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         Mordell Louis:     more detail
  1. Biography - Mordell, Louis (Joel) (1888-1972): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2003-01-01
  2. Three lectures on Fermat 's last theorem. by L. J. Mordell by Mordell. L. J. (Louis Joel). 1888-, 1921
  3. Three Lectures on Fermat's Last Theorem: -1921 by L. J. (Louis Joel) Mordell, 2009-07-24
  4. Three Lectures On Fermat's Last Theorem (1921) by Louis Joel Mordell, 2010-05-23
  5. Gerd Faltings Proves Mordell's Conjecture (1983): An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Brooke Coates, 2001
  6. Reflections of a Mathematician. by Louis Joel (1888-1972). MORDELL, 1959-01-01
  7. Three Lectures On Fermat's Last Theorem (1921) by Louis Joel Mordell, 2010-09-10
  8. Louis Joel Mordell 1888-1972 by J.W.S. Cassels, 1973-01-01
  9. Three Lectures On Fermat's Last Theorem

61. Einige Der Bedeutenden Mathematiker
Translate this page Kuratowski Kazimierz, 1896-1980. Lagrange Joseph louis von, 1736-1813. LandauEmil, 1877-1938. Möbius August Ferdinand, 1790-1868. mordell Lewis, 1888-1972.
http://www.zahlenjagd.at/mathematiker.html
Einige der bedeutenden Mathematiker
Abel Niels Hendrik Appolonius von Perga ~230 v.Chr. Archimedes von Syrakus 287-212 v.Chr. Babbage Charles Banach Stefan Bayes Thomas Bernoulli Daniel Bernoulli Jakob Bernoulli Johann Bernoulli Nicolaus Bessel Friedrich Wilhelm Bieberbach Ludwig Birkhoff Georg David Bolyai János Bolzano Bernhard Boole George Borel Emile Briggs Henry Brouwer L.E.J. Cantor Georg Ferdinand Carroll Lewis Cassini Giovanni Domenico Cardano Girolamo Cauchy Augustin Louis Cayley Arthur Ceulen, Ludolph van Chomsky Noel Chwarismi Muhammed Ibn Musa Al Church Alonzo Cohen Paul Joseph Conway John Horton Courant Richard D'Alembert Jean Le Rond De Morgan Augustus Dedekind Julius Wilhelm Richard Descartes René Dieudonné Jean Diophantos von Alexandria ~250 v. Chr. Dirac Paul Adrien Maurice Dirichlet Peter Gustav Lejeune Eratosthenes von Kyrene 276-194 v.Chr. Euklid von Alexandria ~300 v.Chr. Euler Leonhard Fatou Pierre Fermat Pierre de Fischer Ronald A Sir Fourier Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fraenkel Adolf Frege Gottlob Frobenius Ferdinand Georg Galois Evariste Galton Francis Sir Gauß Carl Friedrich Germain Marie-Sophie Gödel Kurt Goldbach Christian Hadamard Jacques Hamilton William Rowan Hausdorff Felix Hermite Charles Heawood Percy Heron von Alexandrien ~60 n.Chr.

62. John Bunyan (1628-1688) Library Of Congress Citations
F. (louis FitzGerald), 1 Title The hymns of John Bunyan, by louis F. Benson ControlNo. 68007346 //r902 Author mordell, Albert, 1885 Title Dante and other
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcbunyan.htm

John Bunyan (1628-1688)
: Library of Congress Citations
The Little Search Engine that Could
Down to Name Citations LC Online Catalog Amazon Search Book Citations [First 20 Records] Author: Bunyan, John, 1628-1688. Title: The Jerusalem sinner saved; or, Good news to the vilest of men ... being an help for despairing souls: Shewing, that Jesus Christ would have mercy in the first place offered to the biggest sinners. To which is added, An answer to those grand objections that lie in the way of them that would believe: for the comfort of those that fear they have sinned against the Holy Ghost. By John Bunyan .... Published: Printed at Amherst, [N.H.] By Samuel Preston. 1798. Description: iv, [5]-176 p. 14 x 11 cm. LC Call No.: BR75 .B8 Control No.: 26012113 Author: Bunyan, John, 1628-1688. Uniform Title: Pilgrim's progress Title: The pilgrim's progress from this world to that which is to come, delivered under the similitude of a dream, by John Bunyan. Published: New York, American tract society, [186-] Description: 495 p., front., plates 16 cm. LC Call No.: PR3330 .A1 1860 Subjects: Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages Fiction. Puritan movements Fiction. Christian life Fiction. Christian fiction. lcsh Control No.: 30004672 //r943

