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  1. Paul Albert Gordan (Breslavia, Reino de Prusia, 27 de abril de 1837-Erlangen, Imperio alemán, 21 de diciembre de 1912), conocido como Paul Gordan, fue un matemático judío alemán, [1] alumno de Carl Jacobi durante su doctorado en la Universidad de Breslavia (1862), [2] y profesor en la Univerisidad de Erlangen-Núremberg.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Paul_GordanPaul Gordan - Wikipedia

    Paul Albert Gordan (27 April 1837 – 21 December 1912) was a Jewish-German mathematician, a student of Carl Jacobi at the University of Königsberg before obtaining his PhD at the University of Breslau (1862), and a professor at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

  3. 27 de abr. de 2013 · Paul Gordan worked with Clebsch on invariant theory and algebraic geometry. He also gave simplified proofs of the transcendence of e and π.

  4. www.wikiwand.com › es › Paul_GordanPaul Gordan - Wikiwand

    Paul Albert Gordan, conocido como Paul Gordan, fue un matemático judío alemán, alumno de Carl Jacobi durante su doctorado en la Universidad de Breslavia (1862), y profesor en la Univerisidad de Erlangen-Núremberg.

  5. His major works include The Theory of Determinants, Matrices, and Invariants (1928), The Great Mathematicians (1929), Theory of Equations (1939), The Mathematical Discoveries of Newton (1945), and An Introduction to the Theory of Canonical Matrices (1945), which was cowritten with A.C. Aitken.….

  6. Gordan's proof was long and complicated and the result was re-proved in 1888 by David Hilbert using newer and far simpler methods. In collaboration with Rudolf Clebsch, Gordan also wrote a book on Abelian functions that included the central theorem now known as the Clebsch–Gordan theorem.

  7. Paul Gordan (1837-1912) king of invariant theory. Paul Albert Gordan, a mathematician at the University of Erlangen, was a close friend of Max Noether, and Emmy Noether was Gordan's only doctoral student.