source
stringlengths 31
168
| text
stringlengths 51
3k
|
---|---|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald%20Brookmeyer
|
Ronald S. Brookmeyer (born on September 4, 1954) is an American public health researcher. He is a professor of biostatistics at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.
Early life and education
Brookmeyer was born on September 4, 1954, in New York, US. He completed his Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics from Cooper Union and his Master's degree and PhD from the University of Wisconsin. During his time at Cooper Union, he developed a mathematical model of the parasite-host relationship on the population growth of schistosomiasis.
Career
Following his PhD, Brookmeyer joined the faculty at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHU). During his tenure at JHU, Brookmeyer focused on creating tools using statistical, informational, and mathematical sciences to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In 1992, he was awarded the Mortimer Spiegelman gold medal by the American Public Health Association for contributions to health statistics. Beyond Johns Hopkins, Brookmeyer also taught a series of workshops on biostatistics in China at the request of the Chinese Centers for Disease Control, becoming one of the first biostatisticians in China teaching biostatistics. He also served on the editorial board of the journal Statistics in Medicine from 1985 to 1994. As a result of his public health efforts, Brookmeyer was also chosen to develop statistical models to evaluate the public health response following 9/11 and to rapidly address biosecurity and bioterrorism emergencies in the future.
By 2006, Brookmeyer was appointed Chair of JHU's Master of Public Health Program and was elected chair of the Statistics Section of American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS). The following year, he was also elected a member of the Institute of Medicine (now referred to as the National Academy of Medicine). He eventually left JHU in 2010 to join the faculty at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.
UCLA
Upon joining the faculty at UCLA, Brookmeyer was awarded the President's Citation from Cooper Union "for the development of new statistical methods and models for tracking the spread and consequences of disease." Following this, he was elected to a five-year term on the statistical board of reviewing editors for Science. In the same year, Brookmeyer was also named the 2014 Norman Breslow Distinguished Lecturer at the University of Washington. In 2015, Brookmeyer received the Nathan Mantel Lifetime Achievement Award from American Statistical Association's Section on Statistics in Epidemiology for his "valuable lifetime contributions at the intersection of statistical science and epidemiology."
In January 2020, Brookmeyer was named dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he advocated for the development of a new approach to clinical trials conducted during pandemics. In the co-authored paper, the researchers suggested a "core-protocol concept" to clinical trials, which could be applied across infectious dis
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val%C3%A9rie%20Chavez-Demoulin
|
Valérie Chavez-Demoulin is a Swiss statistician whose research includes statistical models of extreme events and their application to risk management. She is a professor of statistics at HEC Lausanne.
Education and career
Chavez-Demoulin studied mathematics and statistics at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, earning a master's degree there before completing her Ph.D. in 1999. Her dissertation, Two Problems in Environmental Statistics: Capture-Recapture Analysis and Smooth Extremal Models, concerned environmental statistics, and was supervised by Anthony C. Davison.
After postdoctoral research with the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) at the WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF) in Davos, she became a researcher at ETH Zurich and a hedge fund manager before taking her present position at HEC Lausanne.
Recognition
Chavez-Demoulin is an Elected Member of the International Statistical Institute.
References
External links
Home page
Four questions for Valérie Chavez, HEConomist
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Swiss statisticians
Women statisticians
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne alumni
Academic staff of the University of Lausanne
Elected Members of the International Statistical Institute
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence%20Merlev%C3%A8de
|
Florence Merlevède is a French probability theorist whose research interests focus on dependent and weakly dependent random variables, including Bernstein inequalities and central limit theorems for these variables. She is a professor in the laboratory for analysis and applied mathematics at Gustave Eiffel University, associated with the research group on probability and statistics there.
Merlevède earned her Ph.D. at Pierre and Marie Curie University in 1996, with a dissertation jointly supervised by Denis Bosq and Magda Peligrad. With Peligrad and Sergey Utev, she is coauthor of the book Functional Gaussian Approximation for Dependent Structures (Oxford University Press, 2019).
In 2021, Merlevède was named a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, "for outstanding contributions to the field of dependent random variables, especially for fundamental results concerning the conditional limit theorems, rates of convergence in the central limit theorem, and large random matrices".
References
External links
Home page
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
French mathematicians
French women mathematicians
Probability theorists
Fellows of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexayurt
|
A hexayurt is a simplified disaster relief shelter design. It is based on a hexagonal geodesic geometry adapted to construction from standard 4x8 foot sheets of factory made construction material, built as a yurt. It was invented by Vinay Gupta. Hexayurts are common at Burning Man.
References
See also
Yurt
Tents
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lillian%20Bradley
|
Lillian Bradley may refer to:
Lillian K. Bradley (1921–1995), American mathematician and mathematics educator
Lillian Trimble Bradley (1875–1959), American theatrical director and playwright
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu%20Sui%20Man
|
Simon Liu Sui Man (; born 12 February 1987) is a former Hong Kong professional footballer who played as a right back.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
Trivia
Most notably, he is noted for his inability to pronounce the word "simultaneously" properly.
References
External links
Yau Yee Football League profile
Living people
1987 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Hong Kong Premier League players
Hong Kong FC (football) players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgan%20Powell
|
Morgan Thomas Orfanel Powell (born 27 March 2003) is a Welsh professional footballer of partial Filipino descent who is currently a free agent.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
Yau Yee Football League profile
Living people
2003 births
Hong Kong people of Welsh descent
Hong Kong men's footballers
Hong Kong men's youth international footballers
Welsh men's footballers
Filipino men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Hong Kong
Men's association football midfielders
Hong Kong Premier League players
Hong Kong FC (football) players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bong%20Quinto
|
Kier John R. "Bong" Quinto (born December 15, 1994) is a Filipino professional basketball player for the Meralco Bolts of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).
PBA career statistics
As of the end of 2022–23 season
Season-by-season averages
|-
| align=left |
| align=left | Meralco
| 43 || 19.6 || .430 || .403 || .574 || 2.5 || 1.5 || .5 || .0 || 5.2
|-
| align=left |
| align=left | Meralco
| 18 || 26.8 || .399 || .275 || .655 || 4.6 || 2.7 || .5 || .2 || 8.4
|-
| align=left |
| align=left | Meralco
| 42 || 23.5 || .366 || .225 || .775 || 3.4 || 3.1 || .5 || .1 || 6.8
|-
| align=left |
| align=left | Meralco
| 49 || 25.1 || .448 || .347 || .835 || 3.4 || 2.4 || .7 || .0 || 9.4
|-class=sortbottom
| align="center" colspan=2 | Career
| 152 || 23.3 || .414 || .318 || .744 || 3.3 || 2.4 || .6 || .1 || 7.4
References
1994 births
Living people
Basketball players from Quezon City
Filipino men's basketball players
Letran Knights basketball players
Meralco Bolts draft picks
Meralco Bolts players
Shooting guards
Small forwards
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixtilinear%20incircles%20of%20a%20triangle
|
In plane geometry, a mixtilinear incircle of a triangle is a circle which is tangent to two of its sides and internally tangent to its circumcircle. The mixtilinear incircle of a triangle tangent to the two sides containing vertex is called the -mixtilinear incircle. Every triangle has three unique mixtilinear incircles, one corresponding to each vertex.
Proof of existence and uniqueness
The -excircle of triangle is unique. Let be a transformation defined by the composition of an inversion centered at with radius and a reflection with respect to the angle bisector on . Since inversion and reflection are bijective and preserve touching points, then does as well. Then, the image of the -excircle under is a circle internally tangent to sides and the circumcircle of , that is, the -mixtilinear incircle. Therefore, the -mixtilinear incircle exists and is unique, and a similar argument can prove the same for the mixtilinear incircles corresponding to and .
Construction
The -mixtilinear incircle can be constructed with the following sequence of steps.
Draw the incenter by intersecting angle bisectors.
Draw a line through perpendicular to the line , touching lines and at points and respectively. These are the tangent points of the mixtilinear circle.
Draw perpendiculars to and through points and respectively, and intersect them in . is the center of the circle, so a circle with center and radius is the mixtilinear incircle
This construction is possible because of the following fact:
Lemma
The incenter is the midpoint of the touching points of the mixtilinear incircle with the two sides.
Proof
Let be the circumcircle of triangle and be the tangency point of the -mixtilinear incircle and . Let be the intersection of line with and be the intersection of line with . Homothety with center on between and implies that are the midpoints of arcs and respectively. The inscribed angle theorem implies that and are triples of collinear points. Pascal's theorem on hexagon inscribed in implies that are collinear. Since the angles and are equal, it follows that is the midpoint of segment .
Other properties
Radius
The following formula relates the radius of the incircle and the radius of the -mixtilinear incircle of a triangle :
where is the magnitude of the angle at .
Relationship with points on the circumcircle
The midpoint of the arc that contains point is on the line .
The quadrilateral is harmonic, which means that is a symmedian on triangle .
Circles related to the tangency point with the circumcircle
and are cyclic quadrilaterals.
Spiral similarities
is the center of a spiral similarity that maps to respectively.
Relationship between the three mixtilinear incircles
Lines joining vertices and mixtilinear tangency points
The three lines joining a vertex to the point of contact of the circumcircle with the corresponding mixtilinear incircle meet at the external center of simi
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%20M.%20Boothby
|
William Munger Boothby (April 1, 1918 – February 14, 2021) was an American mathematician and professor emeritus of mathematics at Washington University in St. Louis, known for his work in differential geometry including the book An introduction to differentiable manifolds and Riemannian geometry (1975; 2nd ed. 1986).
Boothby was originally from Detroit, and graduated from the University of Michigan in 1940. He became a pilot for the United States Army Air Forces during World War II. After the war, he returned to graduate study in mathematics at the University of Michigan, completing his Ph.D. in 1949. His dissertation, A Topological Study of the Level Curves of Harmonic Functions, was supervised by Wilfred Kaplan.
After postdoctoral research at ETH Zurich and the Institute for Advanced Study, and a junior faculty position at Northwestern University, he joined the Washington University faculty as a professor of mathematics in 1959. His early research concerned differential geometry; after publishing his book, which "defined the curriculum and standards of introductory graduate differential geometry courses worldwide", his interests shifted to control theory. He retired in 1988.
References
1918 births
2021 deaths
American centenarians
United States Army Air Forces pilots of World War II
20th-century American mathematicians
Differential geometers
Control theorists
University of Michigan alumni
Northwestern University faculty
Washington University in St. Louis faculty
Washington University in St. Louis mathematicians
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle%20conic
|
In Euclidean geometry, a triangle conic is a conic in the plane of the reference triangle and associated with it in some way. For example, the circumcircle and the incircle of the reference triangle are triangle conics. Other examples are the Steiner ellipse, which is an ellipse passing through the vertices and having its centre at the centroid of the reference triangle; the Kiepert hyperbola which is a conic passing through the vertices, the centroid and the orthocentre of the reference triangle; and the Artzt parabolas, which are parabolas touching two sidelines of the reference triangle at vertices of the triangle.
The terminology of triangle conic is widely used in the literature without a formal definition; that is, without precisely formulating the relations a conic should have with the reference triangle so as to qualify it to be called a triangle conic (see ). However, Greek mathematician Paris Pamfilos defines a triangle conic as a "conic circumscribing a triangle (that is, passing through its vertices) or inscribed in a triangle (that is, tangent to its side-lines)". The terminology triangle circle (respectively, ellipse, hyperbola, parabola) is used to denote a circle (respectively, ellipse, hyperbola, parabola) associated with the reference triangle is some way.