63. Research
At Caltech, Olga Taussky had made me present a paper by Schur in the slick functorialmode (which was not her own); at Notre Dame, louis mordell (who was there
http://www.math.ubc.ca/~hoek/Research/research.html
My Research Story
Like Ludwig van Beethoven's, my creative life falls into three periods, but unlike his, my middle one was perfectly fallow : an unsightly hiatus mars my list of publications in the seventies, the hippie decade. Rather than trying your patience with some unlikely explanation for this shameful blot on my escutcheon, I shall concentrate on outlining the contents of the first and third periods. Roughly speaking, the former is abstract and theoretical, delighting in concepts and valuing form over substance, while the latter is concrete and computational, using modest tools and preferring ugly facts to shapely froth. This points to a second difference between Ludwig and myself : while he stubbornly followed his genius, I found nothing better to follow than the fashion of the day. In the 1950's the accepted wisdom was that mathematics was a deductive science based on axioms. Here at UBC (where I started and ended my career), there were still some dinosaurs who took pride in not knowing what a Banach algebra was, but the in-crowd cultivated general topology and ring theory. Robert Langlands, a fellow student, occasionally liked to organise informal seminars to plough through something he wanted to learn. In the summer of 57 he had chosen Jabobson's new book on the structure of rings just my cup of tea. (To be continued)

64. International Society Of TOE (Theory Of Everything)
In 1922, louis J. mordell used a different approach (different fromthe FreyRibet-Wiles path) to tackle the Fermat's last theorem.
http://www.fortunecity.com/business/all/1046/Fermat.htm
web hosting domain names email addresses related sites
The Philosophical Meanings of Fermat's Last Theorem
Revised 1996 When Fermat's Last Theorem was unproven, it was very interesting. Once proven, it is no longer an interesting problem. For many, FLT was never fundamental or useful in any way. However, Fermat's last theorem points out that nature numbers are permanently entangled with (or confined to) the irrationals. Does not only the concept of permanent confinement of numbers provide a wonderful short proof for FLT, its philosophical meanings open up a new gate for mathematics.
I: Introduction
In 1640s, Pierre de Fermat wrote a note in the margin of his copy of the Arithmetica, "...it is impossible to separate a cube into two cubes, or a biquadrate into two biquadrates, or generally any power except a square into two powers with the same exponent. I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of this, which however the margin is not large enough to contain."
For 350 years, the best mathematical minds in the world tried to reconstruct or rediscover Fermat's proof but all failed. This marginal note is now known as Fermat's Last Theorem.

65. Page014
2, 105108. For the second step, see 1999. 1984 The truth of Bieberbach's Conjecturewas established by louis de Brange. 1983 mordell's conjecture.
http://www.math.utoledo.edu/~jevard/Page014.htm
Mathematical events and history Page maintained by Jean-Claude Evard. Last update: March 21, 2003. Content of this page: 1. News and events in mathematics Link
2. List of Web pages about events in mathematics Link
3. List of Web pages on history of mathematics Link
4. List of Web pages on meetings and conferences Link News and events in mathematics
(In reverse chronological order) Dates: It is not easy to obtain information about the exact date of events,
like the date when a proof of a conjecture was officially certified as correct
by referees. The dates that I provide on this page are not official. They are
only the best I have obtained so far. Any additional information you could
provide will be very welcome.
Mathematical Review Copies of reviews from Mathematical
Review
cannot be posted on Web pages, but they can be seen through links to MathSciNet. These links work only in the networks of institutions or on the computers of users who are current subscribers to MathSciNet. June 1114, 2003:

66. BSHM: Gazetteer -- Acknowledgements And Bibliography
London Math. Soc. 11 (1979) 241258. Cassels, JWS (3). louis Joel mordell 1888-1972.Biog. Springer, 1997. mordell, louis Joel. Reflections of a Mathematician.
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/zingaz/References.html
The British Society for the History of Mathematics HOME About BSHM BSHM Council Join BSHM ... Search
BSHM Gazetteer Acknowledgements and Bibliography
Main Gazetteer A B C D ... Z Written by David Singmaster (zingmast@sbu.ac.uk ). Links to relevant external websites are being added occasionally to this gazetteer but the BSHM has no control over the availability or contents of these links. Please inform the BSHM Webster (A.Mann@gre.ac.uk) of any broken links. [When the gazetteer was edited for serial publication in the BSHM Newsletter, references were omitted since the bibliography was too substantial to be included. Publication on the web permits references to be included for material now being added to the website, but they are still absent from material originally prepared for the Newsletter - TM, August 2002]
Acknowledgements and References
Return to the top.
Acknowledgements
I must first express my thanks to Lester H. Lange and Gerald L. Alexanderson for the inspiration to start this compilation. Finally I would like to thank many people unknown to me - porters, guards, custodians, secretaries, librarians, etc., who have let me wander about or even shown me about sites and provided booklets, leaflets, prospectuses, etc.

