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  2. Professor Calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professor_Calculus

    Calculus first appeared in Red Rackham's Treasure (more specifically in the newspaper prepublication of 4–5 March 1943 [2]), and was the result of Hergé's long quest to find the archetypal mad scientist or absent-minded professor. Although Hergé had included characters with similar traits in earlier stories, Calculus developed into a much ...

  3. Absent-minded professor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absent-minded_professor

    "Doc" Emmett Brown from Back to the Future is an example of an absent-minded scientist-inventor character. He is depicted as strange, eccentric, or insane. Another example is the title character in the film The Absent-Minded Professor and its less successful film remakes, all based on the short story "A Situation of Gravity" by Samuel W. Taylor.

  4. Griffin (The Invisible Man) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griffin_(The_Invisible_Man)

    The Invisible Man's Revenge (1944): Jon Hall stars as Robert Griffin / Invisible Man. Griffin is a madman who seeks revenge on those who have wronged him, and becomes invisible upon experimentation by eccentric scientist Dr. Peter Drury and uses it to get revenge on his former friends and business partners turned enemies, Sir Jasper and Lady ...

  5. List of fictional scientists and engineers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional...

    ) – eccentric scientist and inventor whose chemical creations turned a group of ordinary men into superhero rock musicians who fight crime with the aide of The Professor's gadgets and contraptions; Zefram Cochrane (Star Trek: The Original Series and Star Trek: First Contact) – inventor of the warp drive

  6. Mad scientist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_scientist

    A common stereotype of a mad scientist. The mad scientist (also mad doctor or mad professor) is a stock character of a scientist who is perceived as "mad, bad and dangerous to know" [1] or "insane" owing to a combination of unusual or unsettling personality traits and the unabashedly ambitious, taboo or hubristic nature of their experiments.

  7. Marshall Hall (mathematician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Hall_(mathematician)

    He proposed Hall's conjecture on the differences between perfect squares and perfect cubes, which remains an open problem as of 2015. Hall's work [6] on continued fractions showed that the Lagrange spectrum includes all numbers greater than 6. This interval is known as Hall's Ray. The lower limit of Hall's ray was established by Freiman in 1975.

  8. However, a vegan diet does require supplementation of vitamin B 12, [359] and vitamin B 12 deficiency occurs in up to 80% of vegans that do not supplement their diet. [362] Consuming no animal products increases the risk of deficiencies of vitamins B 12 and D , calcium , iron , omega-3 fatty acids , [ 363 ] and sometimes iodine . [ 364 ]

  9. List of female detective characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_female_detective...

    Aiden Burn portrayed by (Vanessa Ferlito) was a New York City police detective and forensic scientist on the CBS series CSI: NY, 2004–05. Mary Louise Burrows is a 15-year-old who sets out to prove her grandfather not guilty of treason, in Mary Louise (1916) by L. Frank Baum (author of The Wizard of Oz ) under the pseudonym Edith Van Dyne .