Even though several triangle conics have been studied individually, there is no comprehensive encyclopedia or catalogue of triangle conics similar to Clark Kimberling's Encyclopedia of Triangle Centres or Bernard Gibert's Catalogue of Triangle Cubics.
Equations of triangle conics in trilinear coordinates
The equation of a general triangle conic in trilinear coordinates has the form
The equations of triangle circumconics and inconics have respectively the forms
Special triangle conics
In the following, a few typical special triangle conics are discussed. In the descriptions, the standard notations are used: the reference triangle is always denoted by . The angles at the vertices are denoted by and the lengths of the sides opposite to the vertices are respectively . The equations of the conics are given in the trilinear coordinates . The conics are selected as illustrative of the several different ways in which a conic could be associated with a triangle.
Triangle circles
Triangle ellipses
Triangle hyperbolas
Triangle parabolas
Families of triangle conics
Hofstadter ellipses
An Hofstadter ellipse is a member of a one-parameter family of ellipses in the plane of defined by the following equation in trilinear coordinates:
where is a parameter and
The ellipses corresponding to and are identical. When we have the inellipse
and when we have the circumellipse
Conics of Thomson and Darboux
The family of Thomson conics consists of those conics inscribed in the reference triangle having the property that the normals at the points of contact with the sidelines are concurrent. The family of Darboux conics contains as members those circumscribed conics of the
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caio%20Roque
|
Caio Alves Roque Gomes (born 9 January 2002) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a defender for Bahia.
Club career
On 8 August 2023, Caio Roque signed with Bahia.
Career statistics
Club
References
2002 births
Living people
Brazilian men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
Challenger Pro League players
CR Flamengo footballers
Lommel S.K. players
Esporte Clube Bahia players
Brazilian expatriate men's footballers
Brazilian expatriate sportspeople in Belgium
Expatriate men's footballers in Belgium
Brazil men's youth international footballers
Footballers from Salvador, Bahia
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean%20Hugonet
|
Jean Hugonet (born 24 November 1999) is a French professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for 2. Bundesliga side 1. FC Magdeburg.
Career statistics
References
1999 births
Living people
French men's footballers
Men's association football central defenders
Championnat National 3 players
Championnat National 2 players
2. Liga (Austria) players
Austrian Football Bundesliga players
Paris FC players
US Saint-Malo players
SC Austria Lustenau players
1. FC Magdeburg players
French expatriate men's footballers
French expatriate sportspeople in Austria
Expatriate men's footballers in Austria
French expatriate sportspeople in Germany
Expatriate men's footballers in Germany
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probabilistic%20numerics
|
Probabilistic numerics is an active field of study at the intersection of applied mathematics, statistics, and machine learning centering on the concept of uncertainty in computation. In probabilistic numerics, tasks in numerical analysis such as finding numerical solutions for integration, linear algebra, optimization and simulation and differential equations are seen as problems of statistical, probabilistic, or Bayesian inference.
Introduction
A numerical method is an algorithm that approximates the solution to a mathematical problem (examples below include the solution to a linear system of equations, the value of an integral, the solution of a differential equation, the minimum of a multivariate function). In a probabilistic numerical algorithm, this process of approximation is thought of as a problem of estimation, inference or learning and realised in the framework of probabilistic inference (often, but not always, Bayesian inference).
Formally, this means casting the setup of the computational problem in terms of a prior distribution, formulating the relationship between numbers computed by the computer (e.g. matrix-vector multiplications in linear algebra, gradients in optimization, values of the integrand or the vector field defining a differential equation) and the quantity in question (the solution of the linear problem, the minimum, the integral, the solution curve) in a likelihood function, and returning a posterior distribution as the output. In most cases, numerical algorithms also take internal adaptive decisions about which numbers to compute, which form an active learning problem.
Many of the most popular classic numerical algorithms can be re-interpreted in the probabilistic framework. This includes the method of conjugate gradients, Nordsieck methods, Gaussian quadrature rules, and quasi-Newton methods. In all these cases, the classic method is based on a regularized least-squares estimate that can be associated with the posterior mean arising from a Gaussian prior and likelihood. In such cases, the variance of the Gaussian posterior is then associated with a worst-case estimate for the squared error.
Probabilistic numerical methods promise several conceptual advantages over classic, point-estimate based approximation techniques:
They return structured error estimates (in particular, the ability to return joint posterior samples, i.e. multiple realistic hypotheses for the true unknown solution of the problem)
Hierarchical Bayesian inference can be used to set and control internal hyperparameters in such methods in a generic fashion, rather than having to re-invent novel methods for each parameter
Since they use and allow for an explicit likelihood describing the relationship between computed numbers and target quantity, probabilistic numerical methods can use the results of even highly imprecise, biased and stochastic computations. Conversely, probabilistic numerical methods can also provide a likelihood in computat
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvin%20Zwickl
|
Marvin Zwickl (born 22 February 2004) is an Austrian footballer who plays as a right-back for Rapid Wien II.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2004 births
Living people
Austrian men's footballers
Austria men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
2. Liga (Austria) players
Wiener Sport-Club players
SK Rapid Wien players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristot%20Tambwe-Kasengele
|
Aristot Tambwe-Kasengele (born 4 June 2004) is a DR Congo footballer who plays as a centre-back for Rapid Wien II.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2004 births
Living people
Democratic Republic of the Congo men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
2. Liga (Austria) players
SK Rapid Wien players
Democratic Republic of the Congo expatriate men's footballers
Expatriate men's footballers in Austria
21st-century Democratic Republic of the Congo people
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haris%20Zahirovic
|
Haris Zahirovic (born 11 May 2003) is a Bosnia and Herzegovina footballer who plays as a forward for Rapid Wien II.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
Bosnia and Herzegovina men's footballers
Bosnia and Herzegovina men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
2. Liga (Austria) players
First Vienna FC players
SK Rapid Wien players
Bosnia and Herzegovina expatriate men's footballers
Bosnia and Herzegovina expatriate sportspeople in Austria
Expatriate men's footballers in Austria
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet%20McDonald%20%28mathematician%29
|
Janet McDonald (1905–2006) was an American mathematician who specialized in geometry, specifically the concept of Conjugate Nets. She taught at Vassar College for 27 years and was named professor emerita in 1971.
Life and work
McDonald (sometimes spelled MacDonald) was born in Wesson, Mississippi, on September 3, 1905, and was the first child of Joseph McDonald and Bessie Walden McDonald.
She earned her bachelor's degree from Belhaven College for Young Ladies in Jackson in 1925, and then she taught for three years in secondary schools in nearby Jefferson Davis County. She completed her M.A. degree in mathematics from Tulane University in 1929 and joined the faculty of Mississippi Synodical College (1929-1932) to head the math department. In 1932, she was named department head and registrar at Hinds Junior College in Raymond, Mississippi (1932-1941).
With the start of World War II, McDonald enrolled at University of Chicago to pursue her Ph.D. but after two years of study, she took on a teaching role there. She completed her doctorate in 1943 (showing her name as Janet MacDonald) with her dissertation titled Conjugate nets in asymptotic parameters. She was immediately hired by Vassar College in New York, first as an instructor and moving to professorships, chair and then professor emerita (1971). She particularly enjoyed teaching geometry and encouraged students to pursue advanced degrees in math. She remained there in a teaching capacity for 27 years.
Throughout her life, she enjoyed studying and traveling abroad, "spending much of her leisure in England, Scotland (home of her paternal grandfather), France, Greece, and Spain. Her extended studies took her to the University of Rome and Indiana University." For example, in 1951, she spent the summer in her native Mississippi studying.
She spent most of her time doing work in mathematics on projective differential geometry, especially conjugate nets, and studying Italian in preparation for her leave of absence second semester next year. At that time, she went to study projective differential geometry and algebraic geometry at the University of Rome. She chose Rome because Professors Enrico Bompina and Francesco Severi, leaders in her field of study, were lecturing there.
On her retirement in 1971, she returned to Jackson, Mississippi and taught some classes at her alma mater, Belhaven College.
McDonald died October 29, 2006, in Madison, Mississippi, after a brief illness at 101 years of age. She is buried in Prentiss Cemetery in Prentiss, Mississippi.
References
1905 births
2006 deaths
American centenarians
Women centenarians
Vassar College faculty
Belhaven University alumni
Tulane University alumni
University of Chicago alumni
Mathematics educators
American mathematicians
20th-century American mathematicians
Women mathematicians
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20most-watched%20Netflix%20original%20programming
|
This is a list of most-watched Netflix original programming in total hours viewed, in the first 28 days of being uploaded to Netflix. These statistics are released by Netflix based on its proprietary engagement metrics.
Television series
Television shows on Netflix with over 500 million views in their first 28 days.
Films
Films on Netflix with over 100 million views in their first 28 days.
References
External links
Netflix
Netflix lists
Netflix
Netflix
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%BDivko%20Kusti%C4%87
|
Živko Kustić (12 December 1930 – 19 July 2014) was a Croatian writer. Kustić studied mathematics, physics, and theology at the University of Zagreb before being ordained as a priest of the Greek Catholic Church of Croatia and Serbia in Žumberak in 1958. He was the editor of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb-published weekly Glas Koncila from 1963 until 1990. In 1993, Kustić was appointed the first editor-in-chief of the established by the Episcopal Conference of Croatia. He held the position until 1999. Kustić died in Zagreb in 2014. During the Croatian Spring, among many others, Kustić was accused of stirring up Croatian nationalist views.
References
1930 births
2014 deaths
Writers from Split, Croatia
20th-century Croatian writers
20th-century Croatian Roman Catholic priests
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20Silvester
|
David James Silvester (born 26 December 1958) is a Scottish numerical analyst. He has a Chair in Numerical Analysis and is the Head of Applied Mathematics in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Manchester.
Silvester was born in Dumfries, but was educated at Ysgol Ardudwy (Wales) and the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST), from which he gained his B.Sc. in Mathematics (1980) and Ph.D. in Numerical Analysis (1983). His Ph.D. thesis (An Analysis of Finite Element Approximation for Swirling Flow) was supervised by Ronald Thatcher. He was appointed lecturer in Mathematics at UMIST in 1984, and later promoted to Senior Lecturer and Reader. In 2003 he was promoted to a personal Chair of Numerical Analysis. Silvester held visiting positions in the Computer Science Department at Stanford University in 1991 (as a Fulbright Senior Fellow) and in 1999, at the University of Maryland (1994), the University of the Littoral Opal Coast (2009), and the University of Heidelberg (2019).
Silvester is best known for his work on finite element methods, fast iterative solvers for fluid dynamics, and uncertainty quantification. He has more than 65 refereed publications on topics such as iterative solution of Stokes and Navier–Stokes systems, preconditioning, and error estimation in finite element methods. Silvester's books include Finite Elements and Fast Iterative Solvers: With Applications in Incompressible Fluid Dynamics and Essential Partial Differential Equations.
Silvester has served as the elected President of the UK and Republic of Ireland section of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (2009–2011). He is on the editorial board of the Journal of Scientific Computing.
References
External links
Homepage
1958 births
Living people
Academics of the University of Manchester
Alumni of the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology
20th-century Scottish mathematicians
21st-century Scottish mathematicians
Numerical analysts
People from Dumfries
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marko%20Perkovi%C4%87%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201991%29
|
Marko Perković (born 30 August 1991) is a Croatian footballer who plays for Hungarian side MTK Budapest II as a defender.
