Template:Selected anniversaries/November 11: Difference between revisions

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||Enzo Martinelli (b. 11 November 1911) was an Italian mathematician, working in the theory of functions of several complex variables: he is best known for his work on the theory of integral representations for holomorphic functions of several variables, notably for discovering the Bochner–Martinelli formula in 1938, and for his work in the theory of multi-dimensional residues.
||Enzo Martinelli (b. 11 November 1911) was an Italian mathematician, working in the theory of functions of several complex variables: he is best known for his work on the theory of integral representations for holomorphic functions of several variables, notably for discovering the Bochner–Martinelli formula in 1938, and for his work in the theory of multi-dimensional residues.


||1914 – James Gilbert Baker, American astronomer, optician, and academic (d. 2005)
||1914 – James Gilbert Baker, American astronomer, optician, and academic (d. 2005). Pic.


||Roberto Mario "Robert" Fano (b. 11 November 1917) was an Italian-American computer scientist and academic. He was known principally for his work on information theory, inventing (with Claude Shannon) Shannon–Fano coding and deriving the Fano inequality. He also invented the Fano algorithm and postulated the Fano metric. Pic.
||Roberto Mario "Robert" Fano (b. 11 November 1917) was an Italian-American computer scientist and academic. He was known principally for his work on information theory, inventing (with Claude Shannon) Shannon–Fano coding and deriving the Fano inequality. He also invented the Fano algorithm and postulated the Fano metric. Pic.

Revision as of 10:16, 3 July 2018