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Amalie Emmy Noether (US: / ˈ n ʌ t ər /, UK: / ˈ n ɜː t ə /; German:; 23 March 1882 – 14 April 1935) was a German mathematician who made many important contributions to abstract algebra. She proved Noether's first and second theorems, which are fundamental in mathematical physics.
Jun 11, 2024 · Emmy Noether (born March 23, 1882, Erlangen, Germany—died April 14, 1935, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, U.S.) was a German mathematician whose innovations in higher algebra gained her recognition as the most creative abstract algebraist of modern times.
Jun 12, 2018 · A century after she published a groundbreaking mathematical theory, Emmy Noether gets her due.
Emmy Noether was a mathematician who discovered perhaps the most profound idea in contemporary physics. Noether’s theorem, which she formulated in 1915, says that symmetries in the...
Jul 15, 2021 · Noether made groundbreaking contributions to mathematics at a time when women were barred from academia and when Jewish people like herself faced persecution in Nazi Germany, where she lived.
Apr 18, 2024 · Great Women in Science: Emmy Noether, Greatest Female Mathematician. By Barbara Pfeffer Billauer JD MA (Occ. Health) PhD — Apr 18, 2024. Among the most creative and original mathematical thinkers – explanations of her work are virtually incomprehensible to us mortals, who communicate in words rather than symbols – Amalie “Emmy ...
Sep 12, 2018 · Emmy Noether was a force in mathematics — and knew it. She was fully confident in her capabilities and ideas. Yet a century on, those ideas, and their contribution to science, often go...
Mar 26, 2012 · Scientists are a famously anonymous lot, but few can match in the depths of her perverse and unmerited obscurity the 20th-century mathematical genius Emmy Noether.
May 26, 2015 · Emmy (officially Amalie Emmy) Noether, born 1882, did not stand out in any particular way as a child, although she did, on occasion, attract some notice for her astonishing quickness in...
Jun 12, 2018 · Emmy Noether may be the most influential mathematician you’ve never heard of. In 1918, she solved a puzzle in Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.