Career statistics
Club
References
External links
1991 births
Living people
People from Slavonski Brod
Men's association football defenders
Croatian men's footballers
Croatian expatriate men's footballers
HNK Cibalia players
NK Radomlje players
NK Krško players
Knattspyrnufélagið Víkingur players
RNK Split players
NK Široki Brijeg players
NK Brežice 1919 players
NK Olimpija Ljubljana (2005) players
MTK Budapest FC players
First Football League (Croatia) players
Slovenian PrvaLiga players
Úrvalsdeild karla (football) players
Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina players
Slovenian Second League players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Expatriate men's footballers in Belgium
Expatriate men's footballers in Slovenia
Expatriate men's footballers in Iceland
Expatriate men's footballers in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Expatriate men's footballers in Hungary
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Belgium
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Slovenia
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Iceland
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatian expatriate sportspeople in Hungary
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary%20Michel%20Boulus
|
Sister Mary Michel Boulus (born Jumela Ann Boulus, July 27, 1926 – December 9, 2012) was an American Catholic nun, mathematics teacher, and academic administrator who became president of Sacred Heart College in North Carolina.
Life and career
Boulus was born on July 27, 1926, in China Grove, North Carolina, the daughter of Lebanese Catholic immigrants. After graduating from Concord High School, a public high school in North Carolina, she became a student at the Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina, now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her activities there included participation in the Catholic Students organization, the Square Circle mathematics society, and the campus Service League, and service as president of the Interfaith Council.
After graduating in 1947, she returned to Concord High School as a mathematics teacher, while also studying guidance and law at Columbia University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She joined the Sisters of Mercy as a postulant in 1949, and over the next years became a teacher at two local Catholic high schools. In 1959 she completed a master's degree in mathematics at John Carroll University, a Catholic university in Ohio, and by 1966 she was working as an instructor at Sacred Heart College. She was named treasurer of the college in 1967, and president in 1975.
The Lebanese Civil War roughly coincided in time with her term as president, and she worked to provide US scholarships for Lebanese students displaced by the war. Although she was active in starting new programs at Sacred Heart College, the school closed for lack of students and funding in 1987, and its facilities are now used by Belmont Abbey College.
In later life, Boulus continued to work as director of food services at her convent. She died on December 9, 2012.
Recognition
Boulos was given honorary doctorates by the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 1977, recognizing her as their first graduate lead a four-year college or university, and by Belmont Abbey College recognizing her efforts at starting new programs at Sacred Heart College, some of which continued at Belmont Abbey. UNC Greensboro also gave her their Alumni Distinguished Service Award, in the same year.
In 2011, Lebanese president Michel Suleiman gave her the Presidential Shield of the Republic of Lebanon.
References
External links
1926 births
2012 deaths
People from China Grove, North Carolina
American people of Lebanese descent
20th-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
University of North Carolina at Greensboro alumni
John Carroll University alumni
Sisters of Mercy
20th-century American Roman Catholic nuns
21st-century American Roman Catholic nuns
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor%20Makarikhin
|
Igor Yuryevich Makarikhin (born 18 June 1964, Perm) is a Russian Physicist, Doctor of Physics and Mathematics, who achieved the positions of a professor, a vice-rector of Academic Affairs (2002–2010), was a rector of Perm University.
Biography
Makarikhin graduated from Alexander Pushkin School No. 9 in Perm (Physics and Mathematics School) (1981) and the Faculty of Physics of Perm University (1986).
From 1985 to 1988, he was working as an engineer, from 1988 to 1995, as an assistant of the Department of General Physics of Perm University. From 1986 to 1988, he pursued the Postgraduate studies at the Department of General Physics.
Since 1996, he has been the Head of the Computer Network Informatization Department of the PSU ICC, since 1997, a university professor of Perm University of the Faculty of Physics.
From 1997 to 1999, he was a program coordinator of Open Society Institute (Soros Foundation) in Perm Krai.
From 1998 to 2002, he was the leader of the Educational and Methodological Department of Perm University
Concurrently, from 1999 to 2000, he was working as a leading programmer of the Department of Information and Computing Systems of the ICS PSU, since 2000 — as a senior professor and, from 2000 to 2011, — Associate professor as an Associate Professor of the Department of General Physics. In 2000, he defended his thesis titled "Electroconvective instability of flows of a weakly conducting liquid in a vertical capacitor" and was awarded the rank of Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences.
Starting from May 2002, he was appointed Vice-Rector for Academic Affairs of Perm University.
On 6 May 2010 he defended his doctoral thesis "Dissipative structures and non-stationary processes in interphase hydrodynamics" at the Institute of Continuous Media Mechanics Russian Academy of Sciences Ural Branch.
Later, on 26 May 2010, he was elected the rector of Perm University at the conference of scientific and pedagogical workers and representatives of other categories of workers and students; Re-elected in 2015. Currently, he is also a Professor of the Department of General Physics of PSU. Since July 2020, he has been working as an Advisor to the Rector of PSU.
On 7 April 2014, Makarikhin initiated the Endowment Fund of Perm University was created.
In 2021, he stood in the election as an independent candidate in District No. 11 in 2021 Russian regional elections in Perm City Duma, won about 15% of the votes.
Organizational and administrative activities
From 1996 to 2002, Makarikhin was one of the creators of the University Internet Center (UIC).
From 2003 to 2006, he led the creation of an automated educational process management system, which was a part of the unified teleinformation system of the university.
In 2004, Makarikhin was one of the creators of the concept of the University Stabilization Fund, which helped significantly to increase the salaries of academic staff and educational support staff of PSU.
From 2005 to 2
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9%20Soto%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202002%29
|
José David Soto Peceros (born 21 March 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a left-back for UTC.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Peruvian Primera División players
Esther Grande footballers
Club Universitario de Deportes footballers
Cienciano footballers
Universidad Técnica de Cajamarca footballers
People from Andahuaylas Province
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jes%C3%BAs%20Reyes%20%28footballer%29
|
Jesús Alexander Piero Reyes Espinoza (born 11 January 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a right-back for Santos de Nasca, on loan from Sporting Cristal.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Peruvian Segunda División players
Sporting Cristal footballers
Santos de Nasca players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9%20Racchumick
|
José Antonio Racchumick Torres (born 1 January 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a centre-back for Club Sportivo Cienciano.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
People from Talara
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Peruvian Primera División players
Peruvian Segunda División players
Sporting Cristal footballers
Sport Boys footballers
Cienciano footballers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diego%20Enr%C3%ADquez
|
Diego Mauricio Enríquez Gutiérrez (born 24 January 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for UTC, on loan from Sporting Cristal.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Peruvian Primera División players
Sporting Cristal footballers
Cienciano footballers
Cusco FC footballers
Universidad Técnica de Cajamarca footballers
People from Abancay Province
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massimo%20Sandi
|
Massimo Enrique Sandi Béjar (born 12 May 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Cienciano, on loan from Alianza Lima.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Footballers from Lima
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Peruvian Primera División players
Club Alianza Lima footballers
Cienciano footballers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedro%20de%20la%20Cruz
|
Pedro Giampier de la Cruz Espinoza (born 15 January 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Santos de Nasca, on loan from Alianza Lima.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Footballers from Lima
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Peruvian Segunda División players
Club Alianza Lima footballers
Santos de Nasca players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos%20Meza
|
Carlos Daniel Meza Villa (born 31 October 2002) is a Peruvian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Cienciano.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Peruvian men's footballers
Peru men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Peruvian Primera División players
Sporting Cristal footballers
Carlos A. Mannucci players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabinho%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202002%29
|
Fábio Silva de Freitas (born 9 April 2002), commonly known as Fabinho, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as an midfielder for Palmeiras.
Career statistics
Club
Honours
Palmeiras
Copa Libertadores: 2021
Brasileiro 2023
Reserva contra o Atlético MG em 2023
References
2002 births
Living people
Footballers from Natal, Rio Grande do Norte
Brazilian men's footballers
Brazil men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players
Sociedade Esportiva Palmeiras players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federico%20Losas
|
Federico Gabriel Losas (born 28 March 2002) is an Argentine footballer currently playing as a goalkeeper for Chacarita Juniors.
Career statistics
Club
Began playing for Chacarita Juniors at age 11.
South America U15 Winner San Juan Argentina Nov 2017.
Four Nations U16 Runner Up Mexico City Oct 2018.
South America U17 Winner Lima Apr 2019.
Granatkin Memorial U17 Winner Saint Petersburg Jun 2019.
Played for Argentina at U17 World Cup Brazil 2019.
Played more than 50 international cups with Argentina U15, U16 and U17.
In April 19th 2021 he made his first team debut with a cleansheet in a host game vs Belgrano (2-0). He became the youngest goalkeeper playing in Primera Nacional, keeping this record for 14 months .He was also the youngest goalkeeper playing a full time match including the two first categories in Argentine football.
References
2002 births
Living people
Footballers from Buenos Aires
Argentine men's footballers
Argentina men's youth international footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
Primera Nacional players
Chacarita Juniors footballers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Kent
|
Michael Kent may refer to:
Michael Kent (businessman), Australian businessman
Michael Kent (computer specialist), co-founded the Computer Group which used a statistics-based system to predict college football results
Michael Kent (comedian), American comedian and magician
Michael Kent (footballer), English footballer
Prince Michael of Kent, member of the British royal family
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reducing%20subspace
|
In linear algebra, a reducing subspace of a linear map from a Hilbert space to itself is an invariant subspace of whose orthogonal complement is also an invariant subspace of That is, and One says that the subspace reduces the map
One says that a linear map is reducible if it has a nontrivial reducing subspace. Otherwise one says it is irreducible.
If is of finite dimension and is a reducing subspace of the map represented under basis by matrix then can be expressed as the sum
where is the matrix of the orthogonal projection from to and is the matrix of the projection onto (Here is the identity matrix.)
Furthermore, has an orthonormal basis with a subset that is an orthonormal basis of . If is the transition matrix from to then with respect to the matrix representing is a block-diagonal matrix
with where , and
References
Linear algebra
Matrices
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emilio%20Gagliardo
|
Emilio Gagliardo (5 November 1930, Genoa – 15 August 2008, Genoa) was an Italian mathematician working in the field of Analysis.
Life
He did his PhD in Algebraic Geometry at the University of Genoa with Eugenio Togliatti and graduated in 1953.He then became an assistant of Guido Stampacchia and started to study partial differential equations. In 1959 he got his Habilitation and spend some time abroad with Nachman Aronszajn at the University of Kansas and with Jacques-Louis Lions in Nancy. In 1961 he became Professor in Genoa. From 1968 to 1975 he was at the University of Oregon and since 1975 at the University of Padua.
His main contributions are to the field of parabolic partial differential equations, interpolation in Banach spaces, and Sobolev spaces.
1964 was awarded the Caccioppoli Prize.
Selected works
Ulteriori proprietà di alcune classi di funzioni in più variabili, Ricerche Mat., 8, 1959, 24–52
Caratterizzazioni delle tracce sulla frontiera relative ad alcune classi di funzioni in n variabili, Rend. Sem. Mat. Univ. Padova, 27, 1957, 284–305
with Nachman Aronszajn: Interpolation spaces and interpolation methods, Ann. Mat. Pura Appl., 68, 1965, 51–117
References
Enrico Magenes, obituary in Notiziario UMI, 2009
1930 births
2008 deaths
20th-century Italian mathematicians
21st-century Italian mathematicians
PDE theorists
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah%20Abramowitz
|
Sarah Knapp Abramowitz (born 1967) is an American statistician specializing in statistics education and known for her textbooks on the use of statistical software packages. She is the John H. Evans Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science at Drew University, where she chairs the Mathematics & Computer Science Department.
Education and career
Abramowitz majored in mathematics at Cornell University, graduating in 1989, and earned a master's degree in mathematics in 1992 from Stony Brook University. She switched to mathematics education for her doctoral studies, completing her Ph.D. in 1999 at New York University. Her dissertation was A computer-enhanced course in descriptive statistics at the college level: An analysis of student achievement and attitudes, and was supervised by Sharon L. Weinberg.
