• Thumbnail for Richard Dedekind
    Julius Wilhelm Richard Dedekind [ˈdeːdəˌkɪnt] (6 October 1831 – 12 February 1916) was a German mathematician who made important contributions to number...
    16 KB (1,732 words) - 02:11, 15 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dedekind cut
    In mathematics, Dedekind cuts, named after German mathematician Richard Dedekind (but previously considered by Joseph Bertrand), are а method of construction...
    13 KB (2,056 words) - 20:18, 2 April 2024
  • In abstract algebra, a Dedekind domain or Dedekind ring, named after Richard Dedekind, is an integral domain in which every nonzero proper ideal factors...
    24 KB (3,672 words) - 14:01, 18 February 2024
  • In mathematics, a set A is Dedekind-infinite (named after the German mathematician Richard Dedekind) if some proper subset B of A is equinumerous to A...
    12 KB (1,749 words) - 17:49, 11 April 2024
  • provided an axiomatization of natural-number arithmetic. In 1888, Richard Dedekind proposed another axiomatization of natural-number arithmetic, and in 1889...
    47 KB (6,301 words) - 08:56, 11 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dedekind number
    mathematics, the Dedekind numbers are a rapidly growing sequence of integers named after Richard Dedekind, who defined them in 1897. The Dedekind number M(n)...
    15 KB (1,894 words) - 17:42, 5 March 2024
  • In mathematics, the Dedekind eta function, named after Richard Dedekind, is a modular form of weight 1/2 and is a function defined on the upper half-plane...
    17 KB (2,710 words) - 20:40, 5 March 2024
  • this article lists only a small fraction of these. Dedekind sums were introduced by Richard Dedekind in a commentary on fragment XXVIII of Bernhard Riemann's...
    5 KB (933 words) - 18:38, 23 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dedekind–MacNeille completion
    and constructed it, and after Richard Dedekind because its construction generalizes the Dedekind cuts used by Dedekind to construct the real numbers from...
    22 KB (2,726 words) - 08:00, 11 January 2024
  • ζK(s) = 0 and 0 < Re(s) < 1, then Re(s) = 1/2. The Dedekind zeta function is named for Richard Dedekind who introduced it in his supplement to Peter Gustav...
    11 KB (1,529 words) - 02:02, 26 February 2024