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  1. Los Bernoulli constituyen una singular familia en la historia de las ciencias. Johann Bernoulli era el más afamado de todos los geómetras de su época. Fue conocido como el Arquímedes de su época. Hijo de Nicolaus y Margaretha Bernoulli, fue considerado dentro de los miembros de la familia que más se destacaron en la labor científica como ...

  2. Johann II Bernoulli’s essay on light propagation, which received a prize of the Paris Académie, was published 1 in 1736. In this essay Bernoulli attempts to describe light as a pressure wave in an elastic medium that can be conceived as a sprinkling of small particles in an ether full of very small vortices. 2 A portion of the essay is devoted to an analysis of the propagating pressure wave.

  3. Nicolaus II Bernoulli (also spelled as Niklaus or Nikolaus; 6 February 1695 in Basel – 31 July 1726 in Saint Petersburg) was a Swiss mathematician as were his father Johann Bernoulli and one of his brothers, Daniel Bernoulli. He was one of the many prominent mathematicians in the Bernoulli family .

  4. In 1695, Johann Bernoulli was appointed to the chair of mathematics at Groningen; when his brother Jacob died in 1705, Johann became his successor at Basel. From there he disseminated the methods and results of his research through teaching, publishing and corresponding with mathematicians and scientists throughout Europe.

  5. Johann III Bernoulli (también conocido como Jean; 4 de noviembre de 1744, Basilea-13 de julio de 1807, Berlín), fue un matemático y astrónomo suizo perteneciente a la familia Bernoulli, era nieto de Johann Bernoulli e hijo de Johann II Bernoulli. Estudió en Basilea y Neuchâtel. Con trece años obtuvo el grado de doctor en filosofía.

  6. 23 de mar. de 2019 · Footnote 1 The Bernoulli letter Edition aims to produce an authoritative critical and fully annotated edition of the correspondence of the mathematicians and physicists Daniel I Bernoulli (1700–1782), Jacob I Bernoulli (1654–1705), Jacob II Bernoulli (1759–1789), Johann I Bernoulli (1667–1748), Johann II Bernoulli (1710–1790), Nicolaus I Bernoulli (1687–1759), Nicolaus II Bernoulli ...

  7. Nicolaus II Bernoulli (1695–1726), son of Johann; Daniel Bernoulli (1700–1782), son of Johann, developer of Bernoulli's principle and originator of the concept of expected utility for resolving the St. Petersburg paradox; Johann II Bernoulli (1710–1790; also known as Jean), son of Johann, mathematician and physicist