Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Henri Poincaré University, or Nancy 1, nicknamed UHP, was a public research university located in Nancy, France. UHP was merged into University of Lorraine in 2012, and was previously a member of the Nancy-Université federation, belonging to the French Nancy-Metz academy .

    • 1,375
    • Jean-Pierre Finance
    • 1572, 1970
    • Public
  2. Institut Henri Poincaré - Sorbonne Université / CNRS. 11 Rue Pierre et Marie Curie, 75005 Paris. 15 Feb. 2024 31 Dec. 2024. Call for proposals / appel à projets. [Doctoral training] Programmes between January and June 2024 ; or July and December 2024. 00h01 - 23h59. IHP. Institut Henri Poincaré - Sorbonne Université / CNRS.

  3. Jules Henri Poincaré [ pwɛ̃kaˈʀe] (* 29. April 1854 in Nancy; † 17. Juli 1912 in Paris) war ein bedeutender französischer Mathematiker, theoretischer Physiker, theoretischer Astronom und Philosoph.

  4. 1. Dez. 2010 · Bereits während seiner Schulzeit fällt der junge Jules Henri Poincaré, Sohn eines Medizin-Professors an der Universität Nancy (die heute den Namen UHP – Université Henri Poincaré trägt), wegen seiner besonderen mathematischen Begabung auf, als er mehrfach einen ersten Preis im landesweiten Concours général gewinnt.

  5. 3. Sept. 2013 · Henri Poincaré was a mathematician, theoretical physicist and a philosopher of science famous for discoveries in several fields and referred to as the last polymath, one who could make significant contributions in multiple areas of mathematics and the physical sciences. This survey will focus on Poincaré’s philosophy.

  6. Site de Strasbourg : 7 rue de l'Université. F-67000 STRASBOURG. Céline Demirbas - Secrétaire-gestionnaire (Université de Strasbourg) Tél : 33 (0) 3 68 85 06 03 - Fax : 33 (0) 3 68 85 05 84. E-mail : archives-poincare-contact [at] univ-lorraine.fr.

  7. Vor 5 Tagen · Henri Poincaré (born April 29, 1854, Nancy, France—died July 17, 1912, Paris) was a French mathematician, one of the greatest mathematicians and mathematical physicists at the end of 19th century.