Post by Justin MJ

Information Technology and Services Professional

INTELLECTUAL WARS NOT POSSIBLE.. IF SOMEONE TOOK EFFORTS IN RESEARCH FOR ONE YEAR AND HE HAD THESIS.. THIEF STOLEN THESIS.. THIEF USED STOLEN THESIS TO RUN SMEAR COMPAIGNS IN THE SOCIETY DANG.. WAR MODE ON... In 1902, Minkowski returned to the university system, this time to the University of Göttingen. A new chair in mathematics was established specifically for Minkowski (his third chair). This was an extraordinary achievement. It was made possible by Hilbert's interest in inviting Minkowski to Göttingen. Previously, Hilbert had come to Göttingen at the invitation of Felix Klein (1849–1925), the great German mathematician who had a formative influence on the development of modern geometry. Klein had assumed the chair of mathematics at the University of Göttingen in 1886 and set about making Göttingen a great center of mathematical study. To achieve his objective, Klein persuaded the authorities to establish another chair in pure mathematics and invited Hilbert to take it. Hilbert had already received an offer for the Lazarus Fuchs Chair of Mathematics at the University of Berlin. Hilbert agreed to accept the Göttingen proposal on the condition that Minkowski join Klein's colleague at the University of Göttingen. At Klein's insistence, the Prussian academic authorities took the unprecedented decision to establish the Hilbert Chair. After arriving in Göttingen, Minkowski's primary concern was mathematical physics. In 1905, Minkowski, together with Hilbert, organized a seminar on the review of electron theories. In 1907, they organized a joint seminar on the equations of electrodynamics. For the remaining two years of his life (1907-1909), Minkowski devoted himself entirely to the study of the equations of electrodynamics and Einstein's theory of relativity. Minkowski reformulated the general theory of special relativity in terms of the space-time continuum. He showed that the main conclusions of this theory could be derived solely from mathematical rules and did not require experimentation. Minkowski's formulation gave the theory a level of clarity and sophistication that it far surpassed Einstein's original theory. Renowned physicists such as Max von Laue and Arnold developed Minkowski's ideas further. Laue's introductory textbook on the general theory of relativity, published in 1911, was incidentally the first textbook to use Minkowski's formulation. hurdles Gopakumar Nair. International Cricket Council AFBS Association of Foreign Banks in Switzerland Julius Baer Helvetia Insurance Switzerland GSK Roche Novartis Acino Araris Biotech AG REDCROSS.COM BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee SVP Worldwide UBS Russian Federation - Russia Iranian Red Crescent Society Steve Waugh Foundation Adam Gilchrist Sreekala Andrews Citizen Digital Foundation CBRE Ireland Industrial & Logistics World Health Organization UN Human Rights Council Investigative Bodies INTERPOL Europol Volgograd Police Academy of Russian Federation