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Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics whose objective is to solve systems of equations that are expressed in matrix form Ax=b, for which it studies concepts as abstract as matrices and their operations, as well as vector spaces among other concepts.
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Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics whose objective is to solve systems of equations that are expressed in matrix form Ax=b, for which it studies concepts as abstract as matrices and their operations, as well as vector spaces among other concepts.
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Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss De-carlfriedrichgauss.ogg; He was a German mathematician, astronomer, and physicist who contributed significantly to many fields, including number theory, mathematical analysis, differential geometry, statistics, algebra, geodesy, magnetism, and optics.
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The Italian mathematicians Scipione del Ferro, Tartaglia and Gerolamo Cardano solved the general cubic equation based on the constants that appear in the equation. Ludovico Ferrari, Cardano student. In 1535 Tartaglia was finally able to solve these problems, and announced that could solve any equation of the type: x
3 + px2 = q . -
Abū Kāmil Shujāʿ ibn Aslam ibn Muḥammad ibn Shujāʿ was an Egyptian mathematician during the Islamic Golden Age. He is considered the first mathematician to systematically use and accept irrational numbers as solutions and coefficients of equations.
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He was a Persian mathematician, astronomer and geographer. He was an astronomer and head of the Library of the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, around 820. He is considered one of the greatest mathematicians in history.
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The history of algebra begins with the Egyptians and the Babylonians, they already had a certain mastery of arithmetic, they were able to solve any second degree equation that had positive solutions.
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He was a Greek philosopher and mathematician considered the first pure mathematician. He contributed significantly to the advancement of Hellenic mathematics, geometry, and arithmetic, derived particularly from numerical relationships, and applied, for example, to the theory of weights and measures, the theory of music, or astronomy.