Template:Selected anniversaries/February 2: Difference between revisions

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||Gustav Herglotz (b. 2 February 1881) was a German Bohemian mathematician. He is best known for his works on the theory of relativity and seismology.
||Gustav Herglotz (b. 2 February 1881) was a German Bohemian mathematician. He is best known for his works on the theory of relativity and seismology.


File:Joseph Wedderburn.jpg|link=Joseph Wedderburn (nonfiction)|1882: Mathematician [[Joseph Wedderburn (nonfiction)|Joseph Wedderburn]] born. He will make significant contributions to algebra, proving that a finite division algebra is a field, and proving part of the Artin–Wedderburn theorem on simple algebras.  
File:Joseph Wedderburn.jpg|link=Joseph Wedderburn (nonfiction)|1882: Mathematician [[Joseph Wedderburn (nonfiction)|Joseph Wedderburn]] born. He will make significant contributions to algebra, proving that a finite division algebra is a field, and proving part of the Artin–Wedderburn theorem on simple algebras. Returning to Scotland in 1905, Wedderburn worked for four years at the University of Edinburgh as an assistant to George Chrystal, who supervised his D.Sc, awarded in 1908 for a thesis titled On Hypercomplex Numbers. A significant algebraist, he proved that a finite division algebra is a field, and part of the Artin–Wedderburn theorem on simple algebras.
 
Returning to Scotland in 1905, Wedderburn worked for four years at the University of Edinburgh as an assistant to George Chrystal, who supervised his D.Sc, awarded in 1908 for a thesis titled On Hypercomplex Numbers.
 
A significant algebraist, he proved that a finite division algebra is a field, and part of the Artin–Wedderburn theorem on simple algebras.


||1893 – Cornelius Lanczos, Hungarian mathematician and physicist (d. 1974)
||1893 – Cornelius Lanczos, Hungarian mathematician and physicist (d. 1974)
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||1913 – Gustaf de Laval, Swedish engineer (b. 1845)
||1913 – Gustaf de Laval, Swedish engineer (b. 1845)
||Herman Feshbach (b. February 2, 1917) was an American physicist. He was an Institute Professor Emeritus of physics at MIT. Feshbach is best known for Feshbach resonance and for writing, with Philip M. Morse, Methods of Theoretical Physics.


||1922 – Ulysses by James Joyce is published.
||1922 – Ulysses by James Joyce is published.

Revision as of 11:17, 29 November 2017