Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Johann Christian Martin Bartels. Johann Friedrich Pfaff (sometimes spelled Friederich; 22 December 1765 – 21 April 1825) was a German mathematician. He was described as one of Germany's most eminent mathematicians during the 19th century. He was a precursor of the German school of mathematical thinking, under which Carl Friedrich Gauss and ...

  2. Quick Info. Born. 22 December 1765. Stuttgart, Württemberg (now Germany) Died. 21 April 1825. Halle, Saxony (now Germany) Summary. Johann Friedrich Pfaff was an influential German mathematician who worked on systems of partial differential equations. View two larger pictures. Biography.

  3. People also ask

  4. Apr 17, 2024 · partial differential equation. Johann Friedrich Pfaff (born December 22, 1765, Stuttgart, Württemberg [Germany]—died April 21, 1825, Halle, Saxony [Germany]) was a German mathematician who proposed the first general method of integrating partial differential equations of the first order.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Apr 12, 2007 · Deutsch: de:Johann Friedrich Pfaff (* 22. Dezember 1765 in Stuttgart; † 21. Dezember 1765 in Stuttgart; † 21. April 1825 in Halle (Saale)),ein deutscher Mathematiker.

  6. chic.caltech.edu › genealogy › johann-friedrich-pfaffJohann Friedrich Pfaff - CHIC

    Johann Friedrich Pfaff (22 December 1765 – 21 April 1825) was a German mathematician. He was described as one of Germany’s most eminent mathematicians during the 19th century. He was a precursor of the German school of mathematical thinking, which under Carl Friedrich Gauss and his followers largely determined the lines on which mathematics ...

  7. Johann Friedrich Pfaff.jpg 228 × 268; 25 KB Pfaff, Johann Friedrich – Commentatio de ortibus et occasibus siderum apud auctores classicos commemoratis, 1786 – BEIC 4641692.jpg 1,268 × 1,889; 534 KB

  8. views 2,716,233 updated. PFAFF, JOHANN FRIEDRICH. ( b. Stuttgart, Germany, 22 December 1765; d. Halle, Germany, 21 April 1825) mathematics. Pfaff came from a distinguished family of Wurttemberg civil servants.

  1. People also search for