Hankel The mathematician who developed Hankel functions and the Hankel transform.Category Science Physics Mathematical Physics PeopleHermann Hankel. Born Hermann Hankel's father was Wilhelm Gottlieb Hankelwho was a physicist at Halle at the time Hermann was born. Hermann http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Hankel.html
Extractions: Hermann Hankel 's father was Wilhelm Gottlieb Hankel who was a physicist at Halle at the time Hermann was born. Hermann began his education in Halle but, in 1849 Wilhelm was appointed to the chair of physics at Leipzig so the family moved to Leipzig where Hermann attended the Nicolai Gymnasium. At the gymnasium he [1]:- ... improved his Greek by reading the ancient mathematicians in the original. In 1857 Hankel entered the University of Leipzig where he studied mathematics with Riemann and then, in the following year, he worked with Weierstrass and Kronecker in Berlin. He received his doctorate for a thesis Uber eine besondere Classe der symmetrischen Determinanten in 1862. Hankel's habilitation He worked on the theory of complex numbers, the theory of functions and the history of mathematics. His work on complex analysis, however, is not considered of the first rank and in [8] he is included with those who contributed but whose:- ... influence on the foundations of complex analysis was not as essential as that of those mathematicians discussed in more detail Riemann Weierstrass Hurwitz Bieberbach Hankel made a systematic study of the rules of arithmetic with his Prinzip der Permanenz der formalen Gesetze (1867), see [7]. He wrote another important work which was also published in 1867
Virtual Encyclopedia Of Mathematics john hahn hans hall philip halley edmond halphen george henri halsted george brucehamilton sir william rowan hamilton william hankel hermann hardy claude http://www.lacim.uqam.ca/~plouffe/Simon/supermath.html
Hankel, Hermann (1839-1873) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biograp Branch of Science " Mathematicians Nationality " German hankel, hermann (18391873) German mathematician who advocated an intellectual mathematics detached from all perceptions. He wrote Theorie der komplexen Zahlensystem (1867). Additional http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Hankel.html
Untitled Handlirsch, Martha. hankel, hermann (18391873). hankel, Wilhelm (1814-1899) http://www.lrz-muenchen.de/~Sommerfeld/PersDat/H.html
Bibliography hankel, hermann. 1867. Theorie der complexen Zahlensysteme insbesondere der gemeinen imaginären Zahlen und der http://www.hf.uio.no/filosofi/njpl/vol3no1/algbrlog/node4.html
Hankel Biography of hermann hankel (18391873) hermann hankel. Born 14 Feb 1839 in Halle, Germany http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Hankel.html
Extractions: Hermann Hankel 's father was Wilhelm Gottlieb Hankel who was a physicist at Halle at the time Hermann was born. Hermann began his education in Halle but, in 1849 Wilhelm was appointed to the chair of physics at Leipzig so the family moved to Leipzig where Hermann attended the Nicolai Gymnasium. At the gymnasium he [1]:- ... improved his Greek by reading the ancient mathematicians in the original. In 1857 Hankel entered the University of Leipzig where he studied mathematics with Riemann and then, in the following year, he worked with Weierstrass and Kronecker in Berlin. He received his doctorate for a thesis Uber eine besondere Classe der symmetrischen Determinanten in 1862. Hankel's habilitation He worked on the theory of complex numbers, the theory of functions and the history of mathematics. His work on complex analysis, however, is not considered of the first rank and in [8] he is included with those who contributed but whose:- ... influence on the foundations of complex analysis was not as essential as that of those mathematicians discussed in more detail Riemann Weierstrass Hurwitz Bieberbach Hankel made a systematic study of the rules of arithmetic with his Prinzip der Permanenz der formalen Gesetze (1867), see [7]. He wrote another important work which was also published in 1867
References For Hankel References for hermann hankel. Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography(New York 19701990). AF Monna, hermann hankel, Nieuw Arch. Wisk. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Hankel.html
Extractions: A I Borodin, Mathematical calendar for the 1988/89 academic year (Russian), Mat. v Shkole M Cantor, Allgemeinen deutsche Biographie X (Leipzig, 1879), 516-519. A F Monna, Hermann Hankel, Nieuw Arch. Wisk. J Tappenden, Geometry and generality in Frege's philosophy of arithmetic, Synthese W von Zahn, Hermann Hankel, Mathematische Annalen P G J Vredenduin, Gleanings from the history of the negative number (Dutch), Euclides (Groningen) W Wieslaw, German analysts at the turn of the 19th-20th centuries (Polish), Opuscula Math. No. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
References For Hankel References for the biography of hermann hankel A F Monna, hermann hankel, Nieuw Arch. Wisk. (3) 21 (1973), 6487. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Hankel.html
Extractions: A I Borodin, Mathematical calendar for the 1988/89 academic year (Russian), Mat. v Shkole M Cantor, Allgemeinen deutsche Biographie X (Leipzig, 1879), 516-519. A F Monna, Hermann Hankel, Nieuw Arch. Wisk. J Tappenden, Geometry and generality in Frege's philosophy of arithmetic, Synthese W von Zahn, Hermann Hankel, Mathematische Annalen P G J Vredenduin, Gleanings from the history of the negative number (Dutch), Euclides (Groningen) W Wieslaw, German analysts at the turn of the 19th-20th centuries (Polish), Opuscula Math. No. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
Blank Entries From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biography Translate this page 1963) Hadfield, Robert (1858-1940) Hahn, Otto (1879-1968) Hall, Asaph (1829-1907)Hamilton, William (1788-1856) hankel, hermann (1839-1873) Harrington, Roy http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/blank-entries.html
Hankel, Hermann hankel, hermann (18391873). German mathematician and mathematical historianwho made significant contributions to the study of complex http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/H/Hankel/1.html
Extractions: Hankel was also the first to suggest a method for assessing the magnitude, or 'measure', of absolutely discontinuous point sets (such as the set of only irrational numbers lying between and 1). The 'measure' theory of point sets has now been extensively applied to probability, cybernetics, and electronics.