67. BSHM: Gazetteer -- LONDON MAIN INDEX
Laud; Derrick Henry and Emma Lehmer; Angelo John Lewis, Professor louis Hoffmann ; AbrahamDe Moivre; Samuel Molyneux; Jonas Moore; LJ mordell; Sir Samuel Morland;
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/zingaz/London.html
The British Society for the History of Mathematics HOME About BSHM BSHM Council Join BSHM ... Search
BSHM Gazetteer LONDON
Main Gazetteer A B C D ... Z Written by David Singmaster (zingmast@sbu.ac.uk ). Links to relevant external websites are being added occasionally to this gazetteer but the BSHM has no control over the availability or contents of these links. Please inform the BSHM Webster (A.Mann@gre.ac.uk) of any broken links. [When the gazetteer was edited for serial publication in the BSHM Newsletter, references were omitted since the bibliography was too substantial to be included. Publication on the web permits references to be included for material now being added to the website, but they are still absent from material originally prepared for the Newsletter - TM, August 2002]
London
Because of its size, the London section of the Gazetteer is divided into nine pages: this main index page; and sections covering the scientific institutions and societies the British Museum, British Library and Science Museum other institutions and places ; and mathematical people ( A-C D-G H-M N-R and S-Z ). Inevitably these categories are somewhat arbitrary so use of this index page and / or the

68. Engineering
19521957 Robert Edwards Jamieson. 1957-1968 Donald louis mordell. 1968-1974 GeorgeLee d'Ombrain. 1974 Thomas H. Barton, Acting Dean. 1975-1984 Gerald W. Farnell.
http://www.archives.mcgill.ca/resources/guide/vol1/rg35.htm
Engineering
R.G. 35: FACULTY OF ENGINEERING DEANS OF THE FACULTY 1878-1908 Henry Taylor Bovey 1908-1922 Frank Dawson Adams 1923-1924 Henry Martyn McKay, Acting Dean 1924-1930 Henry Martyn McKay 1931-1941 Ernest Brown 1942-1951 John Johnston O'Neil 1952-1957 Robert Edwards Jamieson 1957-1968 Donald Louis Mordell 1968-1974 George Lee d'Ombrain 1974 Thomas H. Barton, Acting Dean 1975-1984 Gerald W. Farnell ADMINISTRATIVE RECORDS, 1907-1975 Faculty Records, 1907-1975 Minutes of the Faculty, 1907-1952, 1974-1975, 50 cm (c.1-c.4, c.6) Minutes of the Faculty are indexed by name and subject from 1907 until September 1949. There is no index for the post 1949 period. Minutes before 1907 were probably destroyed in the 1907 Macdonald Engineering Building fire. Annual Reports, 1896, 1961-1968, 5 cm (c.5, c.15, c.40) These reports were submitted to the Principal and/or Corporation. Records of the Office of the Dean, 1907-1984 Administrative Records, 1907-1977, 6 m (c.5-c.31, c.179, c.182-c.184, c.192, c.198, c.200) PARTS RESTRICTED

69. Eugene O'Neill Letters Project
BEI. 32/04/06, ALS, 1, KANTOR, louis (KALONYME), 1095 PARK AVE., NYC,NY, NYPL. HARV. 32/05/28, ALS, 1, mordell, ALBERT, SEA ISLAND BEACH, GA,UPEN.
http://www.eoneill.com/project/letters16.htm
Date Form Pages Addressee Place Source ALS MACGOWAN, KENNETH 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY BEI ALS MADDEN, RICHARD 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY BEI ALS KANTOR, LOUIS (KALONYME) 1095 PARK AVE., NY, NYC NYPL ALS WEINBERGER, HARRY SEA ISLAND BEACH, GA BEI ALS LYMAN, DAVID 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY BEI ALS ELKINS, KATE FELTON NEW YORK CITY, NY STAN TLS BYRNE, PAUL 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY NWES ALS QUINN, ARTHUR HOBSON 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY UPEN ALS WEAVER, BENNETT NEW YORK CITY, NY MICH ALU SISK, ROBERT 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY ? UCLA ALS WEINBERGER, HARRY SEA ISLAND BEACH, GA BEI ALS WEINBERGER, HARRY 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY ? BEI ALS CLARK, BARRETT 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY ? BEI COP MCGINLEY, ARTHUR 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY UVAX ALS CLARK, BARRETT 1095 PARK AVE., NYC, NY BEI ALS KANTOR, LOUIS (KALONYME)

70. Terminkalender
Translate this page Le Verrier (1811), Bertrand (1822), Pincherle (1853), Berwick (1888) louis Richard(1849 1859), Patodi (1945) Feuerbach (1834), Balmer (1898), mordell (1972).
http://www.fmi.uni-leipzig.de/aktuell/termine.html
Mathematisches Institut
Terminkalender gekennzeichnet!
Dienstag Geburtstag:
Sterbetag:
Clavius Gudermann Shatunovsky
Wessel

