Frisch, Max -- Encyclopædia Britannica Frisch, max GermanSwiss dramatist and novelist, noted for his Expressionistdepictions of the moral Also features an image gallery. max noether http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9035456
Australian Mathematics Trust Emmy noether s father, max noether, was a mathematician at Erlangen. He was asignificant mathematician in his own right and became a Full Professor at that http://www.amt.canberra.edu.au/noether.html
Extractions: Emmy Noether (1882-1935) Emmy Noether is one of the most significant female mathematicians in history. She was born in the Bavarian town of Erlangen. Erlangen at the time had one of Germany's three "free" Universities (i.e. independent of the churches), the other two being at Halle and Göttingen. The Erlangen University had been cast into the mathematical spotlight by one of its mathematicians named Felix Klein, who had given significant insights into the concept of a group in geometry, insights which became known as the "Erlangen Program". Emmy Noether's father, Max Noether, was a mathematician at Erlangen. He was a significant mathematician in his own right and became a Full Professor at that University. Women were not officially allowed to study at German Universities, or to hold normal teaching positions. Nevertheless Emmy became known while enrolled as an audit student and was able eventually (in 1907) to graduate with a PhD summa cum laude at Erlangen under the supervision of Paul Gordan (whom David Hilbert had described as "King of the Invariants"). In 1915 she moved to Göttingen where she was given a licence to teach without being paid. Hilbert was in fact one of her colleagues there. Her most productive years were during the 1920s, when she produced a number of significant results. She is best known for her work in abstract algebra, particularly working with structures such as rings. She also did important work on the theory of invariants, which had an influence on the formulation of Einstein's general theory of relativity.
Active Skim View Of: 4 Emmy Noether max noether s close friend was max Gordan, an eminent Erlangen mathematician As for her delighted father, max noether wrote, I see every day how her http://www.nap.edu/nap-cgi/skimit.cgi?isbn=0309072700&chap=64-90
Extractions: Read more than 3,000 books online FREE! More than 900 PDFs now available for sale HOME ABOUT NAP CONTACT NAP HELP ... ORDERING INFO Items in cart [0] TRY OUR SPECIAL DISCOVERY ENGINE Questions? Call 888-624-8373 Nobel Prize Women in Science: Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries, Second Edition (1993) Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii 1 A Passion for Discovery, pp. 1-8 2 Marie Sklodowska Curie, pp. 9-36 3 Lise Meitner, pp. 37-63 4 Emmy Noether, pp. 64-90 5 Gerty Radnitz Cori, pp. 91-116 6 Irene Joliot-Curie, pp. 117-143 7 Barbara McClintock, pp. 144-174 8 Maria Goeppert Mayer, pp. 175-200 9 Rita Levi-Montalcini, pp. 201-224 10 Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, pp. 225-253 11 Chien-Shiung Wu, pp. 254-278 12 Gertrude Belle Elion, pp. 279-302 13 Rosalind Elsie Franklin, pp. 303-331 14 Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, pp. 332-354 15 Jocelyn Bell Burnell, pp. 355-377 16 Christiane Nusslein-Volhard, pp. 378-405 Afterword, pp. 406-407
Extractions: Skip Navigation You Are Here ENC Home ENC Features Classroom Calendar Search the Site More Options Don't lose access to ENC's web site! Beginning in August, goENC.com will showcase the best of ENC Online combined with useful new tools to save you time. Take action todaypurchase a school subscription through goENC.com Classroom Calendar By Category By Month ... Ask ENC Explore online lesson plans, student activities, and teacher learning tools. Find detailed information about thousands of materials for K-12 math and science. Read articles about inquiry, equity, and other key topics for educators and parents. Create your learning plan, read the standards, and find tips for getting grants. March 23 Noether won the Alfred Ackermann-Teubner Memorial Prize for the Advancement of Mathematical Knowledge in 1932. As is common practice in honoring important mathematicians, a crater on the moon is named after her. In the judgement of the most competent living mathematicians, Fraulein Noether was the most significant creative mathematical genius thus far produced since the higher education of women began. Albert Einstein, letter to the
Biografia De Noether, Max Translate this page noether, max. (Mannheim, 1844- Erlangen, 1921) Matemático alemán. Sus trabajosversaron sobre el desarrollo de la teoría de las funciones algebraicas y, http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/n/noether_max.htm
Extractions: Inicio Buscador Las figuras clave de la historia Reportajes Los protagonistas de la actualidad Noether, Max (Mannheim, 1844- Erlangen, 1921) Matemático alemán. Sus trabajos versaron sobre el desarrollo de la teoría de las funciones algebraicas y, en particular, sobre sus implicaciones geométricas. Escribió Sobre las funciones algebraicas y su aplicación a la geometría y Sobre la fundamentación de la teoría de las curvas algebraicas . Su hija Emmy (Erlangen, 1882-Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, 1935), que emigró a EE UU, ejerció una profunda influencia en el desarrollo de la topología y del álgebra moderna. Inicio Buscador Recomendar sitio
