- Wilhelm Jordan
Wilhelm Jordan (
March 1 1842 -April 17 1899 ) was a Germangeodesist who did surveys in Germany andAfrica and founded the German geodesyjournal .Jordan was born in Ellwangen a small town in southern Germany. He studied at the polytechnic institute in Stuttgart and, after working for two years as an engineering assistant on the preliminary stages of railway construction, he returned there as an assistant in geodesy. In 1868, when he was 26 years old, he was appointed a full professor at Karlsruhe. In 1874 Jordan took part in the expedition of
Friedrich Gerhard Rohlfs to Libya. From 1881 until his death he was professor of geodesy and practical geometry at the technical university Hanover. He was a prolific writer and his best known work was his "Handbuch der Vermessungskunde" ("Textbook of Geodesy.")He is remembered among
mathematician s for theGauss-Jordan elimination algorithm, with Jordan improving the stability of the algorithm so it could be applied to minimizing the squared error insurveying . Thisalgebra ic technique appeared in the third edition (1888) of his "Textbook of Geodesy".Wilhelm Jordan is not to be confused with the mathematician
Camille Jordan (Jordan curve theorem ), nor with the German physicistPascual Jordan (Jordan algebra s).External links
* [http://www.et.fh-koeln.de/ia/ma/jordan.html Photograph and brief biography]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.