About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 23. Chapters: Lodovico Ferrari, Giulio Racah, Lorenzo Mascheroni, Giovanni Ceva, Eugenio Elia Levi, Antonio Signorini, Carlo Somigliana, Alessandro Padoa, Guido Zappa, Giambattista Benedetti, Baldassarre Boncompagni, Cesare Arzela, Giulio Ascoli, Francesco Brioschi, Pietro Abbati Marescotti, Giuseppe Vitali, Mauro Picone, Federico Commandino, Paolo Ruffini, Beniamino Segre, Gasparo Berti, Giuseppe Veronese, Cesare Burali-Forti, Ulisse Dini, Enrico Betti, Giovanni Francesco Sagredo, Vincenzo Riccati, Ernesto Cesaro, Carlo Alberto Castigliano, Giulio Carlo de' Toschi di Fagnano, Giuseppe Colombo, Andrea Naccari, Luigi Guido Grandi, Luigi Poletti, Tommaso Ceva, Luigi Fantappie, Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, Nils Aall Barricelli, Francesco Cetti, Giusto Bellavitis, Enrico Arbarello, Felice Casorati, Pietro Cataldi, Alfredo Andreini, Pietro Mengoli, Michele Cipolla, Ugo Morin, Carlo Emilio Bonferroni, Gustavo Colonnetti, Arnoldo Frigessi, Francesco Paolo Cantelli, Lorenzo Respighi, Giuseppe Lauricella, Mario Bettinus, Francesco Stelluti, Humiaki Huzita, Gino Fano, Fazio Cardano, Leonardo Ximenes, Gregorio Fontana, Emilio Artom, Vinzenz Bronzin, Delfino Codazzi, Giovanni Vacca, Alessandro Marchetti, Orazio Grassi, Leonida Tonelli, Giacomo Albanese, Gaspare Mainardi, Angelo Genocchi, Paulo Pancatuccio. Excerpt: Eugenio Elia Levi (October 18, 1883 - October 28, 1917) was an Italian mathematician, known for his fundamental contributions in group theory, in the theory of partial differential operators and in the theory of functions of several complex variables: he was the younger brother of Beppo Levi and died in the First World War. He wrote 33 papers, classified by his colleague and friend Mauro Picone according to the scheme reported in this section. He wrote only three papers in group theory: in the first one, Levi 1905, he discovered what...