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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Emmy_NoetherEmmy Noether - Wikipedia

    Amalie Emmy Noether [a] ( US: / ˈnʌtər /, UK: / ˈnɜːtə /; German: [ˈnøːtɐ]; 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. [4]

  2. 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.

  3. Jun 12, 2018 · Born in 1882, Noether (her full name was Amalie Emmy Noether) was the daughter of mathematician Max Noether and Ida Amalia Noether.

  4. 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 universe...

  5. 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...

  6. Mar 23, 2011 · Emmy Noether is best known for her contributions to abstract algebra, in particular, her study of chain conditions on ideals of rings. View thirteen larger pictures. Biography. Emmy Noether's father, Max Noether, was a distinguished mathematician and a professor at Erlangen but he came from a family of wholesale hardware dealers.

  7. Jul 16, 2021 · Emmy Noether earned a doctorate in mathematics in 1909, but women were not allowed to work as professors at that time in Germany.

  8. A brilliant algebraist and iconic figure for women in modern science, Noether exerted a strong influence on the younger mathematicians of her time and long thereafter; today, she is known worldwide as the "mother of modern algebra."

  9. Dec 3, 2018 · A hundred years ago a result was published that came to shape the character of modern physics. Its author, Emmy Noether, was a woman, a mathematician rather than a physicist, and according to Albert Einstein a "creative mathematical genius".

  10. Apr 18, 2024 · Born in Germany in 1882, Emmy was first taught “feminine” subjects like cooking, cleaning, and piano,- which she didn’t like. She was near-sighted, spoke with a lisp, didn’t give a whit how she looked, and didn’t stand out academically. But she loved to dance and mathematics.