Mittwoch Geburtstag:
Sterbetag:
Bowditch Andreev Hurwitz Max Abraham ...
Wheeler

Donnerstag Geburtstag:
Sterbetag:
Pearson Hartree
Carl Neumann
Shatunovsky ... Escher
Freitag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Herstein Grothendieck Dechales Lhuilier ... Hellinger Samstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Levi-Civita Ackermann Condorcet Cochran ... Maurice Kendall Sonntag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Leshniewski Banach Ries Boys ... George Batchelor Beginn der Sommerzeit Montag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Descartes Louis Richard Kirkman Korteweg ... Arthur Walker Dienstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Mohr Germain Kulik Moriarty ... Lev Landau Mittwoch Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Iyanaga Cohen 10 Uhr s.t. Arbeitsgemeinschaft NUMERIK Eugene Tyrtyshnikov (Russian Academy of Science, Moscow) Hierarchical Kronecker Tensor-Product Approximations Donnerstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Amringe Rademacher Ingham Ulam ... Cartwright Freitag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Benjamin Peirce Lucas Eberhard Hopf Yau ... Siegel Samstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Hobbes Fabri Viviani Chaplygin ... Bertrand Sonntag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Abel Burkill Montag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Francois Francais Fredholm du Bois-Reymond Paley ... Kantorovich Vorlesungsbeginn - Sommersemester 2003 Dienstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Stone Wintner Peurbach Mittwoch Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Peacock Anstice Delaunay Laguerre ... Matsushima Donnerstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Tschirnhaus West Dudeney Lagrange ... Loyd Freitag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Finsler Hall Kuttner Wiles ... Robinson Samstag Geburtstag: Sterbetag: Dandelin Zolotarev Lindemann Youden ... David Crighton Sonntag

71. Reps
PA mordellPekter and RM Flagg Company RR Jones Associates, Ltd RR Jones Assoc-MO RR Jones Assoc- St louis RR Jones Associates - IA RR Jones Associates
http://www.aqnet.com/Reps.asp

72. Integer Products
In this talk we will solve the problem posed in the title, one firstsolved by louis mordell in the 1960's. More interesting than
http://www.mathcs.sjsu.edu/faculty/dfhayes/BAMA/Schaefer.html
BAMA presents, absolutely free
Edward F. Schaefer
of
Santa Clara University
Who will ask us
When is an Integer the
Product of Two and Three Consecutive Integers?
At Santa Clara University
in Daly Science room 206
on Wednesday, December 12, 2001
at 7:30 pm
In this talk we will solve the problem posed in the title, one first solved by Louis Mordell in the 1960's. More interesting than the question itself, perhaps, is the method of solution, which serves to introduce the beautiful subject of elliptic curves. This is a field of lively current research interest and the gateway to techniques used in the recent acclaimed proof of Fermat's Last Theorem and to problems of cryptogtraphy. Ed Schaefer earned his Ph.D. from U. C. Berkeley in 1992 and has been at Santa Clara University ever since. His main research interests are arithmetic geometry and cryptography. Arithmetic geometry uses geometry to solve problems from number theory, as we'll see in the talk. This summer he lectured on arithmetic geometry in Peru before being detained by rebels in Bolivia ... he'll be back in time for the talk. How to get to Santa Clara University: From US Highway 101, take the De La Cruz Boulevard/Santa Clara exi t and follow the signs to El Camino and the main campus entrance.

73. Please Title This Page. (Page 1)
Translate this page louis MAHÉ (Rennes). of the Tate-Shafarevich group, and discuss how the Cassels-Tatepairing may be used to improve our estimates for the mordell-Weil rank.
http://www.math.u-psud.fr/~geo/sem/sem_variete_00-01.html
Vendredi 15 juin 2001 Alexei SKOROBOGATOV (Londres)
t n t m N x x d N d d du corps des rationnels. Vendredi 15 juin 2001 Bjorn POONEN (Berkeley) Bertini theorems over finite fields One form of Bertini's theorem states that if X is a smooth projective variety of dimension m in projective space P n over an infinite field k , then there exists a hyperplane H defined over k such that the intersection of X and H is smooth of dimension m -1. This can fail if k is finite. Katz asked whether the statement would remain true if "hyperplane" were changed to "hypersurface". We give an affirmative answer. In fact, as d tends to infinity, the fraction of hypersurfaces of degree d that are good tends to a positive number related to a special value of the zeta function of X
A generalization of our result answers another question of Katz, about "space filling curves" : if X is a smooth projective variety of dimension m >1 over a finite field k , does there exist a smooth
projective curve Y over k in X with Y k X k
Samedi 19 mai 2001 R. PARIMALA (TIFR, Mumbai) Torsors under linear algebraic groups over two dimensional henselian fields Let A be an integral, henselian local ring, with algebraically closed residue field. Let

