Takeo Wada
Takeo Wada (Japanese: 和田健雄, Hepburn: Wada Takeo, 1882–1944) was a Japanese mathematician at Kyoto University working in analysis and topology. He suggested the Lakes of Wada to Kunizo Yoneyama, who wrote about them and named them after Wada.
Publications
- Wada, Takeo (1912), "The conception of a curve", The memoirs of the College of Science and Engineering, Kyoto Imperial University, 3 (9): 265–275
gollark: I will pay you one letter h if you do somehow manage to generate infinite energy this way.
gollark: I mean, it probably won't cost you much, so I guess try it if you want to, but don't expect it to do anything.
gollark: You're not going to overturn extremely well-established scientific laws with some weird apparatus and some water.
gollark: It would only go to a certain height or something, you can't make it loop forever without inputting energy.
gollark: (unless this is satire, I'm terrible at detecting satire)
References
- Neoi, Makoto (2004), A Study on Educational Viewpoints of a Mathematician Kunizo Yoneyama (in Japanese), Tokyo: Tokai University, p. 12
- Mimura, Mamoru (1999), "The Japanese school of topology", in James, I. M. (ed.), History of topology, Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 863–882, doi:10.1016/B978-044482375-5/50032-8, ISBN 978-0-444-82375-5, MR 1721126
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