Eksempler på brug af This theorem på Engelsk og deres oversættelser til Dansk
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This theorem states that.
In Parshall discusses this theorem.
We will analyze this theorem by means of an example.
This theorem remains as Osgood's outstanding single result.
He spoke at the University so I went there and sure enough,he proved this theorem.
This theorem is more strictly fundamental than von Staudt 's….
Take advantage of the opportunity to prove this theorem is already playing the game,"O Lucky Man!
This theorem is more strictly fundamental than von Staudt 's…[which] can be deduced from White's.
Kronecker had first stated a version of this theorem in a lecture which he gave to the Accademia dei Lincei in 1886.
This theorem was motivated by applications and leads to a startling practical prediction.
Eudemus says that the method by which Thales showed how to find the distances of ships from the shore necessarily involves the use of this theorem.
This theorem gave, as a corollary, the complete structure of all finite projective geometries.
However, Eudoxus was born within a few years of the death of Hippocrates, andso there follows the intriguing question of how Hippocrates proved this theorem.
Skolem published this theorem in 1927 in a paper Zur Theorie der assoziativen Zahlensysteme.
Proclus writes(see):[ Eudemus]says that the method by which Thales showed how to find the distances of ships from the shore necessarily involves the use of this theorem.
This theorem states:… every uncountable closed set can be partitioned into a perfect set and a countable set.
We can summarize the above by means of the following equation:VALUE+ MONEY+ VALUE LIQUID MONEY THEORY+ PRACTICE+ THEORY We will analyze this theorem by means of an example.
This theorem is widely used in the theory of group varieties, combinatorial group theory, and permutation group theory.
The theorem for which the greatest number of different proofs have been discovered is possibly the Pythagorean theorem, with hundreds of proofs having been published.[3]Another theorem that has been proved in many different ways is the theorem of quadratic reciprocity-Carl Friedrich Gauss alone published eight different proofs of this theorem.
This theorem, concerning the finite generation of the group of rational points on an elliptic curve, is beautifully surveyed in.
The first proof of this theorem was given by Dirichlet in his lectures of 1862(published 1904) before Heine proved it in 1872.
This theorem is proved by Euclid in the Elements and it is proved there by the method of exhaustion due to Eudoxus.
As a corollary to this theorem Higman proved the existence of a universal finitely presented group containing every finitely presented group as a subgroup.
This theorem was conjectured in the 18th century, but it was not proved until 1896, when Hadamard and(independently) Charles de la Vallée Poussin, used complex analysis.
The statement of this theorem is an afterthought to a paper in which Jacobi responds to the published correction by Thomas Clausen(1842) of an earlier paper by Jacobi 1836.
This theorem shows that if a cone is intersected by a plane in a conic, then the foci of the conic are the points where this plane is touched by the spheres inscribed in the cone.
Kronecker had first stated a version of this theorem in a lecture which he gave to the Accademia dei Lincei in 1886. Castelnuovo had only recently graduated when he was informed by Cremona of Kronecker 's lecture and he found his own proof of the result. Kronecker never published the theorem and it was Castelnuovo's version which appeared in print.
This theorem is widely used in the theory of group varieties, combinatorial group theory, and permutation group theory. Kaluznin made several applications of the wreath product to mathematical logic and mathematical chemistry.
The first proof of this theorem was given by Dirichlet in his lectures of 1862(published 1904) before Heine proved it in 1872. Dugac shows that Dirichlet used the idea of a covering and a finite subcovering more explicitly than Heine.
This theorem showed that under the combined action of three operators on a physical event: P, the parity operator, which performed a reflection; C, the charge conjugation operator, which replaced particles by anti-particles; and T, which performed a time reversal, the result would be another possible physical event.