74. Sinclair Mss. Writings By Others
Excerpts from Hollywood Rajah The Life and Times of louis B. Mayer Dahlin, Ted.The Birth of a BrainChild Dario, Rubén. first line mordell, Albert.
http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/lilly/mss/subfile/sinclrwrit5.html
WRITINGS BY OTHERS Box 37
Acret, George Edward. Revitalizing the Constitution
Albrecht, E. Upton Sinclair und sozialhygienische Faktoren
Allvine, Glendon. The Man Who Owned the Motion Picture
Alva-Tore, Fernand. The Only Statesman in the World Who Has
Ashton, George Franklin. The Campaign for Governor of
Balz, Rose Marguerite. The U.S.A. Eagle
Bantz, Elisabeth. Upton Sinclair, Book Reviews and
Barlow, Arthur. The Hiss Case
Barr, Earl G. High Points in Question and in Answer from
Benamy, Alexander. I was a Citizen in Central Europe. 1939 Berenberg, David Paul. Two poems Bradley, Barclay White. Relief and Rehabilitation Braithwaite, William Stanley Beaumont. On the Desire in Browne, Lewis. Review of A World to Win Browning, Elizabeth Barrett. Excerpt from "Aurora Leigh" Burbank, Luther. [Statement about The Profits of Religion Campanella, Tommaso. The People [poem] Communist Party. [Statement about Sinclair and EPIC Cravath, O.D. The New Deal Relief Plan As I See It Crowther, Bosley. Excerpts from "Hollywood Rajah" The Life Dahlin, Ted. The Birth of a Brain-Child

75. Algebraic Number Theory Archives
Large linked preprint archives for papers in Algebraic Number Theory and Arithmetic Geometry.Category Science Math Number Theory Publications Preprint Archives...... structure of multiplicative subgroups of fields and Galois theory, by louis Mah'{e 288March 15, 2001, mordellWeil Groups and Selmer Groups of Two Types of
http://www.math.uiuc.edu/Algebraic-Number-Theory/
Algebraic Number Theory Archives
Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2003 12:03:33 -0600 (CST)
To: Algebraic-Number-Theory@listserv.uiuc.edu
Subject: Algebraic-Number-Theory preprint archives
I shall no longer be managing the Algebraic Number Theory preprint archives. The web site is now frozen and is not accepting new submissions and subscriptions. Michael Zieve has kindly agreed to assume control, with the help of Greg Kuperberg, and new submissions should be directed to the new URL for the archive, http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/ANT/ Your subscription will continue, unless you choose otherwise. I thank Dan Grayson for setting up the archives and his patient help with technical issues, and Michael and Greg for volunteering to take on this work. Nigel Boston
http://www.math.wisc.edu/~boston/
Welcome to the preprint archives for papers in Algebraic Number Theory and Arithmetic Geometry.
  • Use the Find facility of your browser on this page, or search:
  • Our mirror site in the United Kingdom , set up by Richard Pinch.
  • Our main site in the USA
  • Instructions for authors
  • Instructions for joining the mailing list . Members of the mailing list receive announcements of preprints when they are deposited in the archives.
  • Some TeX fonts , stored in a tar image compressed with gzip, including the lams* and xy* fonts, which are needed for some of the preprints.
  • 76. Little Blue Books Collection
    The Truth About Aimee Semple McPherson A Symposium Author louis Adamic, Edward SinclairThe Record of a Long Collaboration Author Albert mordell Date 1950
    http://www.sunysb.edu/library/mc135.htm
    State University of New York at Stony Brook
    University Libraries
    West Campus
    Special Collections Bottom Library Homepage Mss Collection Guide Finding Aids ... Special Collections
    Little Blue Books Collection Manuscript Collection 135 Collection processed by Scott Lesko Finding aid compiled by Kristen J. Nyitray June 2002 [Introduction] [Box Listing] Introduction return to top The Little Blue Books Collection is comprised books and pamphlets published in the early 20th century by Emanuel Haldeman-Julius of Gerard, Kansas. The collection includes 0.6 cubic feet of material, arranged numerically by "Little Blue Book Number." Box Listing return to top Box 1
    Little Blue Book Number: 27
    Title: The Last Days of a Condemned Man
    Author: Victor Hugo
    Date: n.d.
    Little Blue Book Number: 43
    Title: Marriage and Divorce
    Date: March 1, 1860
    Little Blue Book Number: 83
    Title: The Evolution of Marriage
    Author: Leo Markun
    Date: n.d.
    Little Blue Book Number: 122
    Title: Debate on Spiritualism
    Author: Conan Doyle and Joseph McCabe
    Date: 1922 Little Blue Book Number: 205
    Title: Artemus Ward His Book
    Author: E. Haldeman-Julius

