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Topic: Emmy Noether


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  Noether_Emmy biography
Emmy Noether's father Max Noether was a distinguished mathematician and a professor at Erlangen.
Noether also worked on her own research, in particular she was influenced by Fischer who had succeeded Gordan in 1911.
Emmy Noether's first piece of work when she arrived in Göttingen in 1915 is a result in theoretical physics sometimes referred to as Noether's Theorem, which proves a relationship between symmetries in physics and conservation principles.
www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk /~history/Biographies/Noether_Emmy.html   (988 words)

  
 Emmy Noether Biography | Encyclopedia of World Biography
Emmy Noether (1882-1935) was a world-renowned mathematician whose innovative approach to modern abstract algebra inspired colleagues and students who emulated her technique.
Noether was born on March 23, 1882, in the small university town of Erlangen in southern Germany.
During the winter of 1928-29, Noether was a visiting professor at the University of Moscow and the Communist Academy, and in the summer of 1930, she taught at the University of Frankfurt.
www.bookrags.com /biography/emmy-noether   (1648 words)

  
 Emmy Noether   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Emmy Noether was born in Erlangen, Germany on March 23, 1882.
Noether, and all women in Germany, were given the right to vote for the first time.
Emmy Noether taught at Bryn Mawr College until her death in 1935.
www.agnesscott.edu /lriddle/women/noether.htm   (1240 words)

  
 Emmy Noether (1882 1935)
Emmy Noether's father, Max Noether, was a mathematician at Erlangen.
Nevertheless Emmy became known while enrolled as an audit student and was able eventually (in 1907) to graduate with a PhD summa cum laude at Erlangen under the supervision of Paul Gordan (whom David Hilbert had described as "King of the Invariants").
Emmy Noether's name is perpetuated as the name for a ring in which every (ascending) chain of ideals is finite, as it is demonstrably in the case of Z.
www.amt.canberra.edu.au /noether.html   (951 words)

  
 Emmy Noether (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab-5.cs.princeton.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
'''Emmy Noether''' (March 23 1882 – April 14 1935) was one of the most talented mathematicians of the early 20th century, with penetrating insights that she used to develop elegant abstractions which she formalized beautifully.
Emmy Noether She was born Amalie Noether in Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany.
In 1921, Noether introduced the ascending chain condition for ideals in a commutative ring, and proved the existence of primary decompositions for such rings (a result known as the Lasker-Noether theorem).
emmy-noether.iqnaut.net.cob-web.org:8888   (445 words)

  
 Emmy Amalie Noether   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Amalie Emmy Noether was born on March 23, 1882 in Erlangen, Bavaria, in Germany and she died on April 14, 1935 in Bryn Mavr, Pennsylvania, in the U.S.A. Her father, Max Noether, was a distinqueshed mathematician.
Emmy was a mathematician in the first half of the 20th century.
Emmy is best known for her contributions to abstract algebra, her study of chain conditions on ideals of rings, groups, and fields.
warrensburg.k12.mo.us /math/emmy/ali.html   (315 words)

  
 Emmy Noether
Emmy, the eldest, was born in Erlangen, Germany on March 23, 1882.
Emmy must have been brought up in a very loving and supportive environment for it was these qualities she carried throughout her live.
Emmy Noether was an exceptional woman; caring, compassionate and utterly unselfish possessing a love for life.
www.math.sfu.ca /histmath/Europe/20thCenturyAD/Emmy.html   (907 words)

  
 CWP at physics.UCLA.edu // Emmy Noether
The theory of non-commutative algebras and their representations wa built up by Emmy Noether in a new unified, purely conceptual manner by making use of all the results that has been accumulated by the ingenious labors of decades by Frobenius, Dickson, Wedderburn and others.
As a Jewish woman, in 1933 Emmy Noether was fired from her position as a privat docent in Göttingen.
Emmy Noether - her courage, her frankness, her unconcern about her own fate, her conciliatory spirit - was in the midst of all the hatred and meaness, despair and sorrow surrounding us, a moral solace." [sm1935hw]
cwp.library.ucla.edu /Phase2/Noether,_Amalie_Emmy@861234567.html   (959 words)