While still a graduate student, she worked as an adjunct assistant professor of mathematics at St. Francis College.
She joined the Drew University faculty as an assistant professor in 1998, was tenured as an associate professor in 2004, and was promoted to full professor in 2011. She was named Evans Professor in 2021. At Drew, she has also served as the faculty representative to the NCAA for Drew's athletics program.
Books
With her doctoral advisor, Sharon L. Weinberg, Abramowitz is the co-author of a series of textbooks on statistical software packages:
Data Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences Using SPSS (2002)
Statistics Using SPSS: An Integrative Approach (2nd ed., 2008)
Statistics Using IBM SPSS: An Integrative Approach (3rd ed., 2016)
Statistics Using Stata: An Integrative Approach (2016)
Statistics Using R: An Integrative Approach (also with Daphna Harel, 2020)
References
External links
Home page
</ref>
1967 births
Living people
American statisticians
American women statisticians
Statistics educators
Cornell University alumni
Stony Brook University alumni
Drew University faculty
21st-century American women scientists
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20H.%20Schmid
|
Christopher H. Schmid is a Professor of Biostatistics and chair of the Department of Biostatistics at the Brown University School of Public Health. Schmid was a founding member formerly Co-Director of Brown's Center for Evidence Synthesis in Health.
Schmid grew up in Bethesda, Maryland. He earned a bachelor of arts in mathematics from Haverford College and a Ph.D. in statistics from Harvard University. After receiving his doctorate, he joined Tufts-New England Medical Center where he worked on predictive models for patients who had heart attacks and were candidates for thrombolysis. Schmid remained at Tufts from 1991 to 2012 ultimately directing the Biostatistics Research Center, at the Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies. In 2012, he moved to Brown University, where he co-founded the Center for Evidence Synthesis in Health with Joseph Lau and Tom Trikalinos.
Schmid has been a fellow of the American Statistical Association since 2010 and chaired the Health Policy Statistics Section of the ASA in 2013. He served as president of the Society for Research Synthesis Methodology from 2018 to 2019.
References
External links
American statisticians
Biostatisticians
Haverford College alumni
Harvard University alumni
Brown University faculty
People from Bethesda, Maryland
Year of birth missing (living people)
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
Living people
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord%20diagram%20%28mathematics%29
|
In mathematics, a chord diagram consists of a cyclic order on a set of objects, together with a one-to-one pairing (perfect matching) of those objects. Chord diagrams are conventionally visualized by arranging the objects in their order around a circle, and drawing the pairs of the matching as chords of the circle.
The number of different chord diagrams that may be given for a set of cyclically ordered objects is the double factorial . There is a Catalan number of chord diagrams on a given ordered set in which no two chords cross each other. The crossing pattern of chords in a chord diagram may be described by a circle graph, the intersection graph of the chords: it has a vertex for each chord and an edge for each two chords that cross.
In knot theory, a chord diagram can be used to describe the sequence of crossings along the planar projection of a knot, with each point at which a crossing occurs paired with the point that crosses it. To fully describe the knot, the diagram should be annotated with an extra bit of information for each pair, indicating which point crosses over and which crosses under at that crossing. With this extra information, the chord diagram of a knot is called a Gauss diagram. In the Gauss diagram of a knot, every chord crosses an even number of other chords, or equivalently each pair in the diagram connects a point in an even position of the cyclic order with a point in an odd position, and sometimes this is used as a defining condition of Gauss diagrams.
In algebraic geometry, chord diagrams can be used to represent the singularities of algebraic plane curves.
References
Knot theory
Matching (graph theory)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsuki%20Yamanaka
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Thespakusatsu Gunma.
Career statistics
Club
.
Notes
References
External links
2001 births
Living people
Association football people from Saitama Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
J2 League players
J3 League players
Thespakusatsu Gunma players
AC Nagano Parceiro players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamato%20Naito
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a forward for Ventforet Kofu.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
2004 births
Living people
Association football people from Yamanashi Prefecture
Japanese men's footballers
Japan men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
J2 League players
Ventforet Kofu players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidenori%20Takahashi
|
is a Japanese footballer currently playing as a defender for Renofa Yamaguchi.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
External links
1998 births
Living people
Association football people from Chiba (city)
Japanese men's footballers
Men's association football defenders
J2 League players
Renofa Yamaguchi FC players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agust%C3%ADn%20Rodr%C3%ADguez%20%28footballer%2C%20born%202004%29
|
Agustín Javier Rodríguez (born 2 May 2004) is an Argentine footballer currently playing as a midfielder for Lanús.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2004 births
Living people
Footballers from Lomas de Zamora
Footballers from Buenos Aires
Argentine men's footballers
Argentina men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Argentine Primera División players
Club Atlético Lanús footballers
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnab%C3%A1s%20Biben
|
Barnabás Biben (born 19 November 2003) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for MTK Budapest.
Career statistics
.
References
External links
2003 births
Footballers from Budapest
Living people
Hungarian men's footballers
Hungary men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
MTK Budapest FC players
III. Kerületi TVE footballers
Szentlőrinci SE footballers
Tiszakécske FC footballers
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Nemzeti Bajnokság II players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinton%20Osei
|
Clinton Osei (born 17 March 2002) is a Ghanaian professional footballer who plays for Romanian club ACS Târgu Mureș 1898.
Career statistics
.
References
External links
2002 births
Living people
Ghanaian men's footballers
Ghanaian expatriate men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
MTK Budapest FC players
Kozármisleny SE footballers
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Nemzeti Bajnokság II players
Expatriate men's footballers in Hungary
Ghanaian expatriate sportspeople in Hungary
Expatriate men's footballers in Romania
Ghanaian expatriate sportspeople in Romania
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elijah%20Lidonde
|
Elijah Lidonde is a Kenyan former footballer. He was capped 26 times for the Kenya national football team between 1950 and 1961, scoring 33 goals.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list Kenya's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
Kenyan men's footballers
Kenya men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetsu%20Tamura
|
Tetsu Tamura (also known as "S. Tetsu Tamura"; birth name: Satoru Tamura); October 18, 1876August 19, 1909) was a Japanese meteorologist and oceanographer, who utilized higher mathematics, active in the United States (U.S. National Weather Service) before Syukuro Manabe (2021 Nobel Prize in Physics) and Japan during the Meiji era. Tamura helped Cleveland Abbe (head of the NWS) as his assistant specialized in physico-mathematical theory for three years (19031906) until his returning to Japan and frequently published articles to Science magazine, Weekly Weather Review, etc. as listed below. He was also a pedagogist of the comparative educational system. He taught at the Naval War College, Tokyo Higher Normal School (now University of Tsukuba), and Waseda University.
Early life
On October 18, 1876 (Meiji 9), Tamura was born in Yonezawa, Yamagata, Japan. He was the third son of Yoshimasa Tamura, a samurai of the Yonezawa Domain (Uesugi clan). In his autobiography, Tamura writes that his father survived the fierce battle of Koguriyama in Hokuetsu (Northern Niigata) during the Boshin War (1868–1869), and that the family was "as poor as a church mouse."
In July 1892 (Meiji 25), he was graduated from the Yonezawa Chugakko (now Yamagata Prefectural Yonezawa Kojokan High School), a five-year secondary school run by the Uesugi clan, and left home on March 15 of the following spring to enter the Aoyama Gakuin College (now Aoyama Gakuin University). He worked as a schoolboy and janitor while studying at Aoyama Gakuin College. When he studied higher mathematics by himself in this college, Tamura found some mistakes in a book of "determinants" and communicated with the author. The author's response with appreciation would later encourage him to study abroad.
The event that Seitaro Goto (1867–1935), who was then a lecturer in zoology at Aoyama Gakuin, went to the United States with a scholarship from Johns Hopkins University was the motivation and hope for Tamura's subsequent trip to the United States. Tamura would, in fact, later obtain at least three different scholarships from U.S. universities He was graduated from Aoyama Gakuin College in March 1896 (Meiji 29), as listed in Aoyama Gakuin University Alumni Record (Aoyama Gakuin Resource Center).
The next year, in April 1897 (Meiji 30), he taught mathematics and English at Aichi Prefectural Normal School in Nagoya, introduced by Nobuta Kishimoto (1866–1928) and Ryokichi Yatabe (1851–1899), and the following year 1898 (Meiji 31), in April, he was ready to travel to the United States. His destination was Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa, where he received his first scholarship. The ship was the City of Peking from Yokohama to San Francisco via Honolulu.
Study and research in the U.S.A.
For the following educational backgrounds and training timelines, while referring to his autographed résumé and his autobiography, "Nine Years Abroad," the inconsistencies and inaccuracies between these two sources are co
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helge%20Andersson%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201897%29
|
Helge Valentin Andersson (25 June 1897 – 5 February 1976) was a Swedish footballer who played for Hammarby. He featured twice for the Sweden national football team in 1921 and 1922.
Career statistics
International
References
1897 births
1976 deaths
Footballers from Stockholm
Swedish men's footballers
Sweden men's international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Hammarby Fotboll players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertil%20Johansson%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201929%29
|
Axel Elof Bertil Johansson (19 March 1929 – 15 November 2005) was a Swedish footballer. He featured once for the Sweden national football team in 1952.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
References
1929 births
2005 deaths
Footballers from Helsingborg
Swedish men's footballers
Sweden men's international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf%20Hanel
|
Rudolf Hanel was an Austrian footballer who played for a number of clubs in Austria. He featured twice for the Austria national football team in 1926, scoring two goals.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list Austria's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
Footballers from Vienna
Austrian men's footballers
Austria men's international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Wiener AC players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20Hughes%20%28South%20African%20soccer%29
|
Peter Hughes was a South African footballer. He featured in a number of games for the South Africa national soccer team in 1955, scoring nine times in five appearances.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list South Africa's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's international soccer players
Men's association football players not categorized by position
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald%20Wilson%20%28South%20African%20soccer%29
|
Donald Wilson was a South African footballer. He featured in a number of games for the South Africa national soccer team in 1947, scoring eleven times in nine appearances.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list South Africa's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's international soccer players
Men's association football players not categorized by position
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian%20Palmer%20%28soccer%2C%20fl.%201955%29
|
Ian Palmer was a South African footballer. He played in four games for the South Africa national soccer team in 1955, scoring four times.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list South Africa's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
South African men's soccer players
South Africa men's international soccer players
Men's association football players not categorized by position
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie%20Duflo
|
Marie Duflo (19 August 1940 – 15 September 2019) was a French probability theorist, and left-wing internationalist activist, known for her books on probability theory and random processes and on Nicaraguan politics.
Education and career
Duflo was an alumna of the École normale supérieure de jeunes filles, promoted in 1959, and completed a doctorate (Doctorat d'État) at the University of Paris in 1969, with the dissertation Opérateurs potentiels des chaînes et des processus de Markov irréductibles supervised by Jacques Neveu. She became a professor at Université Paris-Nord and the University of Marne-la-Vallée.
Activism
Duflo was active in French left-wing circles concerning Latin America. In 1968, she attended a Cultural Congress in Havana with several other French mathematicians. In the 1980s, she took over the responsibility for Central American affairs in the French Socialist Party when Nicole Bourdillat stepped up to head Latin American affairs more generally for the party, and later under Louis Le Pensec she became the head of Latin American affairs for the party herself.
By 2006, when she signed an open letter in support of undocumented students in France, she had retired from Marne-la-Vallée as a professor emerita. She spent her retirement as an activist for the rights of foreigners in France, and a 2020 paper on the legal treatment of noncitizens in overseas France was dedicated in her memory.
