Lazarus Fuchs (nonfiction)
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Lazarus Immanuel Fuchs (5 May 1833 – 26 April 1902) was a German mathematician who contributed important research in the field of linear differential equations.
He is the eponym of Fuchsian groups and functions, and the Picard–Fuchs equation.
Lazarus Fuchs was the father of Richard Fuchs, also a mathematician.
In the News
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Gerhard Hessenberg (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Marie Ennemond Camille Jordan (nonfiction) - Influenced
- Felix Christian Klein (nonfiction) - Influenced
- Ernst Kummer (nonfiction) - Influence
- Edmund Landau (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Mathematician (nonfiction)
- Jules Henri Poincaré (nonfiction) - Influenced
- Hermann Schapira (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Ludwig Schlesinger (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Issai Schur (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Theodor Vahlen (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Karl Weierstraß (nonfiction) - Doctoral advisor
- Ernst Zermelo (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
External links:
- Lazarus Fuchs @ Wikipedia