Template:Selected anniversaries/February 23: Difference between revisions

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||Derrick Henry Lehmer (b. February 23, 1905) was an American mathematician who refined Édouard Lucas' work in the 1930s and devised the Lucas–Lehmer test for Mersenne primes. Lehmer's peripatetic career as a number theorist, with he and his wife taking numerous types of work in the United States and abroad to support themselves during the Great Depression, fortuitously brought him into the center of research into early electronic computing. Pic.
||Derrick Henry Lehmer (b. February 23, 1905) was an American mathematician who refined Édouard Lucas' work in the 1930s and devised the Lucas–Lehmer test for Mersenne primes. Lehmer's peripatetic career as a number theorist, with he and his wife taking numerous types of work in the United States and abroad to support themselves during the Great Depression, fortuitously brought him into the center of research into early electronic computing. Pic.


||Jean-Gaston Darboux FAS MIF FRS FRSE (d. 23 February 1917) was a French mathematician.
||George Michael Volkoff (b. February 23, 1914) was a Canadian physicist and academic who helped, with J. Robert Oppenheimer, predict the existence of neutron stars before they were discovered. Pic.
 
||Jean-Gaston Darboux (d. 23 February 1917) was a French mathematician.


||1924 – Allan McLeod Cormack, South-African-American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1998)
||1924 – Allan McLeod Cormack, South-African-American physicist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1998)

Revision as of 06:43, 1 April 2018