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  1. William Brouncker, segundo vizconde Brouncker (1620 - 5 de abril de 1684) [1] fue un matemático inglés que introdujo la fórmula que lleva su nombre. Miembro fundador y primer presidente de la Royal Society , también desempeñó un cargo público , sirviendo como comisionado de la Marina Real británica .

    • Primero en el cargo
  2. William Brouncker, 2nd Viscount Brouncker FRS (c. 1620 – 5 April 1684) was an Anglo-Irish peer and mathematician who served as the president of the Royal Society from 1662 to 1677. Best known for introducing Brouncker's formula, he also worked as a civil servant, serving as a commissioner in the Royal Navy.

    • Saint Catherine's Hospital
  3. William Brouncker, segundo vizconde Brouncker (1620 - 5 de abril de 1684) fue un matemático inglés que introdujo la fórmula que lleva su nombre. Miembro fundador y primer presidente de la Royal Society, también desempeñó un cargo público, sirviendo como comisionado de la Marina Real británica.

  4. London, England. Summary. William Brouncker was an Irish mathematician who was a founder and the first president of the Royal Society of London. He worked on continued fractions and calculated logarithms by infinite series. View four larger pictures. Biography.

  5. William Brouncker (ca. 1620–1684) was the inaugural President of The Royal Society, and John Wallis (1616–1703) one of its founder members. The two collaborated closely during the 1650s on some original and unusual mathematics, but while Wallis acquired a lasting reputation, Brouncker's work is no longer well known.

    • Jacqueline A. Stedall
    • 2000
  6. 28 de nov. de 2023 · William Brouncker. NOVEMBER 28, 2023. On Nov. 28, 1660, a small group of natural philosophers, a dozen or so, met at Gresham College in London, and decided to establish a society... Scientist of the Day - William Brouncker. November 28, 2023.

  7. British scientist. Learn about this topic in these articles: Royal Society. In Royal Society. …courtiers Sir Robert Moray and William, 2nd Viscount Brouncker. (Brouncker was to become the Royal Society’s first president.)