    77. Www.math.auckland.ac.nz/~wilson/Personal/quiz
    43. Gerd Faltings got the Fields' medal for proving mordell's conjecture. Whatwas it? 44. 55. louis de Branges proved Bieberbach's conjecture in 1984.
    http://www.math.auckland.ac.nz/~wilson/Personal/quiz
    [Mathematical trivia quiz] [By Mark Wilson. No responsibility taken for silly questions, bogus answers, etc] Give the first names of the following mathematicians: Legendre, Laplace, Lagrange, Newton, Lie, Klein, Hilbert, Poincare, Leray, Kolmogorov, Faltings, Donaldson, Atiyah, Fibonacci, Leibniz, Chebyshev, Cauchy, Milnor, Napier, Fourier, Monge, d'Alembert, Riemann, Wedderburn, Hardy, Brouwer. 1. Who stated the Erlanger Programm in 1872, and what was its central idea? 2. Which mathematician was Emil Artin's son-in-law? 3. State the (generalized) Poincare conjecture. Who proved it in dimension 4? 4. Name the 1986 Fields' medallists. 5. Which famous American mathematician had artificial hands? 6. Who wrote 'Space, Time, Matter' ? 7. What was Gauss's famous motto? 8. The nephew of which founding member of Bourbaki is (in)famous for his publicity of fractals? 9. What is the name of the lobby at Gottingen containing the bust of Hilbert? 10. Whose name is usually attached to the Schubfachprinzip (pigeonhole principle)? 11. Which great American differential topologist died in 1989? 12. Who was the first director of MSRI, and who was his Ph.D supervisor? 13. Who looked like "a nearsighted washerwoman" ? 14. Which famous female mathematician was brutally murdered by a Christian sect? 15. What nationality was Fields, of medal fame? 16. In which century was the modern = sign adopted? 17. Which great Soviet mathematician of this century was blind and anti-Semitic? 18. Who wrote 'I am a Mathematician' ? 'I want to be a Mathematician' ? 19. Who invented the term cybernetics? 20. In which war was Sophus Lie arrested as a German spy? 21. Who "revolutionized topology while in a WW2 prisoner-of-war camp" ? 22. Who published 'General investigations into curved surfaces' in 1827? 23. Which proponent of rigour in analysis overlooked the concept of uniform convergence in his 1821 text? 24. What happened to Felix Klein which ended his career as a researcher in 1883? 25. Who first showed the correspondence between Boolean algebras and Boolean rings? 26. Who developed linear and multilinear algebra decades ahead of his time? 27. Who systematically developed the theory of group representations in the 1890's? 28. Who wrote 'The Sand Reckoner' ? 29. Which Indian mathematician died in 1987, having done much fundamental work on representations of semisimple Lie groups? 30. Which famous philosopher was born in Konigsberg 138 years before Hilbert? 31. Which Nazi activist, whose work relates to quasiconformal mapping, died in 1941 aged 28? 32. Who were the first 2 recipients of the Fields' medals, in 1936? 33. Which "prima donna of mathematics" referred to applied mathematics as 'Schmierol' (grease)? 34. Who tied for the French Academy prize in 1881, aged 17? 35. What was Poincare doing when he realized the connection between hyperbolic geometry and Fuchsian groups? 36. Name the first 6 mathematics professors of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. 37. Which future peer proved transcendence of pi in 1882? 38. Name the theorem: An everywhere-defined symmetric operator on a Hilbert space is self-adjoint. 39. Who first gave, in 1957, an explicit example of a PDE with smooth coefficients which has no (distributional) solution? 40. Hilbert's 5th problem asks whether every locally Euclidean group is a Lie group. In which year was it solved? 41. What did Paul Cohen do in 1963 to warrant the Fields' medal? 42. Who was the chief developer of the the representation theory of Banach algebras in the early 1940's? 43. Gerd Faltings got the Fields' medal for proving Mordell's conjecture. What was it? 44. Who showed that, for differential manifolds, diffeomorphism is a stricter classification than homeomorphism? 45. Which important concept of analysis was discovered by Seidel in 1847, having been missed by Abel and Cauchy among others? 46. What, according to Legendre, was "a monument more lasting than bronze" ? 47. Apart from his earlier work in differential topology, for what is Rene Thom famous? 48. What did Kruskal and Zabusky discover in 1965 when studying nonlinear D.E. by computer? 49. Which mathematician's collected works are by far the largest? 50. Who were the 'invariant trinity' of 19th century British mathematics? 51. Walter Feit and John Thompson proved Burnside's conjecture in 1963, the proof occupying an entire journal issue. What was the conjecture? 52. Who, in 1890, mapped the unit interval continuously onto the unit square, thereby demolishing the current definition of 'dimension'? 53. For work on which problem in celestial mechanics did Poincare win the prize of 2500 crowns offered by King Oscar II of Sweden in 1887? 54. Which early topologist created intuitionism? 55. Louis de Branges proved Bieberbach's conjecture in 1984. What was it, in words? 56. Who said "I see it but I do not believe it" after showing that euclidean 1-space and n-space have the same cardinality for all n? 57. Who is usually credited with discovering the famous V - E + F= 2 formula for polyhedra in the 17th century? 58. Who, in 1844, exhibited the first known transcendental number? 