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  2. Hans Maass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Maass

    Hans Maass (1969) Hans Maass (German: Hans Maaß; June 17, 1911, in Hamburg – April 15, 1992) was a German mathematician who introduced Maass wave forms and Koecher–Maass series and Maass–Selberg relations and who proved most of the Saito–Kurokawa conjecture. Maass was a student of Erich Hecke.

  3. Gustav Maass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Maass

    Gustav Maass (1830–1901) Gustav Friedrich Hermann Maass (2 December 1830 – 28 April 1901) was a German botanist who was a native of Brandenburg an der Havel.. In 1848, he became an assistant to agriculturalist Hermann von Nathusius (1809–1879); further, from late 1849, he spent twelve-plus years in the military as an artilleryman in the 3rd Brandenburg Artillery Brigade, as a ...

  4. Type 1934 destroyers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_1934_destroyers

    The Type 1934 destroyers, also known as the Z1 class or Leberecht Maass class after the lead ship, were a group of four destroyers built for the German Navy (initially called the Reichsmarine and then renamed the Kriegsmarine in 1935) during the mid-1930s, shortly before the beginning of World War II.

  5. German destroyer Z1 Leberecht Maass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_destroyer_Z1...

    Zerstörerflotille, including Leberecht Maass, escorted the battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau as well as the heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper during the initial stage of the sortie on 18 February, but Leberecht Maass and Z5 Paul Jacobi were detached the following day on an unsuccessful search for enemy shipping in the Skagerrak. [15] [16]

  6. Maass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maass

    Maass or Maaß is a German surname. People with this surname include: Clara Maass (1876–1901), American nurse; G. F. H. Maass (1830–1901), German botanist; Gustav Maass (1893–1964), American architect; Hans Maass (1911–1992), German mathematician; Hermann Maaß (1897–1944), resistance fighter; Johann Maass (1766–1823), German ...

  7. Maass–Selberg relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maass–Selberg_relations

    In mathematics, the Maass–Selberg relations are some relations describing the inner products of truncated real analytic Eisenstein series, that in some sense say that distinct Eisenstein series are orthogonal. Hans Maass introduced the Maass–Selberg relations for the case of real analytic Eisenstein series on the upper half plane. [1]

  8. Johann Maass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Maass

    Johann Gebhard Ehrenreich Maass (German: Maaß; February 26, 1766 – December 23, 1823) was a German psychologist. Maass was born in 1766 in Krottendorf near Halberstadt . In 1791 he became an extraordinary professor of philosophy, and in 1798 a full professor.

  9. Gustav Maass (architect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Maass_(architect)

    Gustav Adam Maass Jr. (1893–1964) was an American architect working primarily in the Mediterranean Revival style who designed public buildings and private homes in and around Palm Beach, Florida, from the 1920s until his death in 1964.

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