Books
Her books include:
Décisions statistiques pas à pas [Statistical decisions step by step] (with Danielle Florens-Zmirou, CIMPA, 1981)
Probabilités et statistiques (two volumes, with Didier Dacunha-Castelle, Masson, 1982; also published with two separate volumes of exercises; translated into English by David McHale as Probability and statistics, Springer, 1986)
Le volcan nicaraguayen [The Nicaraguan Volcano] (edited with Françoise Ruellan, La découverte, 1985)
Méthodes récursives aléatoires (Masson, 1990, revised and translated into English by Stephen S. Wilson as Random iterative models, Springer, 1997)
Algorithmes stochastiques [Stochastic algorithms] (Springer, 1996)
References
1940 births
2019 deaths
French mathematicians
French women mathematicians
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ng%20Man%20Hei
|
Ng Man Hei (; born 13 November 2000) is a Hong Kong professional footballer who currently plays for Hong Kong Premier League club HK U23.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
Honours
Individual
Hong Kong Second Division Golden Boot: 2018–19
References
Living people
2000 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Hong Kong First Division League players
Hong Kong Premier League players
Tai Po FC players
Hong Kong Pegasus FC players
HK U23 Football Team players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich%20Wieleitner
|
Heinrich Wieleitner (31 October 1874 – 27 December 1931) was a German mathematician and historian of mathematics. He became an honorary professor of mathematics at the University of Munich but for much of his career worked in school- and college-level education.
Wieleitner was born in Wasserburg and was educated at the Catholic seminaries at Scheyern and Freising in theology but took an interest in mathematics, joining the University of Munich. He received a Lamont scholarship proposed by C. L. F. Lindemann and went on to receive a doctorate on third order surfaces (Über die Flächen dritter Ordnung mit Ovalpunkten) in 1901. He then became a mathematics teacher at the Speyer Gymnasium and in 1909 moved to Pirmasens before returning to Speyer as a headmaster of the Realschule. In 1926 he was promoted Oberstudiendirektor at Munich. He became interested in Italian work on geometry following his attendance of the International Congress of Mathematicians held at Heidelberg (1904) and Rome (1908), leading to translations of an article by Gino Loria and he worked on a German edition of Pascal's work along with Edgardo Ciani. Arnold Sommerfeld suggested that he do his habilitation, and so he held lectures on the history of mathematics at the University of Munich from 1928 and in 1930 he was made an honorary professor. Wieleitner worked on an unfinished manuscript by Anton von Braunmühl (died in 1908) on the history of mathematics after Braunmühl and Siegmund Günther had worked on a history, Geschichte der Mathematik, the first volume of which came out in 1908. Wieleitner later published a history of mathematical ideas that did not spend too much space on the biographies of people involved which was published by Sammlung Göschen between 1922 and 1923. He also contributed to a translation of the trigonometry of Al-Biruni by Julius Ruska.
Selected publications
Geschichte der Mathematik (Volume 1, 1922) (1908 edition)
Spezielle ebene kurven (1908)
References
External links
Portrait at the International Academy of the History of Science
20th-century German mathematicians
1874 births
1931 deaths
People from Wasserburg am Inn
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underpowered
|
Underpowered may refer to:
Underpowered (statistics)
Underpowered (game design)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecuador%20national%20football%20team%20results%20%282000%E2%80%932019%29
|
This page details the match results and statistics of the Ecuador national football team from 2000 to 2019.
Key
Key to matches
Att.=Match attendance
(H)=Home ground
(A)=Away ground
(N)=Neutral ground
Key to record by opponent
Pld=Games played
W=Games won
D=Games drawn
L=Games lost
GF=Goals for
GA=Goals against
Results
Ecuador's score is shown first in each case.
Record by opponent
References
Ecuador national football team results
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eamonn%20O%27Brien%20%28mathematician%29
|
Eamonn Anthony O'Brien is a professor of mathematics at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, known for his work in computational group theory and -groups.
Education
O'Brien obtained his B.Sc. (Hons) from the National University of Ireland (Galway) in 1983.
He completed his Ph.D. in 1988 at the Australian National University. His dissertation, The Groups of Order Dividing 256, was supervised by Michael F. Newman.
Research
O'Brien's early work concerned classification, up to isomorphism, of groups of order 256. He developed early computer software to complete the classification, and to verify that the classification can correct errors in earlier counting. This led to classifications of many further families of small order groups. In 2000, together with Bettina Eick and Hans Ulrich Besche, O'Brien classified all groups of order at most 2000, excluding those of order 1024. The groups of order 1024 were instead enumerated. This classification is known as the Small Groups Library. Later with Michael F. Newman and Michael Vaughan-Lee O'Brien extended the classifications of groups of order , , and . These classifications comprise the tables provided in the computer algebra systems SageMath, GAP, and Magma.
For a 20-year span from the mid-1990s, O'Brien led the
so-called Matrix Group Recognition Project whose primary objective is to
solve the following problem: given a list of invertible matrices over a finite field, determine the composition series of the group.
Implementations of algorithms that realize the goals of this project form the bedrock of matrix group computations in the computer
algebra system Magma.
O'Brien's collaborations include resolution of several conjectures include the Ore conjecture, according to which all elements of non-abelian finite simple groups are commutators.
Awards
2021 New Zealand Mathematical Society Kalman Prize
2021 University of Auckland Research Excellence Medal
2020 Hector Medal, Royal Society of New Zealand.
2009 Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand
2004 New Zealand Mathematics Research Award
1995 Humboldt Fellow,
Selected publications
References
External links
Personal homepage
List of Publications
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Group theorists
New Zealand mathematicians
Australian National University alumni
Academic staff of the University of Auckland
Fellows of the Royal Society of New Zealand
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cho%20Sang-jun
|
Cho Sang-jun (; born 11 July 1999) is a Korean professional footballer currently playing as a forward for Seongnam FC.
Career statistics
Club
References
1999 births
Living people
South Korean men's footballers
South Korea men's youth international footballers
Men's association football forwards
K League 1 players
Suwon FC players
Ansan Greeners FC players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl%20Kunisch
|
Karl Kunisch (born September 16, 1952 in Linz) is an Austrian mathematician.
Life and work
Kunisch studied mathematics at the Graz University of Technology and at the Northwestern University, Evanston, USA. After his doctorate in 1978 at the Graz University of Technology on the topic of neutral functional-differential equations and semigroup theory, he obtained his habilitation in 1980 at the same university. In the following years, he repeatedly held visiting professor positions at the Lefschetz Center for Dynamical Systems of Brown University, USA.
From 1986 to 1993, Kunisch held a professor position at the Graz University of Technology before moving to the Technical University of Berlin. In 1996, he became Professor of Optimization and Optimal Control at the University of Graz, where he retired in the fall of 2020. Since 2012, he is also Scientific Director of the Johann Radon Institute for Computational and Applied Mathematics (RICAM) in Linz.
Kunisch authored over 360 publications in peer-reviewed journals as well as several books.
He is a member of the editorial board of several mathematical journals including the SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, and the Journal of the European Mathematical Society.
Between 2007 and 2018, Kunisch was speaker of the collaborative research center Mathematical Optimization and Applications in Biomedical Sciences. funded by the Austrian Science Fund.
In 2008, he was awarded the Alwin-Walther medal of the Technische Universität Darmstadt.
Kunisch was invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Hyderabad, 2010.
In 2015, he received an Advanced Grant of the European Research Council on the topic of From Open to Closed Loop Control.
Since 2017, he is a SIAM Fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM).
He was awarded the W. T. and Idalia Reid Prize 2021.
Research areas
Optimization of partial differential equations
Mathematical control theory
Inverse problems and mathematical imaging
Mathematical modelling in medicine
Model reduction
Scientific computing
Mathematical data science
Neutral functional-differential equations
Publications (selected)
References
1952 births
Living people
20th-century Austrian mathematicians
Fellows of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
People from Linz
21st-century Austrian mathematicians
Academic staff of the Graz University of Technology
Academic staff of the University of Graz
Graz University of Technology alumni
Academic staff of the Technical University of Berlin
Northwestern University alumni
Austrian expatriates in the United States
Austrian expatriates in Germany
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theoni%20Pappas
|
Theoni Pappas (born 1944) is an American mathematics teacher known for her books and calendars concerning popular mathematics.
Pappas is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, and earned a master's degree at Stanford University. She became a high school mathematics teacher in 1967.
She is the author of books including:
Mathematics Appreciation (1986)
The Joy of Mathematics (1986)
Greek Cooking for Everyone (with Elvira Monroe, 1989)
Math Talk: Mathematical Ideas in Poems for Two Voices (1991)
More Joy of Mathematics: Exploring Mathematics All around You (1991)
Fractals, Googols, and Other Mathematical Tales (1993)
The Magic of Mathematics: Discovering the Spell of Mathematics (1994)
The Music of Reason: Experience the Beauty of Mathematics through Quotations (1995)
Math for Kids & Other People Too! (1997)
The Adventures of Penrose: The Mathematical Cat (1997)
Mathematical Scandals (1997)
Math-a-Day: A Book of Days for Your Mathematical Year (1999)
Mathematical Footprints: Discovering Mathematical Impressions All around Us (1999)
Math Stuff (2002)
Further Adventures of Penrose the Mathematical Cat (2004)
Mathematical Snippets: Exploring Mathematical Ideas in Small Bites (2008)
Numbers and Other Math Ideas Come Alive (2012)
Do the Math! Math Challenges to Exercise Your Mind (2015)
More Math Adventures with Penrose the Mathematical Cat (2017)
Mathematical Journeys: Math Ideas and the Secrets They Hold (2021)
Additionally, she has written a series of annual mathematics calendars in various editions.
References
Further reading
Pappas is profiled in
1944 births
Living people
University of California, Berkeley alumni
Stanford University alumni
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Mathematics educators
20th-century American women
21st-century American women
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry%20Johnston%20%28Irish%20footballer%29
|
Harold "Harry" Johnston was an Irish footballer who played for Portadown. He featured once for the Ireland national football team in 1927, scoring two goals.
Career statistics
International
International goals
Scores and results list Ireland's goal tally first.
References
Date of birth unknown
Date of death unknown
Pre-1950 IFA men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards
Portadown F.C. players
Men's association footballers from Northern Ireland
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predictive%20policing
|
Predictive policing is the usage of mathematics, predictive analytics, and other analytical techniques in law enforcement to identify potential criminal activity. A report published by the RAND Corporation identified four general categories predictive policing methods fall into: methods for predicting crimes, methods for predicting offenders, methods for predicting perpetrators' identities, and methods for predicting victims of crime.
Methodology
Predictive policing uses data on the times, locations and nature of past crimes to provide insight to police strategists concerning where, and at what times, police patrols should patrol, or maintain a presence, in order to make the best use of resources or to have the greatest chance of deterring or preventing future crimes. This type of policing detects signals and patterns in crime reports to anticipate if crime will spike, when a shooting may occur, where the next car will be broken into, and who the next crime victim will be. Algorithms are produced by taking into account these factors, which consist of large amounts of data that can be analyzed. The use of algorithms creates a more effective approach that speeds up the process of predictive policing since it can quickly factor in different variables to produce an automated outcome. From the predictions the algorithm generates, they should be coupled with a prevention strategy, which typically sends an officer to the predicted time and place of the crime. The use of automated predictive policing supplies a more accurate and efficient process when looking at future crimes because there is data to back up decisions, rather than just the instincts of police officers. By having police use information from predictive policing, they are able to anticipate the concerns of communities, wisely allocate resources to times and places, and prevent victimization.