59. Both the brachistochrone and tautochrone problem had a certain well-known curve as their solution. What was it? 60. Which two mathematicans, who each lived to be over 90, proved the Prime Number Theorem in 1896? 61. The cousin of which famous mathematician was premier of France during WW I? 62. Which Swede developed a theory of integral equations in the late 1890's which was generalized by Hilbert and the Gottingen school during the next decade? 63. Who introduced the concept of metric space in his 1906 thesis? 64. Which Texas topologist wrote "Mathematics as a Cultural System"? 65. Who heard about Russell's paradox, which in effect scuttled his book on set theory, when the book was already in the press? 66. Who wrote "Algebraic Theory of fields" (in German) in 1910? 67. Which French analyst of the early 20th century had a gold nose? 68. Which Russian topologist drowned off Brittany in 1924 at the age of 26? 69. Which mathematician was a member of the 1908 Danish Olympic soccer team? 70. Which French mathematician got his name from the fact that he was found as a baby on the steps of the church of St Jean le Rond? 71. Which theorem of Gauss did he call his "Theorema Aurema" ? 72. The Lasker of Lasker-Noether is better known as world champion in which sport for 27 years? ANSWERS Adrien-Marie, Pierre-Simon, Joseph-Louis, Isaac, Marius Sophus, Christian Felix, David, Jules Henri, Jean, Andrei Nikolaievich, Gerd, Simon, Michael Francis, Leonardo Pisano, Gottfried Wilhelm, Pafnuti Lvovich, Augustin Louis, John, William, Gaspard, Jean-Baptiste Joseph, Jean le Rond, Georg Bernhard, Joseph Henry MacLagan, Godfrey Harold, L Egbertus Johannes? 1. Felix Klein; geometries should be studied via their automorphism groups. 2. John Tate. 3. A simply-connected n-manifold without boundary having the same homology groups as an n-sphere is homeomorphic to an n-sphere; Michael Freedman. 4. Gerd Faltings, Michael Freedman, Simon Donaldson. 5. Solomon Lefschetz. 6. Hermann Weyl. 7. Pauca sed matura (few but ripe). 8. Szolem Mandelbrojt. 9. Hilbertraum. 10. P.G.L. Dirichlet. 11. Hassler Whitney. 12. Irving Kaplansky; Saunders Mac Lane. 13. Emmy Noether. 14. Hypatia. 15. Canadian. 16. 16th. 17. Lev Pontryagin. 18. Norbert Wiener; Paul Halmos. 19. Norbert Wiener. 20. Franco-Prussian war of 1870. 21. Jean Leray. 22. Gauss. 23. Cauchy. 24. Nervous breakdown caused by competition with Poincare. 25. Marshall Stone. 26. Hermann Grassmann. 27. Georg Frobenius. 28. Archimedes. 29. Harish-Chandra. 30. Immanuel Kant. 31. Oswald Teichmuller. 32. Lars Ahlfors and Jesse Douglas. 33. Edmund Landau. 34. Hermann Minkowski. 35. Stepping onto a bus. 36. Einstein, Morse, Alexander, von Neumann, Weyl, Veblen. 37. Ferdinand Lindemann, later Lord Cherwell. 38. Hellinger-Toeplitz theorem. 39. Hans Lewy. 40. 1952 (by Gleason, Montgomery and Zippin). 41. He showed that the axiom of choice and the continuum hypothesis are independent of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory. 42. I. M. Gelfand. 43. Every equation of genus at least 2 has only finitely many rational points. 44. John W. Milnor, in 1956. 45. Uniform convergence. 46. Abel's memoir on elliptic functions. 47. Being a proponent of catastrophe theory. 48. Solitons. 49. Euler. 50. Cayley, Sylvester and Salmon. 51. Every nonabelian simple group has even order. 52. Guiseppe Peano. 53. Stability of the solar system. 54. L.E.J. Brouwer. 55. The nth Taylor coefficient of a schlicht function has modulus at most n. 56. Georg Friedrich Cantor. 57. Rene Descartes (see Lakatos, 'Proofs and Refutations' for the convoluted history of this formula). 58. Joseph Liouville. 59. Cycloid. 60. Jacques Hadamard and Charles de la Vallee-Poussin. 61. Poincare. 62. Ivar Fredholm. 63. Maurice Frechet. 64. Raymond Wilder. 65. Gottlob Frege. 66. Ernst Steinitz. 67. Gaston Julia. 68. P. Urysohn. 69. Harald Bohr. 70. Jean le Rond d'Alembert. 71. The law of quadratic reciprocity. 72. Chess. Who are we quoting (often in translation)? 1. We must know. We shall know. 2. I turn away in fear and horror from this lamentable plague of functions having no derivatives. 3. Just go on, and faith will soon return. 4. A quantity which is diminished or increased by an infinitely small quantity is neither increased nor decreased. 5. The hypothesis of the acute angle is absolutely false, being repugnant to the nature of the straight line. 6. I fear the cries of the Boeotians... 7. The divine spirit found a sublime outlet in that wonder of analysis, that portent of the ideal world, that amphibian between being and not-being, which we call the imaginary root of negative unity. 8. God ever arithmetizes. 9. One must be able to say at all times, instead of points, lines and planes, tables, chairs and beer mugs. 10. God made the integers - all else is the work of man. 11. I was, for a time, the fifth best pure mathematician in the world. 1. David Hilbert. 2. Charles Hermite. 3. Jean le Rond d'Alembert. 4. Johann Bernoulli. 5. Girolamo Saccheri, being unable to derive a contradiction after dropping Euclid's parallel axiom (Euclid Freed of Every Flaw, 1733). 6. J.C.F. Gauss, on why he did not publicize his knowledge of the existence of noneuclidean geometries. 7. G.W. Leibniz (a lot of words to describe i). 8. Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi. 9. David Hilbert, speaking of the axiomatic method in geometry. 10. Leopold Kronecker. 11. G.H. Hardy.

