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Riemann (crater)

Riemann (pronounced REE mahn) is a lunar crater that is located near the northeastern limb of the Moon, and can just be observed edge-on when libration effects bring it into sight. It lies to the east-northeast of the large walled plain Gauss. To the southeast, beyond sight on the far side, is the crater Vestine.

This is a heavily battered and eroded formation that is only a remnant of its former self. The outer rim has been worn away in many places, and now forms an irregular series of ridges in a rough circle. The rim is overlain along the south-southwestern rim by Beals, and several smaller craters lie along the western and southeast rim. The most intact portion of the outer wall is along the eastern edge.

The interior floor is a mixture of level terrain mixed with rough ground where impacts have stirred up the surface. It is generally less rough in the eastern half, especially near the center. A small, bowl-shaped crater lies on the floor in the southeastern part of the interior, and the faint remnants of several other lesser craters can be observed in the surface.

Riemann (surname)

Riemann is a German surname. Notable people with this surname include the following:

  • Bernhard Riemann, mathematician (1826–1866)
  • Christel Riemann-Hanewinckel, German politician (born 1947)
  • Fritz Riemann, German chess master (1859–1932)
  • Fritz Riemann (psychologist), German psychoanalyst (1902–1979)
  • Hugo Riemann, German musicologist (1849–1919)
  • Johannes Riemann, German actor (1888–1959)
  • Katja Riemann, German actress (born 1963)
  • Manuel Riemann, German soccer player (born 1988)
  • Paula Riemann, German actress (born 1993)
  • Solomon Riemann, Jewish traveller (died c. 1873)
  • Ziska Riemann, German scriptwriter (born 1973)

Usage examples of "riemann".

Platek, for his part, had expected Conrad von Riemann Bunger to be a Nazi.

The idealists in poetry, music, and philosophy gave place to great men of science, to figures such as those of Ludwig and Liebig, of Gauss, Riemann, and Helmholtz.

Foremost among these are the nineteenth-century mathematical insights of Georg Bernhard Riemann that firmly established the geometrical apparatus for describing curved spaces of arbitrary dimension.

Twenty centuries after Euclid, the mathematician Bernhard Riemann took a great leap in 1854, liberating the idea of dimensions from our spatial senses.

Instead, Riemann took dimension to refer to conceptual spaces, which he named manifolds.

Father Riemann when he at last appeared, bouncing downstairs from somewhere, with both hands outstretched to shake, did not look to Alex old enough or calm enough for such penetrating insights.

Alex for some reason had been expecting a large man, but Father Riemann was compact and energetic.

Chicago it was a little later in the morning, and Father Fred Riemann was looking over the morning mail at his desk, a second cup of coffee at hand.

But Father Riemann when he at last appeared, bouncing downstairs from somewhere, with both hands outstretched to shake, did not look to Alex old enough or calm enough for such penetrating insights.

In Chicago it was a little later in the morning, and Father Fred Riemann was looking over the morning mail at his desk, a second cup of coffee at hand.

They were described as cuts in a Riemann sheet of order four, but that told him very little.

Gauss and Euler, Riemann and Levi-Civita, deRham and Cartan, Radiya and Blanca then Yatima knew there were no shortcuts, no alternatives to exploring the Mines firsthand.

Hugo Riemann quotes an extract from an anonymous manuscript of the tenth century, in which the author gives directions for a set of organ pipes.

His operas subsided into farce, the serious element being almost wholly lacking, and, according to Riemann, the last of them shows no improvement over the first.

I decided the Riemann function is too indirect to find an exact error term.