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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hermann_WeylHermann Weyl - Wikipedia

    List of topics named after Hermann Weyl Ontic structural realism Wormhole: Spouses: Friederike Bertha Helene Joseph (nickname "Hella") (1893–1948) Ellen Bär (née Lohnstein) (1902–1988) Children: Fritz Joachim Weyl (1915–1977) Michael Weyl (1917–2011) Awards: Fellow of the Royal Society Lobachevsky Prize (1927) Gibbs Lecture ...

  2. Hermann Weyl (Elmshorn, Imperio alemán, 9 de noviembre de 1885-Zúrich, Suiza, 8 de diciembre de 1955) fue un matemático alemán. Aunque bastante tiempo de su vida laboral radicó en Zúrich y luego en Princeton , es identificado familiarmente con la tradición matemática de la Universidad de Gotinga , representada por David Hilbert y Hermann Minkowski .

    • Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl
    • Cementerio de Princeton
  3. List of things named after Hermann Weyl; List of things named after Norbert Wiener; List of things named after Ernst Witt; Reference tables. List of mathematical reference tables; List of moments of inertia; Table of derivatives; Integrals. In calculus, the integral of a function is a generalization of area, mass, volume, sum, and total.

  4. 9 November 1885. Elmshorn (near Hamburg), Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Died. 8 December 1955. Zürich, Switzerland. Summary. From 1923-38 Weyl evolved the concept of continuous groups using matrix representations. With his application of group theory to quantum mechanics he set up the modern subject. View nine larger pictures. Biography.

  5. List of topics named after Hermann Weyl Ontic structural realism Wormhole: Spouse(s) Friederike Bertha Helene Joseph (nickname "Hella") (1893–1948) Ellen Bär (née Lohnstein) (1902–1988) Children: Fritz Joachim Weyl (1915–1977) Michael Weyl (1917–2011) Awards: Fellow of the Royal Society Lobachevsky Prize (1927) Gibbs ...

  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › Hermann_WeylHermann Weyl - Wikiwand

    Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl, was a German mathematician, theoretical physicist, logician and philosopher. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland, and then Princeton, New Jersey, he is associated with the University of Göttingen tradition of mathematics, represented by Carl Friedrich Gauss, David Hilbert and Hermann Minkowski.