Police may also use data accumulated on shootings and the sounds of gunfire to identify locations of shootings. The city of Chicago uses data blended from population mapping crime statistics to improve monitoring and identify patterns.
Other approaches
Rather than predicting crime, predictive policing can be used to prevent it. The "AI Ethics of Care" approach recognizes that some locations have greater crime rates as a result of negative environmental conditions. Artificial intelligence can be used to minimize crime by addressing the identified demands.
History
Iraq
At the end of destructive and violent combat operations in April 2003, Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) were placed throughout the streets of Iraq to monitor and rebuttal against US military action with predictive policing. However, the amount of space the IEDs covered were too big for Iraq to take action against each American in the area. This problem introduced the concept of Actionable Hot Spots. Areas that had a lot of action, but were too large to control the areas. This caused Iraq military difficulties in determining the be
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry%20R.%20Davis
|
Barry Robert Davis is an American statistician and public health doctor specializing in the design, conduct, and analysis of clinical trials. He is Professor Emeritus of Biostatistics and Data Science at the University of Texas School of Public Health, where he served as Director of its Coordinating Center for Clinical Trials. He served as President of the Society for Clinical Trials in 2000 and as Chair of the Biometrics Section of the American Statistical Association in 2003.
Education and career
Davis earned a B.S. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1973., an M.D. from the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, and a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics under the supervision of Stuart Geman in the Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University in 1982, based on his dissertation entitled "A Neurobiological Approach to Machine Intelligence." He joined the Division of Applied Mathematics at Brown University as an assistant professor in 1982 and moved in 1983 to the University of Texas School of Public Health where he ultimately was the Guy S. Parcel Chair of Public Health, Professor of Biostatistics and Data Science, and Director of the Coordinating Center for Clinical Trials.
Davis had leadership roles in four influential hypertension clinical trials: the Hypertension Detection and Follow-up Program (HDFP), the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP), the Antihypertensive and Lipid Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT) and the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT); and in stem cell therapy trials for treating heart disease, the Cardiovascular Cell Therapy Research Network.
Recognition
Davis became a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1996, a Fellow of the Society for Clinical Trials in 2007, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2014 for "distinguished contributions to the methodology of clinical trials; the design, monitoring, management, and reporting of influential clinical trials; and leadership to advance public health", and an elected member of the International Statistical Institute in 2015. In 2004 he received the University of Texas Health President's Scholar's Award for his leadership role in the ALLHAT Clinical Trial. He is also a Fellow of the American Heart Association, the American Society of Hypertension, and the American College of Preventive Medicine.
References
Fellows of the American Statistical Association
Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Elected Members of the International Statistical Institute
American public health doctors
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston faculty
Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
Year of birth missing (living people)
Living people
Biostatisticians
Brown University faculty
University of California, San Diego School of Medicine alumni
Brown University alumni
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcel%20B%C5%82achewicz
|
Marcel Błachewicz (born 6 May 2003) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a left-back for GKS Tychy.
Career statistics
Club
References
2003 births
Living people
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Poland men's under-21 international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Ekstraklasa players
I liga players
Legia Warsaw players
Wisła Płock players
Bruk-Bet Termalica Nieciecza players
GKS Tychy players
People from Włocławek
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikodem%20Sujecki
|
Nikodem Sujecki (born 27 February 2003) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Resovia.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Men's association football goalkeepers
III liga players
II liga players
I liga players
UKS SMS Łódź players
Pogoń Szczecin players
Olimpia Grudziądz players
Skra Częstochowa players
Resovia (football) players
People from Kutno
Footballers from Łódź Voivodeship
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Kressner
|
Daniel Kressner (born 7 April 1978) is a German numerical analyst. He has a Chair of Numerical Algorithms and High Performance Computing in the Institute of Mathematics at EPF Lausanne.
Education and career
Kressner was born in Karl-Marx-Stadt. He studied Mathematics at TU Chemnitz from 1997 to 2001 and gained his PhD from TU Berlin in 2004. His PhD thesis ("Numerical Methods and Software for General and Structured Eigenvalue
Problems") was supervised by Volker Mehrmann. He was appointed assistant professor in Applied Mathematics at ETH Zurich in 2007. In 2011 he was appointed tenure-track assistant professor in Mathematics at EPF Lausanne, where he became associate professor in 2012 and full professor in 2017. Kressner held visiting positions as an Emmy Noether Fellow of the DFG at the University of Zagreb in 2005 and Umeå University in 2006. In 2018 he was the John von Neumann visiting professor at TU Munich.
Kressner has been the Editor-in-Chief of ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software in 2017, and he is on the editorial boards of journals including the SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and its Applications, SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, and Linear Algebra and Its Applications.
Research
Kressner is best known for his work on numerical methods, in particular for linear eigenvalue problems, nonlinear eigenvalue problems, and low-rank approximation techniques for matrix problems.
Recognition
He has been awarded a second Leslie Fox Prize for Numerical Analysis from the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications in 2007. In 2011 he received the John Todd Award from the Mathematical Research Institute of Oberwolfach.
He was elected as a Fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, in the 2022 Class of SIAM Fellows, "for contributions in numerical linear and multilinear algebra and scientific computing".
Selected publications
References
External links
Homepage
1978 births
Living people
Numerical analysts
Academic staff of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Chemnitz University of Technology alumni
People from Chemnitz
Academic staff of ETH Zurich
Technical University of Berlin alumni
Mathematics journal editors
German expatriates in Switzerland
21st-century German mathematicians
Fellows of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Atshimene
|
Charles Atshimene (born 5 February 2001) is a Nigerian footballer who plays as a forward for Albanian club Bylis.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
References
2001 births
People from Kebbi State
Living people
Nigerian men's footballers
Nigeria men's international footballers
Men's association football forwards
Warri Wolves F.C. players
Akwa United F.C. players
C.D. Feirense players
Leixões S.C. players
KF Bylis players
Nigeria Professional Football League players
Liga Portugal 2 players
Kategoria Superiore players
Nigerian expatriate men's footballers
Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Albania
Expatriate men's footballers in Albania
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony%20Shimaga
|
Anthony Msonter Shimaga (born 24 August 1997) is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back or defensive midfielder for Liga Portugal 2 club Feirense.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
International
References
1997 births
Living people
Nigerian men's footballers
Nigeria men's international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Men's association football central defenders
Men's association football midfielders
Nigeria Professional Football League players
BCC Lions F.C. players
Lobi Stars F.C. players
Ifeanyi Ubah F.C. players
Rangers International F.C. players
C.D. Feirense players
Nigerian expatriate men's footballers
Nigerian expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
People from Gboko
Sportspeople from Benue State
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise%20Zung-nyi%20Loh
|
Louise Zung-nyi Loh () (March 10, 1900 – April 25, 1981) was a Chinese mathematician, physicist, and educator. She taught mathematics and physics in China from 1925 to 1948, and in the United States after 1948.
Early life and education
Loh was born in Jiangsu. She attended Ginling College in 1920 and 1921, and Wellesley College from 1921 until her graduation in 1924. At Wellesley she was chair of the Chinese students' club. She earned a master's degree in physics and mathematics at Cornell University in 1925. Her thesis at Cornell was titled "The Effect of Temperature on the Absorption of Fluorescein" (1925). She pursued further studies at Oxford from 1935 to 1937. and was a graduate student at the University of Michigan in 1952.
Career
Loh taught mathematics and physics from 1925 to 1948, at Ginling College, Central University, and Hunan University. She was acting dean of Ginling College in 1946 and 1947. She was a founding member of the Chinese Mathematical Society, and a member of the Mathematical Association of America the American Association of Physics Teachers, and the American Physical Society.
During the Nanjing Massacre in 1927, Loh warned foreign faculty at Ginling College of the approaching danger: "It was she who went to every laboratory and class room and ordered foreign teachers to the faculty house at once," recalled a fellow Wellesley alumna. She also retrieved the contents of the college safe, and organized emergency clothing for the evacuees. She was mentioned in missionary Minnie Vautrin's diary, conferring with Vautrin and Wu Yi-fang about the school's future.
Loh returned to the United States in 1948, and taught mathematics and physics at Wellesley College, Smith College, Wilson College, Western College for Women. From 1956 to 1964, she worked as a physicist at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Personal life
Loh died in 1981, aged 81 years, in Ohio. She left money to establish the Louise Zung-nyi Loh Scholarship Fund at Ohio State University, to support students interested in East Asian studies.
References
1900 births
1981 deaths
Chinese educators
Chinese mathematicians
Wellesley College alumni
Wellesley College faculty
Wilson College (Pennsylvania) faculty
People from Jiangsu
Cornell University alumni
Chinese physicians
Chinese emigrants to the United States
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anand%20Pillay
|
Anand Pillay (born 7 May 1951) is a British mathematician and logician working in model theory and its applications in algebra and number theory.
Biography
Pillay studied as an undergraduate at the University of Oxford, obtaining a Bachelor in Mathematics and Philosophy in 1973 at Balliol College. At the University of London, he received his master's degree in mathematics in 1974 and his PhD in 1978 with Wilfrid Hodges at Bedford College, titled Gaifman Operations, Minimal Models, and the Number of Countable Models. In 1978, he was a Royal Society Fellow and visiting scientist at CNRS at Paris Diderot University. After teaching at the University of Manchester starting in 1981 and at McGill University in Canada, he joined the University of Notre Dame as an assistant professor in 1983, where he became an associate professor in 1986 and a full professor in 1988. From 1996 to 2006, he was Swanlund Professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where he is now Professor Emeritus. Since 2005, he has been the Chair of Mathematical Logic at the University of Leeds. He also held positions as a visiting scholar at the Fields Institute in Toronto, at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, and at the Isaac Newton Institute in Cambridge.
Career
Pillay's dissertation work concerned the number of countable models of countable theories; under the influence of the Paris school of model theory, he also worked on stability theory. Later, he dealt with applications of model theory in other areas of mathematics, including Nash manifolds and groups, algebraic theory of differential equations and differential algebra, classification of compact complex manifolds, and diophantine geometry.
Pillay was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Zürich in 1994. In 2009 he was invited to present the Tarski Lectures, titled Compact Spaces, Definability, and Measures, in Model Theory. His three lectures were titled "The Logic Topology", "Lie Groups from Nonstandard Models", and "Measures and Domination". In 2001, he received the Humboldt Foundation's research award, and was also a Humboldt Fellow at the University of Kiel in 1988 and at the University of Freiburg in 1992. In 2011, he gave the Gödel Lecture. He is a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.
Selected works
An introduction to stability theory (Oxford Logic Guides 8). Clarendon Press, Oxford 1983, ISBN 0-19-853186-9.
Geometric Stability Theory (Oxford Logic Guides 32). Clarendon Press, Oxford 1996, ISBN 0-19-853437-X.
with David Marker and Margit Messmer: Model theory of fields (Lecture Notes in Logic 5). Springer, Berlin. 1996, ISBN 3-540-60741-2.
Model Theory and Diophantine Geometry. In: Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. Vol. 34, No. 4, 1997, pp. 405–422, .
Model Theory. In: Notices of the American Mathematical Society. Vol. 47, No. 11, 2000, pp. 1373–1381.
with Deidre Haskell and Charles Steinhorn (ed.): Model theory, alge
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleonora%20Di%20Nezza
|
Eleonora Di Nezza is an Italian mathematician, a CNRS researcher at the Centre de mathématiques Laurent-Schwartz and a professor of mathematics at Ecole Polytechnique, in Palaiseau, France. Her research is at the intersection of various branches of mathematics including complex and differential geometry, and focuses on Kahler geometry.
