Briefwechsel von Leonhard Euler mit Johann I Bernoulli und Niklaus I Bernoulli

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Springer Science & Business Media, 28.05.1997 - 747 Seiten
This is Volume 2 of the envisaged ten-book series and the fourth work to be released to date. It contains complete transcripts of the letters - the majority were composed in Latin - which Euler exchanged with Johann I Bernoulli and Nikolaus I Bernoulli; full translation of all letters; and also critical, historico scientific commentaries. The present edition is uniquely comprehensive, taking into account all known manuscripts. Central topics are: analysis, differential equations, calculus of variations, mechanics, hydromechanics, hydraulics and theory of planetary motions.
 

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Autoren-Profil (1997)

Leonhard Euler was one of the most prolific mathematicians of all time, amassing nearly 900 publications over the course of his lifetime. Born in Basel, Switzerland, Euler spent substantial amounts of time promoting mathematics at the courts of Berlin and St. Petersburg. Euler was adept at pure and applied mathematics. His textbooks on algebra and calculus became classics and for generations remained standard introductions to both subjects. He also made seminal advances in the theory of differential equations, number theory, mechanics, astronomy, hydraulics, and the calculus of variations. In 1738, Euler lost vision in one eye. In time, he became totally blind but continued to write. During his life, Euler published more than 800 books, most of them in Latin. Euler died in 1783.

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