  
 Emmy Noether - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Noether fled Germany in 1933; she had been forbidden from teaching undergraduate classes by the Nazi racial laws.
Her younger brother, the German mathematician Fritz Noether, fled Germany during the Nazi rule into the Soviet Union in 1934 and he was shot there for anti-Soviet propaganda at Orel on Sept. 10th, 1941.
Noether's theorem is a central result in theoretical physics that expresses the one-to-one correspondence between symmetries and conservation laws.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Emmy_Noether   (651 words)

  
 Emmy Nöther   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Emmy was born in the small university town of Erlangen in southern Germany where her father was a professor of mathematics.
After Emmy's father retired and her mother died, David Hilbert persuaded Nöther to move to Göttingen, then the center of the world for mathematical and physics research, to work with himself and Felix Klein on the theory of invariants and the mathematical foundations of the theory of relativity.
Emmy and her brother Fritz, an applied mathematician, were fortunate to find other jobs.
scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu /Math/Noether.html   (609 words)

  
 Noether   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Emmy Noether was born March 23rd in 1882.
Since Emmy was a women and a Jew she couldn't teach under Hitler's new regime and she relocated to the United States were she taught at Bryn Mawr College, an all girls school.
Emmy died two years later on April 14th, 1935, she had kept her illness secret from most people so her death was a great surprise to the mathematics community and the world at large.
www.math.wichita.edu /history/women/noether.html   (395 words)

  
 Article by JD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Emmy Noether was the greatest female mathematician of the 20th century, and quite possibly of all time.
It was Emmy Noether who first defined this object in all its generality, and discovered the rules governing its inner structure.
Noether did not at all conform to the standards of femininity current in that time and place — nor, it has to be said in fairness to her colleagues, any other time and place.
www.olimu.com /webjournalism/Texts/Commentary/EmmyNoether.htm   (1566 words)

  
 Emmy Noether Biography | World of Mathematics
Noether was born on March 23, 1882, in Erlangen, Germany.
Noether was educated as a typical German girl of her era.
Noether was the main speaker at one of the section meetings of a conference of the International Mathematical Congress in 1928 in Bologna.
www.bookrags.com /biography/emmy-noether-wom   (1619 words)

  
 Emmy Noether: Creative Mathematical Genius
Amalie Emmy Noether spent an average childhood learning the arts that were expected of upper middle class girls.
Noether was only allowed to lecture under Hilbert's name, as his assistant.
Noether's conceptual approach to algebra led to a body of principles unifying algebra, geometry, linear algebra, topology, and logic.
www.sdsc.edu /ScienceWomen/noether.html   (559 words)

  
 Alice Stebbins Wells
Emmy Noether was born on March 23, 1882 in Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany.
Noether’s first piece of recognized work in 1915 was a result of theoretical physics, and is referred to as Noether’s Theorem.
In 1933, Noether’s mathematical achievements counted for nothing when the Nazis caused her dismissal from the University of Gottingen because she was Jewish.
www.hcc.cc.il.us /Staff/sharonm/bios/noether.htm   (382 words)

  
 Emmy Noether's Penetrating Mathematical Thinking1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Noether's Theorem is one of the most powerful principles in abstract algebra and modern physics, yet this theorem is also strikingly believable, provable, and intuitive.
Noether's theorem provides a mathematical linkage between symmetries and conserved quantities in physics.
Deductions based on Noether's Theorem provide fundamental insight into fields as diverse as electricity and magnetism, particle physics, classical mechanics, many-body physics, and general relativity.
www.physics.ohio-state.edu /~cairnsj/NoethersTheorem   (89 words)

  
 Biography of Noeth
Emmy was the eldest and only daughter of four children, two of whom died early on.
D in 1907 from the University of Erlangen, her publications helped her gain popularity--she was elected to the Circolo Matematico di Palermo, she was invited to become a member of the Deutsche Mathematiker Vereinigung and was also invited to address and lecture in many places.
Emmy Noether was best known for her contributions to abstract algebra, such as...
www.andrews.edu /~calkins/math/biograph/bionoeth.htm   (820 words)

