• Thumbnail for Gabriel Cramer
    Gabriel Cramer (French: [kʁamɛʁ]; 31 July 1704 – 4 January 1752) was a Genevan mathematician. Cramer was born on 31 July 1704 in Geneva, Republic of Geneva...
    6 KB (652 words) - 17:26, 3 October 2024
  • the column vector of right-sides of the equations. It is named after Gabriel Cramer, who published the rule for an arbitrary number of unknowns in 1750...
    28 KB (4,027 words) - 00:37, 21 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Georges-Louis Le Sage
    Jean-André Deluc. Besides philosophy, he studied mathematics under Gabriel Cramer, and physics under Jean-Louis Calandrini. Later he decided to study...
    19 KB (2,512 words) - 09:59, 21 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gabriel (given name)
    (born 1996), Brazilian football player Gabriel Batistuta (born 1969), Argentine football player Gabriel Cramer (born 1994), Israeli-Canadian-American...
    12 KB (1,289 words) - 14:43, 22 September 2024
  • Gabe Cramer (born 1994), Israeli-Canadian-American baseball player Gabriel Cramer (1704–1752), Swiss mathematician, discoverer of Cramer's rule Cramer brothers...
    5 KB (634 words) - 09:09, 20 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Geneva
    (1933–2022), former alpine skier, gold medallist at the 1956 Winter Olympics Gabriel Cramer (1704–1752), Genevan mathematician Maryam d'Abo (born 1960), English...
    155 KB (15,109 words) - 09:12, 29 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Devil's curve
    }{1-\cot ^{2}\theta }}}} . Devil's curves were discovered in 1750 by Gabriel Cramer, who studied them extensively. The name comes from the shape its central...
    3 KB (390 words) - 16:31, 8 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cramer's paradox
    define one such curve. It is named after the Genevan mathematician Gabriel Cramer. This phenomenon appears paradoxical because the points of intersection...
    7 KB (955 words) - 05:29, 6 April 2024
  • Gabriel Cramer had developed a similar theory in a private letter in 1728, aimed at resolving the St. Petersburg paradox. Both Bernoulli and Cramer concluded...
    47 KB (5,882 words) - 20:12, 14 September 2024
  • solved by Daniel Bernoulli in 1738, although the Swiss mathematician Gabriel Cramer proposed taking the expectation of a square-root utility function of...
    34 KB (4,576 words) - 00:36, 10 October 2024