Mga halimbawa ng paggamit ng Birkhoff sa Ingles at ang kanilang mga pagsasalin sa Tagalog
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This is explained by Birkhoff in where he writes.
Of the book,which covers applications such as coding theory, Birkhoff said.
For example Birkhoff and Langer published an important extension in 1923.
It is, of course,not only the ergodic theorem that made Birkhoff the most famous mathematician in America in his day.
Garrett Birkhoff's father was G D Birkhoff who also has a biography in this archive.
Another piece of consultancy work led Birkhoff into yet another area of mathematics.
Birkhoff taught at the University of Wisconsin at Madison as an instructor from 1907 to 1909.
During the period that he was an instructor Stone's interests followed very much those of his research supervisor Birkhoff.
George Birkhoff's parents were David Birkhoff, who was a medical doctor, and Jane Gertrude Droppers.
In 1930 Hopf received a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation to study classical mechanics with Birkhoff at Harvard in the United States.
The impact of Birkhoff and Mac Lane on the content and teaching of algebra in colleges and universities was immediate and long sustained.
Perhaps this high level of involvement with the American Mathematical Society already suggest that Birkhoff worked tirelessly to advance mathematics in America.
Birkhoff himself developed the ideas further in the following years, as did two of his students, Rudolph Langer and Marshall Stone.
He then turned his attention to lattice theory and,together with Garrett Birkhoff, led the increasing activity in lattice theory throughout the 1930s.
Birkhoff said"If these distinguished people come and take the positions, the young American mathematicians will become hewers of wood and drawers of water.".
From the time he undertook research as a postgraduate with Birkhoff he was directed to the major problems which had interested Poincaré such as the three body problem.
Because Birkhoff worked on so many different mathematical topics it is difficult to do justice to the range of his contributions in a biography of this length.
He was given a topic in the theory of differential equations by George Birkhoff but he began reading books on logic which seemed to him far more interesting that his research topic.
Birkhoff read Poincaré 's works on differential equations and celestial mechanics and he learnt more, and was more strongly influenced in the direction his research was taking, by Poincaré than from his supervisor.
Before beginning research on this new topic he decided to teach for a year and,with a strong recommendation from Birkhoff, was appointed as an instructor in mathematics at Princeton for session 1927-28.
Perhaps this is rather misleading for Birkhoff did not consider this work closely related to the mathematical physics which he had started out on. He said.
His research concentrated on asymptotic expansions, boundary value problems, and Sturm- Liouville type problems buthis thesis advisor Eliakim Moore appears to have been a less influential guide to Birkhoff than was Poincaré.
Returning to the United States, Birkhoff was a member of the Society of Fellows at Harvard from 1933 to 1936, and then he was appointed as an instructor at Harvard in 1936.
Certainly at this time Birkhoff systematically kept Jews out of his department, and this must be the explanation for the quite ridiculous assessment of Bochner as a"second rate European youngster".
The doctoral thesis which Birkhoff submitted was entitled Asymptotic Properties of Certain Ordinary Differential Equations with Applications to Boundary Value and Expansion Problems and it led to the award of his Ph.D. in 1907.