mentally stimulating diversions
Random Quiz
Random Science
Games
Create
User Created
Go
Most Popular
Newest
By Rating
By Length
By Favorites
By Difficulty
By Tags
Geography
Entertainment
Science
History
Literature
Sports
Language
Just For Fun
Religion
Movies
Television
Music
Gaming
Miscellaneous
Holiday
Can you name the mathematical concepts named for Euler?
created by
phw
Enter an answer (last names acceptable) in the box below
Correctly named answers will show up below
Answers do not have to be guessed in order
Source:
Wikipedia
This quiz has not been verified by Sporcle
Popular trivia games today
Close Up 100!
5916
Symbol Match Minefield
5026
The 'Wolf Pack' Toast
4406
UEFA Champions League Final Host Cities
3723
Voice Actor Match
3457
4-6 Letter States
2566
Word Ladder: WWE Actors
2164
Missing Word: Best Pictures (A-Z)
1967
And
more...
PLAY GAME
Enter answer:
0
/58 answers correct
10:00
Show Missed Answers
Javascript is not currently enabled on your browser.
If you do have Javascript enabled:
HIDE THIS WARNING
This site uses javascript to make the magic happen.
Please turn on javascript and reload this page, or use a more current browser (like
Firefox
)
You might also like these games:
Periodic Table
Planets from the Sun
Digits of Pi
Loading...
There are
3 comments
for this game.
(Warning: comments may contain spoilers)
Named after Euler Quiz
by
phw
Created Sep 25, 2009 in
Science
Game Plays 67
Nominate
Report Game
Tags
Math Quizzes
euler
concept
name
Barbaloot
:
Sep 26th, 2009 at 02:43 GMT
1 point
The 's needs to be more consistent, or at least more accepted. e.g. "Euler's Method" is the name I have always seen for the step-by-step linear approximation method.
phw
:
Sep 26th, 2009 at 04:05 GMT
1 point
You don't need to type Euler, Euler's, or Eulerian for any of them. Those prefixes are just there so the links on the results page work. I used the last "names" acceptable flag even though that made some of them cheaper than I'd intended.
James_Kay
:
Oct 25th, 2009 at 19:40 GMT
2 points
How about "Euler Buckling", a method for determing the buckling strength of columns in structural engineering?
Like us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Google+
2007-13 © Sporcle, Inc.
About
 |
Advertise
 |
Feedback
 |
Blog
 |
FAQ
 |
Embed
 |
Sporcle Live!
 |
News
 |
Terms
 |
Jobs
 |
Privacy
 
Partner of USA TODAY Sports Digital Properties
Go to the Sporcle.com Mobile Site →