Eugène Rouché

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Eugène Rouché
Born 18 August 1832
Sommières, Gard, France
Died 19 August 1910 at Lunel, Hérault)
Lunel, Hérault
Citizenship French
Nationality French
Fields Mathematics
Institutions Charlemagne Lyceum, École Centrale
Alma mater École Polytechnique
Known for Rouché's theorem, Rouché-Capelli theorem

Eugène Rouché (born 18 August 1832 at Sommières, Gard, France, died 19 August 1910 at Lunel, Hérault) was a French mathematician.

Career

He was an alumnus of the École Polytechnique, graduating in 1852. He went on to become professor of mathematics at the Charlemagne lyceum then at the École Centrale, and admissions examiner at his alma mater. He is most well known for Rouché's theorem in complex analysis, which he published in his alma mater's institutional journal in 1862, and for the Rouché-Capelli theorem in linear algebra.

See also

References

This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.
  • Rouché et Comberousse (de), Traité de géométrie, tomes I et II, 7e édition, 1900 (réédition Jacques Gabay 1997).

External links

  • Biography at the St Andrews university website
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