It is also called Stinespring's factorization theorem.
Pythagoras' theorem :)
There is no theorem with the standard name "1.20". This is probably a non-standard name from a textbook which is either the 20th theorem in the first chapter or a theorem of the 20th section of the first chapter.
Pythagorus did hints the name "Pythagoream Theorem."
He didn't name it. It is named after Pythagoras because he first developed the theorem.
The Pythagorean theorem gets its name from the ancient Greek mathematician Pythagoras. He was one of the first to offer proof of the theorem.
The theorem emulates the action of a hinge. As the angle of the hinge is increased the distance between the free edges increases.
There is no "Shekhar theorem" though there are mathematicians and other investigators whose first or last name is "Shekhar."
Yes. His name is on it.
Pythagoras. He has the Pythagorean Theorem named after him.
Pythagoras
The Liouville theorem of complex is a math theorem name after Joseph Liouville. The applications of the Liouville theorem of complex states that each bounded entire function has to be a constant, where the function is represented by 'f', the positive number by 'M' and the constant by 'C'.
The Pythagorean theorem is often referred to by its original name in ancient Greek, which is "theorem of Pythagoras" or simply "Pythagorean theorem." However, some historians suggest that it may have been known to earlier civilizations, such as the Babylonians and Indians, who had similar geometric principles, although they did not attribute it to Pythagoras. Therefore, while "Pythagorean theorem" is the commonly accepted term, its foundational concepts may have existed long before Pythagoras himself.