  
 Noether's theorem - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Noether's theorem is a central result in theoretical physics that shows that a conservation law can be derived from any continuous symmetry.
Noether's theorem is a relationship of classical mechanics between pairs of conjugate variables -- if the action is invariant under a shift in one of the two physical variables, then the equations of motion resulting from holding that action stationary conserve the value of the other of the pair of variables.
In quantum field theory, the analog to Noether's theorem, the Ward-Takahashi identities, yields further conservation laws, such as the conservation of electric charge from the invariance with respect to the gauge invariance of the electric potential and vector potential.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Noether's_theorem   (1351 words)

  
 The Mother of Abstract Algebra (Emmy Noether)
Amalie `Emmy' Noether was born in Erlangen Germany on March 23, 1882 and was the eldest of four children.
Her father, Max Noether, was a professor of Mathematics at the University of Erlangen.
Her colleagues called her ``the most creative abstract algebraist in the world.'' Emmy Noether brought much to the mathematical world with her work in algebra and in the development of axiomatic theory.
www.mathnews.uwaterloo.ca /BestOf/WomenInMath6906.html   (647 words)

  
 No. 226: Emmy Noether
She was born in 1882 to a distinguished mathematics professor at Germany's University of Erlangen.
By the time the Nazis came to power, Noether was far and away the leading light at that great university.
Emmy Noether was a gentle, low-key lady -- on fire only with the flights of her imagination.
www.uh.edu /engines/epi226.htm   (439 words)

  
 Noether, Emmy (Amalie)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Noether was born in Erlangen, the daughter of mathematician Max Noether.
Despite a rule barring women from university study, she was awarded a doctorate from Erlangen in 1907 for a thesis on algebraic invariants.
Noether first made her mark as a mathematician with a paper 1920 on noncommutative fields (where the order in which the elements are combined affects the result).
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/N/Noether/1.html   (227 words)

  
 Faculty of Mathematics Goettingen: Emmy Noether Professership
In honour of the great mathematician Emmy Noether the Faculty of Mathematics of the University of Göttingen has created a visiting professorship named after the scientist, who studied, taught und researched in Göttingen from 1915 until 1933.
The second Emmy Noether professor was Eva Bayer-Fluckiger from the EPF Lausanne, Switzerland.
The Emmy Noether professorship started in winter 2001/2002 and was first awarded to Mina Teicher from the Bar Ilan University in Israel, who is also the director of the Emmy Noether Mathematical Insitute there.
www.uni-math.gwdg.de /noetherprofessur/index.en.html   (336 words)

  
 E. Noether's Discovery of the Deep Connection Between Symmetrie and Conservation Laws
Emmy Noether proved two deep theorems, and their converses, on the connection between symmetries and conservation laws.
, David Hilbert credits Emmy Noether with having solved the problem of an energy theorem in the general theory, and refers to I.V. In the concluding section of her paper, she refers to Hilbert' having said that 'the failure of the energy theorem' is a characteristic feature of the general theory.
Noether's theorem 11 applies in the case of general relativity and one sees that she has proved Hilbert's assertion that in this case one has `improper energy theorems', and that this is a characteristic feature of the theory.
cwp.library.ucla.edu /articles/noether.asg/noether.html   (5320 words)

  
 EMMY NOETHER   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Within the world mathematical community, Emmy Noether is widely regarded as the greatest of all woman mathematicians.
Noether came to the United States in 1933, where she taught at Bryn Mawr College near Philadelphia and lectured at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.
Emmy Noether's name is known to many physicists through Noether's Theorem, described by Peter G. Bergmann as a cornerstone of work in general relativity as well as in certain aspects of elementary particles physics.
faculty.evansville.edu /ck6/bstud/noether.html   (556 words)

  
 Emmy Noether
Emmy Noether is best known for her contributions to abstract algebra, in particular, her study of chain conditions on ideals of rings.
Noether obtained permission to sit in on courses at the universities of Erlangen and Göttingen.
In 1904 she was permitted to matriculate and in 1907 was granted a doctorate at Erlangen after working under Paul, one of the leading mathematicians of the day.
www.matpack.de /Info/Biographies/Noether_Emmy.html   (467 words)

  
 Emmy Noether   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-02)
Her dad, Max Noether, was a mathematics professor at the University of Erlangen.
Emmy and the group around her had a marked effect on the world of algebra.
Emmy left for the States, in particular Bryn Mawr College, causing much excitement in the American mathematical fraternity.
www.uz.ac.zw /science/maths/zimaths/emmy.htm   (840 words)

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