Quotations By Hankel Quotations by hermann hankel. In most sciences one generation tears down what another has built, and what one has http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Quotations/Hankel.html
Extractions: Quoted in D MacHale, Comic Sections (Dublin 1993) [Mathematics is] purely intellectual, a pure theory of forms, which has for its objects not the combination of quantities or their images, the numbers, but things of thought to which there could correspond effective objects or relations, even though such a correspondence is not necessary.
Marie Hankel Translate this page hankel, hermann. Die Eulerschen Integrale bei unbeschränkter Variabilität desArguments. Habilitationsschrift Leipzig 1863. hankel, hermann. Untersuchungen http://mitglied.lycos.de/Genealogie_Pabst/EspBiographien/EspBiogr/hankel.htm
Extractions: Geburt in Schwerin als Tochter von Hermann Dippe ( 1891), Oberlehrer am Fridericianum und späterer Ministerialbeamter Hermann Hankel habilitiert sich (in Leipzig?) über die Eulersche Integrale bei unbeschränkter Variabilität des Arguments Heirat mit dem Mathematikprofessor Hermann Hankel ( 1873) Umzug nach Erlangen und Tübingen Geburt der drei Kinder Martin, Margarete und Minna (letztere als Kind gestorben) Tod von Hermann Hankel, Umzug zurück nach Schwerin , wo sie bis zum Umzug zu ihrer Tochter Margarete im Jahre 1905 nach Dresden in der Mühlenstr. 18 wohnt Tod der Mutter Tod des Vaters Hermann Dippe besucht Kurse Kunstgeschichte für feine Damen in Schwerin liest über Esperanto in der Zeitschrift Die Woche besucht Ihren Sohn in Offenbach 1905-Sommer lernt Esperanto in Schwerin . Kontakt mit Prof. Sellin 1905 (vor Nov.) Umzug nach Dresden zur (älteren) Tochter Margarete Gründung der Esperanto-Gruppe Dresden, die im Nov. 1905 zerfiel. Nun ruhte bei mir Esperanto fast ein Jahr. 1906-Sept.
H Index Hamming, Richard W (582*). hankel, hermann (546*). Hardy, Claude (168) http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Indexes/H.html
2 The Reception By Ernst Schröder Graßmann 1844) and hermann hankel (18391873, cf. hankel 1867), andon Robert Graßmann's (1815-1901) symbolic logic (Graßmann 1872). http://www.hf.uio.no/filosofi/njpl/vol3no1/algbrlog/node2.html
Extractions: Subsections From the very beginning the learned competition concerning the best system of logic had an international flavor. The knowledge of the new logical systems in Great Britain was carried into the world primarily through the writings of William Stanley Jevons . His Principles of Science ) in particular worked as a catalyst. Furthermore, the effect of Alexander Bain's Logic ) should not be underestimated. It was devoted to John Stuart Mill's inductive logic, but contained a section on Boole's symbolic logic which stimulated the emergence of research on symbolic logic in Poland. It is safe to assume that even MacColl got to know Boole's algebra of logic via Bain's logic. In the second paper on ``The Calculus of Equivalent Statements'' ( ), he quoted Boole according to Bain's presentation. I have shown elsewhere (cf. Peckhaus 1997 ) that the roots of Schröder's algebra of logic are to be found in the German abstract algebraical conceptions of his time, but not in Boole's
Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Index H on networks, 527, 1045 Handprints purpose of in cave paintings, 1184 Handwritingrandomness in, 1192 hankel, hermann (Germany, 18391873) and generalization in http://www.wolframscience.com/nks/index/h.html
Stephen Wolfram: A New Kind Of Science -- Index F-j 1958 ) and sphere packings, 986 Hamming, Richard W. (USA, 1915-1998) and error-correctingcodes, 1101 hankel, hermann (Germany, 1839-1873) and generalization http://www.wolframscience.com/nks/index/names/f-j.html
Great Mathematicians Jordan, Marie Ennemond, (18381922), France, Topology, Theory of finite groups.hankel, hermann, (1839-1873), Germany, hankel functions and the hankel transform. http://www.sali.freeservers.com/engineering/maths.html
Extractions: Home Page About Me Contact Me Photo Gallery 1 Photo Gallery 2 Family Album Engineering Stuff Sports Stuff Tennis Page Favorite People Links Galore Cool Links Kerala Page About Calicut HTML Tutorial Guest Book Home Page Engg. Home CFD Engg. Books ... RECT Faculty The finest mathematicians of all time who had a profound influence in the development of pure and applied mathematics Name Period Country Field of Contribution Descartes, Rene France Invented Analytical Geometry Fermat, Pierre de France Gregory, James Scotland Numerical Interpolation Newton, Isaac England Inventor of Differential and Integral Calculus Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhem Germany Along with Newton he is also credited for invention of Calculus Raphson, Joseph England Numerical Integration Rolle, Michel France Rolle's Theorem Bernoulli, Jakob Swiss Mathematical Probability and Elasticity L'Hôpital, Guillaume François France L'Hôpital Rule Bernoulli, Johann Swiss Development of Calculus de Moivre, Abraham France Analytic Geometry and Theory of Probability Taylor, Brook