    78. Rick Miranda
    Proceedings of the ANNIE '94 conference, St. louis, MO, ASME Press,New York, 831836. Elliptic Surfaces and the mordell-Weil Group.
    http://www.math.colostate.edu/~miranda/articles.html
    Rick Miranda
    Publications (Articles)
  • On the stability of pencils of cubic curves. American Journal of Mathematics, v. 102, no. 6 (1980) 1177-1202.
  • The moduli of Weierstrass fibrations over P1. Mathematische Annalen, v. 255 (1981) 379-394.
  • Smooth models for elliptic threefolds. In: The Birational Geometry of Degenerations, Progress in Mathematics, v. 29, Birkhauser, (1983), 85-133.
  • The minus one theorem, (with D. Morrison). In: The Birational Geometry of Degenerations, Progress in Mathematics, v. 29, Birkhauser, (1983), 173-259.
  • Projectively unstable elliptic surfaces. Illinois Journal of Mathematics, v. 27, no. 3, (1983),404-420.
  • Smoothing cusp singularities of small length, (with R. Friedman). Mathematische Annalen, v. 263 (1983) 185-212.
  • Integration: why you can and why you can't. Pi Mu Epsilon Journal, v.7, no. 9, (1983), 557-566.
  • Non-degenerate symmetric bilinear forms on finite abelian 2-groups. Transactions of the AMS, v. 284, no. 2, (1984), 535-542.
  • Non-classical Godeaux surfaces in characteristic five.
  • 79. Math G Mission College Santa Clara
    In 1922, the American mathematician louis J. mordell discovered what he thought wasa very strange connection between the solutions of algebraic equations and
    http://www.wvmccd.cc.ca.us/mc/depts/math/taboh
    Math Department, Mission College, Santa Clara, California Go to Math Dept Main Page Mission College Main Page This paper was written as an assignment for Ian Walton's Math G - Math for liberal Arts Students - at Mission College. If you use material from this paper, please acknowledge it. To explore other such papers go to the Math G Projects Page.
    Pierre de Fermat: Fermat's Last Theorem
    By Eileen Taboh
    Professor lan Walton Math G November 24, 1997
    Pierre de Fermat ( 1601-1665)
    This paper is about a man by the name of Pierre de Fermat and his mathematical accomplishments, primarily the theorem that he discovered which was later called Fermat's Last Theorem. Over the years, many mathematicians have tried to prove Fermat's theorem and have done so unsuccessfully. I will begin with the history of prime numbers, which was a tremendous factor in Fermat's Last Theorem and go on to describe Fermat and his work and the many mathematicians that have attempted to figure out just what Fermat had in mind when he wrote his theorem.
    Prime numbers were first studied by the ancient Greek mathematicians during the time of Pythagaros from 500 BC to 300 BC. The ancient Greeks were interested in numbers for

    80. Comanducci Arte Italia - Catalogo Artitsti
    V. VANMOUR VAN MOORT VAN MOPPES Maurice VAN MOR Thérèse VAN mordell Florian V NERVENComeils VAN NERVEN Cornelis VAN NERVEN Gerrit VAN NERVEN louis V. VANERVE
    http://www.comanducci.it/elenco/elencoUV18.htm
    ELENCO ARTISTI PRESENTI NEI NOSTRI ARCHIVI LETTERA: UV - PAGINA: HOME PAGE
    A
    B C ...
    VAN OYEN Dorine

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