Education and career
Di Nezza earned her Master's degree in Mathematics from the Sapienza University of Rome, and did her doctoral research between the University of Rome Tor Vergata and Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, France, during which reunified results on fractional Sobolev spaces. Her dissertation was on the
Geometry of complex Monge-Ampère equations on compact Kähler manifolds.
After receiving her PhD, she became a postdoctoral fellow at Imperial College, in London, UK under a Marie Curie Fellowship, during which she joined the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, United States. In 2017 moved to France to join the Institute of Advanced Scientific Studies before becoming a lecturer at Sorbonne University and a professor of mathematics at Ecole Polytechnique. She was awarded the prestigious CNRS bronze Medal in 2021.
References
External links
https://www.ihes.fr/entretien-avec-eleonora-di-nezza/
Italian women mathematicians
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josu%C3%A9%20Galindo
|
Josué Isaac Cárcamo Galindo (born 9 August 2006) is a Honduran professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Victoria.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
2006 births
Honduran men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional de Honduras players
C.D. Victoria players
Place of birth missing (living people)
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara%20Burke%20Hubbard
|
Barbara Burke Hubbard (born 1948) is an American science journalist, mathematics popularizer, textbook author, and book publisher, known for her books on wavelet transforms and multivariable calculus.
Life
Burke Hubbard is the daughter of Los Angeles Times reporter Vincent J. Burke, and spent a year in high school living in Moscow when Burke was stationed there in 1964. She was an undergraduate at Harvard University, initially majoring in biology but switching to English, and graduating in 1969. She became a science writer for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a journalist for The Ithaca Journal, and was the 1981 winner of the AAAS Westinghouse Science Journalism Award in the small newspaper category, for her articles on acid rain in The Ithaca Journal.
She married mathematician John H. Hubbard, with whom she has four children, and with her family has split her time between Ithaca, New York and Marseille, France, with shorter-term stays elsewhere.
Books
Burke Hubbard is the author of a popular mathematics book on wavelet transforms, originally published in French as Ondes et ondelettes: la saga d’un outil mathématique (Pour la Science, 1995). It won the of the Société mathématique de France, and Hubbard became the first winner of this prize who was not French. The English edition of the same book, The world according to wavelets: the story of a mathematical technique in the making, was published in 1996 by A K Peters, with a second edition in 1998. It was also translated into German by M. Basler as Wavelets: Die Mathematik der kleinen Wellen (Birkhäuser, 1997). With her husband, she wrote a textbook on multivariate calculus, Vector calculus, linear algebra, and differential forms: A unified approach (Prentice Hall, 1999; 5th ed., 2015). She has also translated the book Biochronological correlations by Jean Guex from French into English.
In 2001, Burke Hubbard founded the mathematics book publisher Matrix Editions.
References
1948 births
Living people
American science writers
Women science writers
Mathematics popularizers
Harvard University alumni
French–English translators
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sung%20Ho-yeung
|
Sung Ho-yeung (; born 8 January 1999) is a South Korean footballer currently playing as a winger for Busan IPark.
Career statistics
Club
References
1999 births
Living people
South Korean men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
K League 2 players
Busan IPark players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tang%20In%20Chim
|
Tang In Chim (; born 28 February 2003) is a Hong Kong professional footballer who currently plays as a midfielder for Hong Kong Premier League club HK U23.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
2003 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Hong Kong men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Hong Kong Premier League players
HK U23 Football Team players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ho%20Ka%20Chi
|
Ho Ka Chi (; born 16 July 2002) is a Hong Kong professional footballer who plays for Hong Kong Premier League club HK U23.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
2002 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Hong Kong men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Hong Kong Premier League players
Hong Kong Pegasus FC players
HK U23 Football Team players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pouria%20Amini
|
Pourya amini Amini (; born February 27, 1995) is an Iranian footballer.
Club career
Club Career Statistics
Last Update: 1 August 2018
References
External links
Living people
1995 births
Men's association football midfielders
Iranian men's footballers
Esteghlal F.C. players
F.C. Pars Jonoubi Jam players
Naft Tehran F.C. players
F.C. Shahrdari Bandar Abbas players
Sportspeople from Kermanshah
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lam%20Chi%20Fung
|
Lam Chi Fung (; born 30 December 2001) is a Hong Kong professional footballer who plays for Hong Kong Premier League club HK U23.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
Living people
2001 births
Hong Kong men's footballers
Men's association football forwards
Hong Kong First Division League players
Hong Kong Premier League players
Southern District FC players
Citizen AA players
HK U23 Football Team players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milad%20Ahmadi
|
Milad Ahmadi (; born June 18, 1996, in Tehran) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Iranian club Oghab Tehran in the League 2.
Club career
Club Career Statistics
Last Update: 1 August 2020
References
Living people
1996 births
Men's association football defenders
Iranian men's footballers
Esteghlal F.C. players
Naft Tehran F.C. players
Sepidrood Rasht S.C. players
Footballers from Tehran
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad%20Ali%20Safia
|
Mohammad Ali Safia (; born February 12, 1997) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a winger for Iranian club Kheybar Khorramabad in the Azadegan League.
Club career
Club Career Statistics
Last Update: 11 November 2021
References
Living people
1997 births
Men's association football wingers
Iranian men's footballers
Esteghlal F.C. players
Naft Masjed Soleyman F.C. players
Havadar S.C. players
Sanat Mes Kerman F.C. players
Sportspeople from Khuzestan province
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arantza%20Urkaregi
|
Arantza Urkaregi is a mathematician, union organizer, and feminist politician. Within mathematics, she writes, researches, and teaches predominantly about statistics. With regards to her political work, she was involved in the communist party in Basque and the early feminist movement there.
Life
Urkaregi was born on April 23, 1954, in San Sebastian, in the Basque Autonomous community in Spain. She studied at the University of Basque Country.
Activist work
In her 20s, she became involved in EMK (the Basque communist party) and Basque feminist organizations. For example, she was largely involved in the first meetings of the Basque feminist movement in December 1977. While these meetings fit into the broader theme of feminist movements in the 60s and 70s, they are especially important because of the particular anti-feminist pushback in Basque. These meetings in December 1977 were actually inspired by similar Spanish feminist meetings. Overall, these meetings, which had attendance far exceeding expectations, were key in demonstrating the existence of, and support for, a Basque feminist movement.
Urkaregi has also been deeply involved in a Basque teachers union (Steilas), which recently (in 2020) went on strike in protest of insufficient support for teaching in the midst of COVID-19.
She has also been on the Bilbao City Council as a member of the Abertzale Sozialistak group. Particularly, Urkaregi has been active in Basque separatist groups, such being the spokesperson for Basque Nationalist Action, which was outlawed by the Spanish government in 2008 for supposed ties to ETA. In 2009, she was arrested along with other members of the group.
Academic work
As demonstrated by Inguma, which is a database for publications in the Basque scientific community, Urkaregi has published extensively about biostatistics. There are over 50 publications attributed to her here, including a biostatistics textbook, articles about feminism and math, and courses.
References
Wikipedia Student Program
1954 births
Living people
21st-century Spanish mathematicians
Spanish women mathematicians
Spanish trade union leaders
People from San Sebastián
Spanish politicians
Spanish communists
Biostatisticians
Spanish statisticians
20th-century Spanish mathematicians
21st-century Spanish women
20th-century Spanish women
Basque nationalists
Spanish women trade unionists
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alessandra%20Iozzi
|
Alessandra Iozzi (born 25 January 1959) is an Italian-born mathematician known for her research in geometric group theory. Originally from Rome, she holds Italian, Swiss, and American citizenships, and works as an adjunct professor of mathematics at ETH Zurich.
Education and career
Iozzi obtained a laurea at the Sapienza University of Rome in 1982, supervised by Massimo Picardello. Then, she moved to the University of Chicago where she earned a Master's Degree in 1985 and a Ph.D. in 1989. Her dissertation, Invariant Geometric Structures: A Non-Linear Extension of the Borel Density Theorem, was supervised by Robert Zimmer.
After holding a lecturer position at the University of Pennsylvania for two years, she became a postdoctoral scholar first at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, CA and then at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ. From 1992 to 2000, she held a faculty position at the University of Maryland, College Park.
She first came to ETH Zurich as a visiting researcher in 2000–2001. After holding professorships at the University of Strasbourg in France and the University of Basel in Switzerland, she returned to ETH Zurich as a senior scientist in 2006 and took her present faculty position there in 2008.
Recognition
Iozzi was named a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, in the 2022 class of fellows, "for contributions to geometric group theory and the geometry of discrete subgroups of Lie groups, in particular higher Teichmuller theory."
References
External links
Home page
1959 births
Living people
Italian mathematicians
Italian women mathematicians
Swiss mathematicians
Swiss women mathematicians
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
Sapienza University of Rome alumni
University of Chicago alumni
University of Maryland, College Park faculty
Academic staff of the University of Strasbourg
Academic staff of the University of Basel
Academic staff of ETH Zurich
Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
20th-century American women
21st-century American women
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IFFHS%20World%20Team
|
The IFFHS World Team is a football award given annually since 2017. The award is given by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS).
Men's winners
List of winners
In 2017, IFFHS started to nominate a world team of the year.
Statistics
All-time Men's Dream Team (2021)
Men Team of the Century (1901–2000)
Men Team of the Decade (2011–2020)
Women's winners
List of winners
In 2017, IFFHS started to nominate a world team of the year.
Statistics
All-time Women's Dream Team (2021)
Women Team of the Century (1901–2000)
Women Team of the Decade (2011–2020)
See also
International Federation of Football History & Statistics
IFFHS World's Best Club
IFFHS World's Best Player
IFFHS World's Best Goalkeeper
IFFHS World's Best Top Goal Scorer
IFFHS World's Best International Goal Scorer
IFFHS World's Best Club Coach
IFFHS World's Best National Coach
References
International Federation of Football History & Statistics
Association football trophies and awards
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IFFHS%20World%27s%20Best%20Club
|
The IFFHS World's Best Club is a football award given annually since 1991 to the world's best club. The award is given by the International Federation of Football History & Statistics (IFFHS), the entity has also produced a monthly Club World Ranking.
The ranking takes into consideration the results of twelve months of continental and intercontinental competitions, national league matches (including play-offs) and the most important national cup (excluding points won before the round of 16).
All countries are rated at four levels based upon the national league performance—clubs in the highest level leagues receive 4 points for each match won, 2 for a draw and 0 for a defeat. Level 2 is assigned 3 pts. (win), 1.5 (draw) and 0 (lost), and so on with the next lower levels.
In continental competitions, all clubs receive the same number of points at all stages regardless of the performance level of their leagues. However, the UEFA Champions League and the Copa Libertadores yield more points than UEFA Europa League and Copa Sudamericana, respectively. The point assignment system is still lower for the AFC, CAF, CONCACAF and OFC continental tournaments. Competitions between two continents are evaluated depending upon their importance. Competitions not organized by a continental confederation, or any intercontinental events not recognized by FIFA, are not taken into consideration.
Criteria
Men's winners
List of winners
Statistics
Continental rankings
Bold indicates the World's Best Man Club winner.
Continental Men's Clubs of the Century (1901–2000)
In 2009, the IFFHS released the results of a statistical study series which determined the best continental clubs of the 20th century. The ranking did not consider the performance of the teams in national football tournaments (except in the Oceania's club ranking due to limited editions held under OFC club competitions), the performance in the intercontinental or worldwide club competitions or those submitted in the IFFHS Club World Ranking, available since 1991.
Based on this study, which assigned a weighted score criteria applied for each competition analysed, the below six clubs were named as "continental clubs of the century" by the IFFHS between 10 September and 13 October 2009. These clubs were awarded with a golden trophy and a certificate during the World Football Gala celebrated at Fulham, London, on 11 May 2010.