An Analogue Of Max Noether’s Theorem, Lawrence Ein An analogue of max noethers theorem. Source Duke Math. J. 52, no. 3 (1985),689706 Primary Subjects 14J05 Seconday Subjects 14F05 http://projecteuclid.org/Dienst/UI/1.0/Display/euclid.dmj/1077304587
Extractions: Digital Object Identifier (DOI): 10.1215/S0012-7094-85-05235-4 To Table of Contents for this Issue [1] P. Deligne and N. Katz, , Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 340, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1973. Mathematical Reviews: Zentralblatt-MATH: [2] G. Evans and P. Griffith, The syzygy problem , Ann. of Math. (2) Mathematical Reviews: Zentralblatt-MATH: [3] W. Fulton and R. Lazarsfeld
Emmy Her father, max noether, was a professor of mathematics at Erlangen. During thistime, women were unofficially allowed to study at university, http://www.roma.unisa.edu.au/07305/emmy.htm
Extractions: Emmy was born in Germany in 1882. Her father, Max Noether, was a professor of mathematics at Erlangen. During this time, women were unofficially allowed to study at university, so she attended lectures given by her father. In December 1907 she received her Ph.D. in mathematics. She then worked for no salary at the University of Erlangen, doing research and lecturing (Noether 1987). During WW1 (1916) Klein and Hilbert invited Emmy to help in defining one of Einstein's theories at the University of Gottingen. She accepted and soon afterwards began lecturing unofficially. It was not until 1919 that she formally became an academic lecturer. She quickly accumulated a small following of students known as Noether's boys. Many of these students went on to become great mathematicians (Taylor 1995). Emmy helped to alter the face of algebra. She is best known for her contributions to a part of algebra called abstract algebra. Abstract algebra is completely different from the early algebra of equation solving, as it deals with the formal properties of equations, such as associativity, commutativity and distributivity properties (ed. Gillispie 1970 p.138). Emmy did her greatest work later in life. It was not until 1920, when she was 38, that her true talents were acknowledged. This was after she coauthored a paper on differential operators, which showed her strong interest in the conceptual axiomatic approach (Noether 1987).
Emmy Noether Her dad, max noether, was a mathematics professor at the University of Erlangen.She had a normal childhood complete with school, housework and dancing http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Lab/3550/emmy.htm
Extractions: It is a sad fact that there are few women in mathematics, so few that sometimes you wonder if the ones you hear of are considered to be great only as a condescension to their gender. But not Amalie Emmy Noether. Once when Edward Landau was asked if he would agree to the statement that she was a great woman mathematician, he reversed the question: ``I can testify that she is a great mathematician, but that she is a woman, I cannot swear.'' (this seemingly chauvinistic statement should be seen in the context of the times) She was born in 1882, the eldest of eleven children. Her dad, Max Noether , was a mathematics professor at the University of Erlangen. She had a normal childhood - complete with school, housework and dancing - and qualified at 18 to be a English and French teacher. But she wanted to go to university, no easy task in the Germany of 1900! Eventually she became half of the entire female population of the thousand students at Erlangen, earning a doctorate in 1907. Till 1916, she worked (without pay since only men could be employed) as a researcher at the Mathematical Institute in Erlangen, giving seminars and sometimes substituting for her aging father in lectures. Then she moved to Gottingen, where the great mathematicians
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Science -- Sign In Would Dr. noether and max allow her to exhibit her work as a breakthrough inCellSim technology? Or would it just be a vehicle to show off their novel http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/286/5449/2466
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The Heritage Of Emmy Noether - Book Emmy noether was born in Erlangen, Germany, March 23, 1882. max noether, herfather was a professor of. mathematics in the university there. http://www.cs.biu.ac.il/~eni/book_on_emmy.html
Extractions: Emmy Noether was born in Erlangen, Germany, March 23, 1882. Max Noether, her father was a professor of mathematics in the university there.She grew up in a large, warm, intellectual family, and became a warm, gentle,exceptionally helpful person (there are many stories and anecdotes attesting to that fact). She was not an exceptional student. Being non-rebellious, she might have settled for the traditional feminine tasks, were it not for the new wave in Germany that allowed girls to study science in high school. From 1900-1903 she was a student in the University of Erlangen. This was an unusual phenomenon and she needed a special agreement from the professor in every course she wanted to attend. She started by studying languages and moved to mathematics. In 1903 she was awarded a Reifeprufung (university admission certificate) and moved to Gottingen. But, after one semester she moved back to Erlangen, since the university took a very liberal step and introduced equal rights for female students. She started her graduate studies under Paul Gordan who was a colleague of her father.
