Srinivasa Ramanujan
Srinivasa
Ramanujan was born on 22 December 1887 in Erode, Madras Presidency, now
in Tamil Nadu. He is a man known for his work done in the field of
mathematics. And that too with no formal training of that subject which
others are getting in European countries. Ramanujan developed his own
mathematical research in isolation. Some extraordinary contribution done
by him in the field of mathematics are – mathematical analysis, number
theory, infinite series, and continued fractions. Along with this, the
legend has provided many theorems.
Education
He
was enrolled into Telegu School, but found it too tiring and
uninteresting to attend school and mostly he use to ran away from there.
Later in 1904, he graduated from Town Higher Secondary School.
He
also received a scholarship to study at Government Arts College in
Kumbakonam. During his studies he was so influenced by studying
mathematics that he could not focus on any other subject and failed in
all of them. This resulted him in losing the scholarship. Later, without
any degree, he left the college and continued to pursue independent
research in mathematics.
Career
His
unconditional love for mathematics was driving him to develop new
things for that subject, but to support his livelihood he was working as
a clerk in the Accountant-General's office at the Madras Port Trust
Office. He kept working on inventing new mathematical theorems and
continuously tried contacting the experts from west. G.H. Hardy, an
academician at the University of Cambridge, recognized the brilliant
work produced by Ramanujan and invited him to visit and work with him at
Cambridge. Here, Ramanujan became a Fellow of the Royal Society and a
Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.
Some
of the known works, produced by this great mind, are - Landau–Ramanujan
constant, Mock theta functions, Ramanujan conjecture, Ramanujan prime,
Ramanujan–Soldner constant, Ramanujan theta function, Ramanujan's sum,
Rogers–Ramanujan identities and Ramanujan's master theorem.
At the End
Ramanujan
died on 26th April, 1920, when he was only 32 years of age. His death
occurred untimely because of illness, malnutrition, and possibly liver
infection. In this short life he gave around 3900 results, mostly
equations and identities and almost all of them prove to be correct and
original.
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