The World's Best Man Club of the Decade (2001–2010)
In 2012, the IFFHS recognised Barcelona as the World's Best Club Team of the Decade for the first decade of the 21st century (2001–2010).
The World's Best Man Club of the Decade (2011–2020)
In 2021, Barcelona were recognised as the world's best club also for the second decade (2011–2020).
Women's winners
List of winners
Statistics
Continental rankings (women)
Bold indicates the World's Best Woman Club winner.
The World's Best Woman Club of the Decade (2011–2020)
In 2021, Lyon were recognised as the world's best clu
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A1bor%20Vas
|
Gábor Vas (born 29 August 2003) is a Hungarian football midfielder who plays for OTP Bank Liga club Paksi FC.
Career statistics
.
References
External links
2003 births
Living people
Hungarian men's footballers
Hungary men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Paksi FC players
Nemzeti Bajnokság I players
Footballers from Szekszárd
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loredana%20Lanzani
|
Loredana Lanzani (born 1965) is an Italian-American mathematician specializing in harmonic analysis, partial differential equations, and complex analysis. She is a professor of mathematics at Syracuse University.
Education and career
Lanzani earned a laurea from the University of Rome Tor Vergata in 1989, and completed a Ph.D. at Purdue University in 1997. Her dissertation, A New Perspective On The Cauchy Transform For Non-Smooth Domains In The Plane And Applications, was supervised by Steven R. Bell.
She became an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas in 1997, and moved up the academic ranks there until becoming a full professor in 2008, also being given the Robert C. & Sandra Connor Endowed Faculty Fellowship in the same year. From 2011 to 2013 she was a program director for the National Science Foundation, and in 2014 she took her present position as a professor of mathematics at Syracuse University.
Recognition
Lanzani was named a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, in the 2022 class of fellows, "for contributions to function theory in one and several complex variables". She became the first Syracuse University mathematician to win this honor.
References
External links
Home page
1965 births
Living people
Italian mathematicians
Italian women mathematicians
20th-century American mathematicians
21st-century American mathematicians
American women mathematicians
University of Rome Tor Vergata alumni
Purdue University alumni
University of Arkansas faculty
Syracuse University faculty
Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
20th-century American women
21st-century American women
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Austin%20FC%20records%20and%20statistics
|
Austin FC is an American professional soccer team based in Austin, Texas, that competes in Major League Soccer (MLS).
This is a list of club records for Austin FC, which dates from their inaugural season in 2021 to present.
Club Records
Matches
Largest League Victory: 5–0 v FC Cincinnati, (February 26, 2022)
Largest League Defeat: 0–4 @ San Jose Earthquakes, (October 20, 2021)
Largest MLS Cup Playoffs Victory: 2–1 @ FC Dallas, (October 23, 2022)
Largest MLS Cup Playoffs Defeat: 0–3 @ LAFC, (October 30, 2022)
Largest CONCACAF Champions League Victory: 2–0 v Violette AC, (March 14, 2023)
Largest CONCACAF Champions League Defeat: 0–3 @ Violette AC, (March 8, 2023)
Largest Leagues Cup Defeat: 1–3 v Mazatlán F.C., (July 21, 2023) & 1–3 v FC Juárez, (July 29, 2023)
Largest U.S. Open Cup Victory: 2–0 v New Mexico United, (May 10, 2023)
Largest U.S. Open Cup Defeat: 0–2 v Chicago Fire FC, (May 24, 2023)
Streaks
Winning runs
Longest winning run in all competitions: 4, (10 April 2022 – 30 April 2022) & (30 June 2022 – 12 July 2022)
Longest league winning run : 4, (10 April 2022 – 30 April 2022) & (30 June 2022 – 12 July 2022)
Most home wins in a row (all competitions): 4, (24 October 2021 – 6 March 2022)
Most away wins in a row (all competitions): 4, (18 June 2022 – 9 July 2022)
Most league home wins in a row: 4, (24 October 2021 – 6 March 2022)
Most league away wins in a row: 4, (18 June 2022 – 9 July 2022)
Unbeaten runs
Longest unbeaten run (all competitions): 7, (18 June 2022 – 16 July 2022)
Longest league unbeaten run: 7, (18 June 2022 – 16 July 2022)
Winless runs
Longest winless run (all competitions): 10, (21 July 2023 – 30 September 2023)
Longest league winless run: 8, (9 May 2021 — 27 June 2021) & (18 March 2023 – 13 May 2023) & (20 August 2023 – 30 September 2023)
Longest home winless run: 5, (21 July 2023 – 24 September 2023)
Longest away winless run: 16, (9 May 2021 – 2 April 2022)
Draws
Most draws in a row: 3, (30 May 2021 - 19 June 2021)
Losses
Most defeats in a row: 5, (29 August 2021 — 18 September 2021) & (21 July 2023 – 30 August 2023)
Most home defeats in a row: 4, (21 July 2023 – 17 September 2023)
Most away defeats in a row: 10, (23 June 2021 – 12 March 2022)
Seasonal
Most
Most goals scored in a season (all competitions): 70, (2022)
Most league goals scored in a season: 65, (2022)
Most goals conceded in a season: 66, (2023)
Most league goals conceded in a season: 56, (2021)
Most play-off goals scored in a season: 4, (2022)
Most play-off goals conceded in a season: 6, (2022)
Most points in a league season: 56, (2022)
Most league wins in a season: 16, (2022)
Most home league wins in a season: 8, (2022)
Most away league wins in a season: 8, (2022)
Most league draws in a season: 9, (2023)
Most home league draws in a season: 6, (2022)
Most away league draws in a season: 5, (2023)
Most league defeats in a season: 21, (2021)
Most home league losses in a season: 8, (2021)
Most away league losses in a seas
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reys
|
Reys may refer to:
People
Barbara Reys (born 1953), American mathematics educator
Frank Reys (1931–1984), Australian jockey
Michael Reys (born 1966), Dutch slalom canoer
Rita Reys (1924–2013), Dutch jazz singer
Places
Reys, Iran
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census%20and%20Statistics%20Act%201905
|
The Census and Statistics Act 1905 (Cth) is an Act of the Parliament of Australia, that was passed in 1905, and provides the power to the Australian Statistician to collect statistical information in the form of a census. The Act also mandates that the Australian Bureau of Statistics must publish the information collected in the census whilst maintaining the privacy of participant's personal information. On 8 December 1905, the Act received royal assent whilst simultaneously beginning its initial commencement, and it has since been amended 19 times.
Amendments
Privacy
Prior to 2001, all name-identified information relating the census' participants was destroyed once the statistical information was processed. After a trial period, this law was then changed to allow for name-identified information to be stored with the statistical information in the national archives for its public release after 99 years granted that the individuals consented.
See also
Census in Australia
References
External links
Census and Statistics Act 1905 Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
Australian Bureau of Statistics Census information and data.
Censuses in Australia
Acts of the Parliament of Australia
1905 in Australian law
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galina%20Matvievskaya
|
Galina Pavlovna Matviyevskaya (Russian Галина Павловна Матвиевская; born 13 July 1930 in Dnepropetrovsk) is a Soviet-Russian historian of mathematics, and university teacher. In 1974, she won the Biruni State Prize.
Life
Matviyevskaya attended school in Kharkov and in Chkalov. She graduated in 1948 with a gold medal. She graduated from the University of Leningrad, in 1954, and the Leningrad Department of the Moscow Institute of History of Science and Technology, in 1959. She studied unpublished manuscripts by Leonhard Euler on number theory.
In 1959, she became a research associate at the Institute of Mathematics of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Uzbekistant. She researched the history of mathematics in the Near and Middle East using medieval Arabic manuscripts. In 1987 her work on the scholar Albrecht Dürer was published. She cooperated with Boris Abramovich Rosenfeld.
In 1994 she became a professor at the Orenburg State Pedagogical University. In 1995, she became a member of the Académie internationale d'histoire des sciences. She has published works on Pyotr Ivanovich Rychkov, Vasily Alexeyevich Perovsky, Vladimir Ivanovich Dal, Yakov Vladimirovich Khanykov and others. It has been a member of the Union of Writers of Russia since 2000.
Works
with O. Bogolyubov ("Vsevolod Ivanovich Romanov (1879-1954)," Moscow, 1997).
References
1930 births
Living people
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexios%20Kalogeropoulos
|
Alexios Kalogeropoulos (; born 26 July 2004) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a defender for Super League club Volos, on loan from Olympiacos B.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2004 births
Living people
People from Andravida-Kyllini
Greek men's footballers
Footballers from Western Greece
Greece men's youth international footballers
Men's association football defenders
Asteras Tripolis F.C. players
Olympiacos F.C. players
Olympiacos F.C. B players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostolos%20Apostolopoulos
|
Apostolos Apostolopoulos (; born 11 December 2002) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Super League 2 club Olympiacos B.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Greek men's footballers
Super League Greece 2 players
Gamma Ethniki players
Men's association football defenders
Panserraikos F.C. players
Olympiacos F.C. players
Footballers from Serres
Olympiacos F.C. B players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fryderyk%20Gerbowski
|
Fryderyk Gerbowski (born 17 January 2003) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Wisła Płock.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2003 births
Living people
Footballers from Warsaw
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Poland men's under-21 international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Ekstraklasa players
Wisła Płock players
Stal Mielec players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakub%20Myszor
|
Jakub Myszor (born 7 June 2002) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a winger for Cracovia.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2002 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Tychy
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Poland men's under-21 international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Ekstraklasa players
III liga players
MKS Cracovia players
Footballers from Silesian Voivodeship
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maciej%20%C5%9Aliwa
|
Maciej Śliwa (born 22 May 2001) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for ŁKS Łódź.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
Honours
Miedź Legnica
I liga: 2021–22
ŁKS Łódź
I liga: 2022–23
ŁKS Łódź II
III liga, group I: 2022–23
References
2001 births
Living people
People from Starachowice
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Ekstraklasa players
I liga players
III liga players
Wisła Kraków players
Miedź Legnica players
ŁKS Łódź players
Footballers from Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wojciech%20Kami%C5%84ski%20%28footballer%29
|
Wojciech Kamiński (born 21 January 2001) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Odra Opole.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2001 births
Living people
Footballers from Gliwice
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
I liga players
II liga players
Piast Gliwice players
Bruk-Bet Termalica Nieciecza players
Sandecja Nowy Sącz players
Wigry Suwałki players
Zagłębie Sosnowiec players
Odra Opole players
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karol%20Struski
|
Karol Struski (born 18 January 2001) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Cypriot side Aris Limassol.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
Honours
Aris Limassol
Cypriot First Division: 2022–23
Cypriot Super Cup: 2023
References
2001 births
Living people
Footballers from Lublin
Polish men's footballers
Poland men's youth international footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Ekstraklasa players
I liga players
Cypriot First Division players
GKS Górnik Łęczna players
Jagiellonia Białystok players
Aris Limassol FC players
Polish expatriate men's footballers
Polish expatriate sportspeople in Cyprus
Expatriate men's footballers in Cyprus
|
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest%20Terpi%C5%82owski
|
Ernest Terpiłowski (born 14 September 2001) is a Polish professional footballer who plays as an attacking midfielder for Widzew Łódź.
Career statistics
Club
Notes
References
2001 births
Living people
People from Brzeg Dolny
Polish men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Poland men's youth international footballers
Ekstraklasa players
I liga players
II liga players
III liga players
Bruk-Bet Termalica Nieciecza players
Górnik Polkowice players
Widzew Łódź players
Footballers from Lower Silesian Voivodeship
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.