the three famous mathematicans

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The Three Famous Mathematicans By: Cody Cundiff

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The Three Famous Mathematicans. By: Cody Cundiff. Girolamo Cardano 1501 – 1576 AD. Girolamo was a highly respected physician and was first to describe typhoid fever. He was also an accomplished gambler and chess player and wrote an early book on probality . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Three Famous  Mathematicans

The Three Famous Mathematicans

By: Cody Cundiff

Page 2: The Three Famous  Mathematicans

Girolamo was a highly respected physician and

was first to describe typhoid fever. He was also an accomplished gambler and chess

player and wrote an early book on probality. He was a remarkable inventor he invented the

combination lock, advanced gimbal, and a ciphering tool.

He did work in philosophy, geology, hydrodynamics music, he wrote books on medicine and an encyclopedia of natural science.

Girolamo Cardano 1501 – 1576 AD

Page 3: The Three Famous  Mathematicans

He was the first to publish a general solutions

to cubic and quartic equations, and first to publish the use of complex numbers in calcutions.

Cardano’s Italian colleagues deserve much credit. Ferrrai first solved the quartic.

Cardano have been the last great mathematician unaware of negative numbers. His treatment of cubic equations had to deal with ax3- bx + ax3 – bx = c as two different cases.

Girolamo Cardano Publishing Equations

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Picture of Cardano

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Euler may be the most influential

mathematician who ever lived. He rants #77 on Michael Hart’s famous list of

the most Influential Persons in History. Euler found the lovely equation:     Σn p(n) xn

= 1 / Πk (1 - xk)

Leonhard Euler 1707 - 1783

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Biography on

Leonhard Euler

Page 7: The Three Famous  Mathematicans

April 1707 – 18 September 1783) was a

pioneering Swiss mathematics pioneering physicist

mathematical. He made important discoveries in fields as

diverse as infinitesimal calculus and graph theory.

Euler was a devout Christian who believed in the bible to be insprired the rettung was a primarily and argument.

Biography

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Hertha was born in Porsea, England in 1854.

She changed her first name to Hertha even it was Phoebe. She changed it when she was a teenager.

After passing the Cambridge University Examination for Women with honors in English and mathematics, she attended Girton Colloege at Cambridge.

She assisted her husband with his experiments in physics and electricity, becoming an acknowledged expert on the subject of the electric arc.

Hertha Marks Ayrton

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Picture of Martha

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During her time at Cambridge, Ayrton

constructed a sphygmomanometer (pulse recorder), led the choral society, founded the fire brigade, and with Charlotte Scott , Girton's first wrangler, formed a mathematical club.

She successfully completed an external examination and received a B.Sc. degree from the University of London in 1881.

Field that Hertha was in

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She also put her mathematical skills to

practical use – she taught at Notting Hill and Ealing High School, and was also active in devising and solving mathematical problems, many of which were published in "Mathematical Questions and Their Solutions" from the Educational Times.

She was in electrical engineering and physics education and a fellow of the Royal Society.

Her mathematics and electrical work

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In the late nineteenth century, electric arc

lighting was in wide use for public lighting. Shortly thereafter, Ayrton was elected the first

female member of the IEE; she remained the sole female member of the institution until 1958.

Ayrton was also the first woman to win a prize from the institution, the Hughes Medal, awarded to her in 1906 in honour of her research on the motion of ripples in sand and water and her work on the electric arc.

In the 19th Century

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Ayrton published The Electric Arc, a summary

of her research and work on the electric arc, with origins in her earlier articles from the Electrician published between 1895 and 1896.

With this publication her contribution to the field of electrical engineering began to be cemented

In 1902

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Ayrton delivered papers on the subject again

before the Royal Society in 1908 and 1911.

The royal society

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Ayrton died for the blue plague and died with

her husband.

The Blue Plague

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The End