Lunar Republic : Craters esclangon. 21.5N. 42.1E. 15. ernest Benjamin ~ (18761954), French astronomer andmathematician; director of the observatory at Strasbourg (1918), and professor of http://www.lunarrepublic.com/gazetteer/crater_e.shtml
Extractions: Craters (E) Craters A B C D ... Return To Gazetteer Index Feature Name Lat Long Diam Origin Eckert Wallace John ~ (1902-1971), American astronomer; a pioneer in the use of computers to tabulate astronomical data. Director of the U.S. Nautical Almanac Office during World War II. In this post he introduced machine methods to compute and print tables and began publication of the Air Almanac in 1940. Eckert directed the construction of a number of innovative computers for performing astronomical calculations, including the Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (SSEC, 1949) and the Naval Ordnance Research Calculator (NORC, 1954), which for many years was the most powerful computer in the world. The accuracy of Eckert's calculations of the Moon's orbit was so good that in 1965 he was able to correctly show that there was a concentration of mass near the lunar surface. In 1967, he produced data which improved on Brown's theory of the Moon. Eddington Sir Arthur Stanley ~ (1882-1944), British astrophysicist and mathematician; succeeded George Darwin as Plumian Professor of Astronomy at Cambridge (1913), and became director of the Cambridge Observatory (1914). Discovered the mass-luminosity relationship for stars, calculated the abundance of hydrogen, and produced a theory to explain the pulsation of Cepheid variable stars.
ACTUALITES DU PRIX LITTERAIRE Translate this page Lycée F. esclangon (Mme Magnan, Hélène Cordier CDI), 2 nde 35 élèves ?, 2 nde35 élèves ? Journée du 18 Mai 1999. · ernest Dich/Editions Anne Carrière. http://pedagogie.ac-aix-marseille.fr/etablis/colleges/colbanon/prix_litteraire/h
Extractions: Les livres (niveau seconde) (niveau 3 LE BRUIT DU VENT Hubert Mingarelli (niveau 3 ) Page blanche/Gallimard (niveau seconde) DADE CITY Laurent Sagalovitch/Actes sud (niveau seconde) (niveau 3 LA DERNIERE BALLE PERDUE Jacques Roubaud/Libres Fayard (niveau 3 LE PREMIER HOMME SUR LA LUNE Christian de Montella/Libres Fayard (niveau 3 LE TOUR DU MONDE EN NEUF GUITARES Eric Orsenna/Libres Fayard (niveau 3 /seconde) EMBRASSONS-NOUS Annie Saumont/Julliard (niveau seconde) DE QUEL AMOUR BLESSE Fouad Laroui/Julliard (niveau seconde) LA DROITE AMOUREUSE DU CERCLE Didier Nordon/Editions Autrement (niveau 3 /seconde) Retour au menu Les auteurs Fouad Laroui 2 e J. v. Campenstr. 94 hsl 1073 XW Amsterdam Hollande La droite amoureuse du cercle Didier Nordon 47, rue du Sablonat 33800 Bordeaux Jeu sans ballon Embrassons-nous Annie Saumont 29 rue des Gravilliers 75003 Paris Le bruit du vent Hubert Mingarelli Versenat 38350 La Mure Dade City Laurent SAGALOVITSCH 1380 Jervis Street - apt 204 Vancouver B.C VE6 2ES Canada
Isère (38) Translate this page Adresse e-mail CEEF 10h Espace Piano - Bertet Musique, 1 bis Rue Esclangon04 76 Adresse e-mail FEEBF Membre de la FPF 10h15 1 Rue ernest Renan 04 http://www.eglises.org/france/38/
Extractions: AUTOR MATERIA MATERIA GALLEGO PALABRA CLAVE CLASIFICACIONES SIGNATURA Patrimonio Bibliográfico Biblioteca Digital Libro en galego Mosteiro de Poio Consello da Cultura Galega Museo de Pontevedra Nodal de Pontevedra Nodal de Lugo Nodal de Ourense Nodal de Vigo Autor/a Esclangon, Ernest Título Ed. ilustrada Descric. física Serie Materias Astronomía Marc C-BP
Extractions: Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics (Q) Last revision: May 27, 2002 Q. E. D. Euclid (about 300 B. C.) concluded his proofs with hoper edei deiksai, which Medieval geometers translated as quod erat demonstrandum ("that which was to be proven"). In 1665 Benedictus de Spinoza (1632-1677) wrote a treatise on ethics, Ethica More Geometrico Demonstrata, in which he proved various moral propositions in a geometric manner. He wrote the abbreviation Q. E. D., as a seal upon his proof of each ethical proposition. The Q. E. D. abbreviation was also used by Isaac Newton in the Principia, by Galileo in a Latin text, and by Isaac Barrow, who additionally used quod erat faciendum (Q. E. F.), quod fieri nequit (Q. F. N.), and quod est absurdum (Q. E. A.). [Martin Ostwald, Sam Kutler, Robin Hartshorne, David Reed] QUADRANGLE is found in English in the fifteenth century. The word was later used later by Shakespeare. QUADRATIC is derived from the Latin quadratus, meaning "square." In English, quadratic was used in 1668 by John Wilkins (1614-1672) in An essay towards a real character, and a philosophical language
Earliest Known Uses Of Some Of The Words Of Mathematics (Q) theory (OED2). The term QUASIPERIODIC FUNCTION was introduced by ErnestEsclangon (1876-1954) (DSB, article Bohl). The term QUATERNION http://mail.mcjh.kl.edu.tw/~chenkwn/mathword/q.html
Extractions: Last revision: Aug. 2, 1999 Q. E. D. Euclid (about 300 B. C.) concluded his proofs with hoper edei deiksai, which Medieval geometers translated as quod erat demonstrandum ("that which was to be proven"). In 1665 Benedictus de Spinoza (1632-1677) wrote a treatise on ethics, Ethica More Geometrico Demonstrata, in which he proved various moral propositions in a geometric manner. He wrote the abbreviation Q. E. D., as a seal upon his proof of each ethical proposition. The Q. E. D. abbreviation was also used by Isaac Newton in the Principia, by Galileo in a Latin text, and by Isaac Barrow, who additionally used quod erat faciendum (Q. E. F.), quod fieri nequit (Q. F. N.), and quod est absurdum (Q. E. A.). [Martin Ostwald, Sam Kutler, Robin Hartshorne, David Reed] QUADRANGLE is found in English in the fifteenth century. The word was later used later by Shakespeare. QUADRATIC is derived from the Latin quadratus, meaning "square." In English, quadratic was used in 1668 by John Wilkins (1614-1672) in An essay towards a real character, and a philosophical language