Write about 5 mathematician
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Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
We start our list with Sir Isaac Newton, considered by many to be the greatest scientist of all time. There aren't many subjects that Newton didn't have a huge impact in — he was one of the inventors of calculus, built the first reflecting telescope and helped establish the field of classical mechanics with his seminal work, "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica." He was the first to decompose white light into its component colors and gave us the three laws of motion, now known as Newton's laws.
Carl Gauss (1777-1855)
Isaac Newton is a hard act to follow, but if anyone can pull it off, it's Carl Gauss. If Newton is considered the greatest scientist of all time, Gauss could easily be called the greatest mathematician ever. Carl Friedrich Gauss was born to a poor family in Germany in 1777 and quickly showed himself to be a brilliant mathematician. He published "Arithmetical Investigations," a foundational textbook that laid out the tenets of number theory (the study of whole numbers). Without number theory, you could kiss computers goodbye.
John von Neumann (1903-1957)
John von Neumann was born János Neumann in Budapest a few years after the start of the 20th century, a well-timed birth for all of us, for he went on to design the architecture underlying nearly every single computer built on the planet today.
Alan Turing (1912-1954)
Alan Turing a British mathematician who has been call the father of computer science. During World War II, Turing bent his brain to the problem of breaking Nazi crypto-code and was the one to finally unravel messages protected by the infamous Enigma machine. Being able to break Nazi codes gave the Allies an enormous advantage and was later credited by Winston Churchill as one of the main reasons the Allies won the war.
Benoit Mandelbrot (1924-2010)
Benoit Mandelbrot landed on this list thanks to his discovery of fractal geometry. Fractals, often-fantastical and complex shapes built on simple, self-replicable formulas, are fundamental to computer graphics and animation. Without fractals, it's safe to say that we would be decades behind where we are now in the field of computer-generated images.
We start our list with Sir Isaac Newton, considered by many to be the greatest scientist of all time. There aren't many subjects that Newton didn't have a huge impact in — he was one of the inventors of calculus, built the first reflecting telescope and helped establish the field of classical mechanics with his seminal work, "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica." He was the first to decompose white light into its component colors and gave us the three laws of motion, now known as Newton's laws.
Carl Gauss (1777-1855)
Isaac Newton is a hard act to follow, but if anyone can pull it off, it's Carl Gauss. If Newton is considered the greatest scientist of all time, Gauss could easily be called the greatest mathematician ever. Carl Friedrich Gauss was born to a poor family in Germany in 1777 and quickly showed himself to be a brilliant mathematician. He published "Arithmetical Investigations," a foundational textbook that laid out the tenets of number theory (the study of whole numbers). Without number theory, you could kiss computers goodbye.
John von Neumann (1903-1957)
John von Neumann was born János Neumann in Budapest a few years after the start of the 20th century, a well-timed birth for all of us, for he went on to design the architecture underlying nearly every single computer built on the planet today.
Alan Turing (1912-1954)
Alan Turing a British mathematician who has been call the father of computer science. During World War II, Turing bent his brain to the problem of breaking Nazi crypto-code and was the one to finally unravel messages protected by the infamous Enigma machine. Being able to break Nazi codes gave the Allies an enormous advantage and was later credited by Winston Churchill as one of the main reasons the Allies won the war.
Benoit Mandelbrot (1924-2010)
Benoit Mandelbrot landed on this list thanks to his discovery of fractal geometry. Fractals, often-fantastical and complex shapes built on simple, self-replicable formulas, are fundamental to computer graphics and animation. Without fractals, it's safe to say that we would be decades behind where we are now in the field of computer-generated images.
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Srinivasa Ramanujan, Aryabatta, Bramagupta, C.R. Rao, Garish Chandra are the five mathematician name
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