Yeah.Ever hear of an airplane? Brothers named Wright?
Ever hear of submarines, and a man named Holland?
Ever hear of a light bulb?
DR
But not of American mathematicians.
Yeah.Ever hear of an airplane? Brothers named Wright?
Ever hear of submarines, and a man named Holland?
Ever hear of a light bulb?
DR
No.So, maybe you were mistaken, when you spoke about this " Le Galois "?
Please, tell me..
Yeah.So, do we agree that, we have a reason why we do not find so many American mathematician in classical engineering books?
It has to do with standards.I did not know that " displaying obesity " had anything to do with being a good scientist ( or not )
Not mathematics.Virtually, started many, if not all, the hi-tech industries of today?
But you are a troll and a brown noser to U.S.....
I do have the suspicion that Ion can be just a cunny troll..
Then how come you don't know mathematics?Clearly you didn't, since...blah...blah...
Good find.Another important American mathematician..
Carl Pomerance
Carl Pomerance (born in 1944 in Joplin, Missouri) is a well known number theorist. He attended college at Brown University and later received his PhD from Harvard University in 1972 for his study that any odd perfect number N has at least 7 distinct prime factors. He immediately joined the faculty at the University of Georgia, becoming full professor in 1982. He subsequently worked at Lucent Technologies for a number of years, and then became a Distinguished Professor at Dartmouth College.
He has won many teaching and research awards, including the Chauvenet Prize in 1985, MAA's distinguished university teaching award in 1997, and the Conant Prize in 2001. He has over 120 publications to his credit, including co-authorship with R. Crandall of Prime numbers: a computational perspective, Springer-Verlag, 2001, 2005. He is the inventor of one of the most important factorisation methods, the quadratic sieve algorithm, which was used in 1994 for the factorisation of RSA-129. He is also one of the discoverers of the Adleman-Pomerance-Rumely primality test.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Pomerance
No.
Just streamline.
There is nothing wrong with Poincare.
Yeah.
Low standards.
Good find.
But spring is nat made with one flower.
Is that R. as in Richard? If so, I know the guy. Took a class by him once.
Millions.If you have time, I can give you other examples..
BTW, how many flowers do you need to make a spring?
...
What's wrong with Poincare?...
By the way..
Sorry to insist, but..
Who was that " Le Galois "??
Is that R. as in Richard? If so, I know the guy. Took a class by him once.
Millions.
What's wrong with Poincare?
Absolutely.So, I need to give you the name of millions of American mathematicians?
...
Then how come you don't know mathematics?
Suuure.Your presumptions of my ignorance aside, you're still the one who can't even figure out what topology is,...
Suuure.
Spoken like a U.S. lawyer.
Speak mathematics, will you?In other words, you have no substantive response to being proven wrong....
Speak mathematics, will you?
You haven't.I have, and...blah...blah...
Matteo Martini said:So, I need to give you the name of millions of American mathematicians?
Absolutely.
Not just geniuses like Poincare (France) and Pomerance (U.S.), but U.S. people who know off the top of their head what's cos(a+b), what's a Dirac function, how to solve Ricatti differential equations,
Would you give me the names of millions of French and Romanians, who know off the top of their head what's cos(a+b), what's a Dirac function, how to solve Ricatti differential equations?
BTW, for the last time, waiting for an answer about " Le Galois "..
Sure.Would you give me the names of millions of French and Romanians, who know off the top of their head what's cos(a+b), what's a Dirac function, how to solve Ricatti differential equations?
BTW, for the last time, waiting for an answer about " Le Galois "..