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  1. William "Velvel" Morton Kahan (born June 5, 1933) is a Canadian mathematician and computer scientist, who received the Turing Award in 1989 for "his fundamental contributions to numerical analysis", was named an ACM Fellow in 1994, and inducted into the National Academy of Engineering in 2005.

    • Byron Alexander Griffith
    • James Demmel
    • Gauss–Seidel Methods Of Solving Large Systems Of Linear Equations (1958)
  2. William Velvel Kahan (nació el 5 de junio de 1933 en Toronto, Canadá). Eminente matemático y científico computacional, estudió en la Universidad de Toronto . Su contribución ha sido el análisis numérico, en el estudio de los métodos exactos y eficientes de solucionar problemas numéricos sobre un ordenador con la precisión finita, un ...

    • William Velvel Kahan
    • canadiense
  3. 11 de sept. de 2019 · William Kahan Ph.D. (Math., University of Toronto, 1958) Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, and of E.E. & Computer Science 863 Evans Hall (Math), and 411 Soda Hall (CS) Now that I am "retired", I work in my offices sporadically at least once or twice a week during each semester. Phone: (510) 642-5638 (rings in both offices)

  4. 1 de may. de 2024 · William Kahan (born June 5, 1933, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) is a Canadian mathematician and computer scientist and winner of the 1989 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for his “fundamental contributions to numerical analysis.”

    • William L. Hosch
  5. Eminente matemático y científico computacional, estudió en la Universidad de Toronto. Su contribución ha sido el análisis numérico, en el estudio de los métodos exactos y eficientes de solucionar problemas numéricos sobre un ordenador con la precisión finita, un campo sumamente importante en la física y la ingeniería.

  6. William Kahan - A.M. Turing Award Laureate. PHOTOGRAPHS. BIRTH: EDUCATION: EXPERIENCE: HONORS AND AWARDS: William (“Velvel”) Morton Kahan. United States – 1989. CITATION. For his fundamental contributions to numerical analysis. One of the foremost experts on floating-point computations.

  7. He developed a program called "paranoia' in the 1980s to test for potential floating point bugs and developed the Kaham summation algorithm which helps minimize errors introduced when adding a sequences of finite precision floating point numbers. Kahan won the ACM A.M. Turing Award in 1989.