorowitsch Egorov http://users.ox.ac.uk/~magd1768/math_genealogy.shtml
Extractions: My mathematical genealogy Home Academic Mathematics Music ... Links Below is my mathematical ancestry, defined by doctoral thesis supervisor, extracted from the website of the Mathematical genealogy project . Three of my ancestors had two supervisors, and twice two or three had the same supervisor, so this family tree is neither a line nor a tree. My most famous mathematical ancestor is Gauss, but it's hardly a distinguishing feature since 32% of all mathematicians in the database are his descendents. I'm not here yet, since I haven't completed my DPhil. Boris Iosifovich Zil'ber