MPI CPfS - Stellenausschreibung Doktoranden - Rosner In the framework of a recently established Emmy noether group, the maxPlanck-Institutfür Chemische Physik fester Stoffe (max Planck Institute for http://www.cpfs.mpg.de/aktuelles/Rosner.html
Extractions: a Postdoc position and for two PhD candidates in the field of theoretical solid state physics. The scientific scope of the research is the description of phase transitions in physically complex behaving compounds with competing interactions. The goal of the research project is the improvement of the description of real systems with strong electron correlations starting from density functional theory. This band structure approach shall be joined by a subsequent description in terms of many body model Hamiltonians. The results shall be applied to compounds recently synthesized at our institute. The work will be in close collaboration with the Inorganic Chemistry , the Chemical Metals Science and the Solid State Physics research fields of the MPI CPFS. Experience with numerical work (especially Fortran) and Linux is desirable. Candidates with interdisciplinary research interests and a degree (MSc, Diplom) in the fields of solid state physics and/or chemistry are welcome to apply. Applications including a CV, a short statement of research interests and a list of publications should be send to the address below. Applications will be accepted until positions are filled. Helge Rosner
Home Page For Haym Hirsh max noether (b. September 24, 1844, Mannheim, Baden, Germany; d. December 13,1921, Erlangen, Germany) (Dr. phil. RuprechtKarls-Universitat Heidelberg, http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~hirsh/
Extractions: Haym Hirsh spent the first quarter-century of his life in California , receiving his BS degree in 1983 from the Mathematics and Computer Science departments at UCLA and his MS in 1985 and PhD in 1989 from the Computer Science Department at Stanford University . Unhappy with the weather , he moved to Pittsburgh when he found a way to spend his final year at Stanford at the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University . The following year he achieved his life-long dream of living in New Jersey by joining the faculty of the Computer Science Department at Rutgers University , where he is Professor and Department Chair. As part of his never-ending spiritual quest, he has also spent time as visiting faculty at the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon University in Fall , the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and Laboratory for Computer Science at MIT in Fall , and the Information Systems Department at the Stern School of Business at NYU in Fall and Spring . When he is not teaching courses or conducting research, he writes silly biographies with lots of gratuitous pointers to other web pages.
Max Noether (Nöther) Il enseigna à Heidelberg et fut un spécialiste, voire le fondateur, http://serge.mehl.free.fr/chrono/NoetherMax.html
Women And Mathematics May Contest Her father, max noether, was an accomplished mathematician and held a positionas professor at the University of Erlangen. After finishing her education at http://www.pims.math.ca/education/2001/women/sep/
Extractions: and learn about In each of the monthly Women and Mathematics contests you are introduced to a fascinating personality. The contest involves a brief web-based biographical research on the life of a famous woman who made major contributions to the mathematical sciences. The correct entries will participate in a monthly draw for a prize. THE CONTEST IS OPEN TO ALL INTERNATIONALLY! To take part in the September Contest , answer the three multiple choice questions and the mathematical problem solving question below. You are provided with a list of resources at the end of the page to aid your research. String together your answers to give a single integer. TO ENTER THE CONTEST PLEASE SUBMIT THIS NUMBER ONLY. ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS Question 1 , where she attended lectures by prominent mathematicians, including Hilbert and Klein, Emmy Noether returned to Erlangen to study for her doctorate in mathematics which she received in 1907.
History Of Astronomy: Persons (N) noether, max (18441921). Short biography, references and links (MacTutor Hist.Math.) Short biographies, references and links http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/persons/pers_n.html
Extractions: Napier [Neper and numerous other forms], John (1550-1617) Narlikar, Jayant Vishnu (b. 1938) Nasir al-Din al-Tusi (1201-1274) Nasmyth, James (1808-1890) Neander, Ernst Albin Neander, Michael (1529-1581) Needham, Joseph (1900-1995) Neile, William (1637-1670) Short biography and references (MacTutor Hist. Math.)