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Cramér

Cramér is a surname associated with Harald Cramér and with several mathematical concepts named after him. Harald Cramér (1893–1985) was a Swedish mathematician and statistician whose work helped shape modern probability theory and statistics. He introduced and developed results that bear his name in both probability and number theory.

Among his notable contributions are the Cramér–von Mises criterion, a family of statistics used to assess goodness

In the area of probability theory, Cramér's theorem provides a large deviations principle describing the exponential

In number theory, Cramér conjectured that the gaps between consecutive primes are O((log p)^2); this prime gap

The name Cramér may also appear in other mathematical contexts named after different individuals, but Harald

of
fit
between
an
empirical
distribution
and
a
theoretical
one,
and
the
Cramér–Wold
theorem,
which
states
that
a
probability
distribution
on
n-dimensional
space
is
determined
by
its
one-dimensional
projections,
a
result
central
to
convergence
in
distribution.
decay
rate
of
probabilities
for
sums
of
independent
and
identically
distributed
random
variables,
with
the
rate
function
given
by
a
Legendre
transform
of
the
cumulant
generating
function.
conjecture
remains
unproven
but
has
guided
substantial
research.
Cramér
is
the
principal
historical
figure
associated
with
the
major
theorems
and
conjectures
bearing
the
name.