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Title: 3 Famous Mathematicians


1
3 Famous Mathematicians
  • By Tyler Peck

2
Pythagoras
  • Pythagoras, who is sometimes called the "First
    Philosopher," studied under Anaximander,
    Egyptians, Babylonians, and the mystic Pherekydes
    (from whom Pythagoras acquired a belief in
    reincarnation) he became the most influential of
    early Greek mathematicians. He is credited with
    being first to use axioms and deductive proofs,
    so his influence on Plato and Euclid may be
    enormous. He and his students (the
    "Pythagoreans") were ascetic mystics for whom
    mathematics was partly a spiritual tool. He was
    Born on (578-505)B.C.

3
Pythagoras
  • Some occultists treat Pythagoras as a wizard and
    founding mystic philosopher. Pythagoras was very
    interested in astronomy and recognized that the
    Earth was a globe similar to the other planets.
    He and his followers began to study the question
    of planetary motions, which would not be resolved
    for more than two millenia. He believed thinking
    was located in the brain rather than heart. The
    words "philosophy" and "mathematics" are said to
    have been coined by Pythagoras

4
Pythagoras
  • His students included Hippasus of Metapontum,
    perhaps the famous physician Alcmaeon, Milo of
    Croton, and Croton's daughter Theano (who may
    have been Pythagoras's wife). The term
    "Pythagorean" was also adopted by many disciples
    who lived later these disciples include
    Philolaus of Croton, the natural philosopher
    Empedocles, and several other famous Greeks.
    Pythagoras' successor was apparently Theano
    herself the Pythagoreans were one of the few
    ancient schools to practice gender equality.

5
Pythagoras
6
Isaac (sir) Newton
  • Newton was an industrious lad who built marvelous
    toys (e.g. a model windmill powered by a mouse on
    treadmill). At about age 22, on leave from
    University, this genius began revolutionary
    advances in mathematics, optics, dynamics,
    thermodynamics, acoustics and celestial
    mechanics. He is famous for his Three Laws of
    Motion (inertia, force, reciprocal action) but,
    as Newton himself acknowledged, these Laws
    weren't fully novel Hipparchus, Ibn al-Haytham,
    Galileo and Huygens had all developed much basic
    mechanics already, and Newton credits the First
    Law itself to Aristotle. However Newton was also
    apparently the first person to conclude that the
    ordinary gravity we observe on Earth is the very
    same force that keeps the planets in orbit.Born
    (1642-1727)

7
Isaac (sir) Newton
  • His Law of Universal Gravitation was
    revolutionary and due to Newton alone.
    (Christiaan Huygens, the other great mechanist of
    the era, had independently deduced that Kepler's
    laws imply inverse-square gravitation, but he
    considered the action at a distance in Newton's
    theory to be "absurd.") Newton's other
    intellectual interests included chemistry,
    theology, astrology and alchemy. Although this
    list is concerned only with mathematics, Newton's
    greatness is indicated by the wide range of his
    physics.

8
Isaac (sir) Newton
  • Even without his revolutionary Laws of Motion and
    his Cooling Law of thermodynamics, he'd be famous
    just for his work in optics, where he explained
    diffraction and observed that white light is a
    mixture of all the rainbow's colors. (Although
    his corpuscular theory competed with Huygen's
    wave theory, Newton understood that his theory
    was incomplete without waves.) Newton also
    designed the first reflecting telescope, first
    reflecting microscope, and the sextant.

9
Isaac (sir) Newton
  • Although others also developed the techniques
    independently, Newton is regarded as the Father
    of Calculus (which he called "fluxions") he
    shares credit with Leibniz for the Fundamental
    Theorem of Calculus (that integration and
    differentiation are each other's inverse
    operation). He applied calculus for several
    purposes finding areas, tangents, the lengths of
    curves and the maxima and minima of functions. In
    addition to several other important advances in
    analytic geometry, his mathematical works include
    the Binomial Theorem, his eponymous numeric
    method, the idea of polar coordinates, and power
    series for exponential and trigonometric
    functions. (His equation   ex ? xk / k!   has
    been called the "most important series in
    mathematics.")

10
Picture of Isaac (sir) Newton
11
William Rowan (sir) Hamilton
  • Hamilton was a childhood prodigy. Home-schooled
    and self-taught, he started as a student of
    languages and literature, was influenced by an
    arithmetic prodigy his own age, read Euclid,
    Newton and Lagrange, found an error by Laplace,
    and made new discoveries in optics all this
    before the age of seventeen when he first
    attended school. At college he enjoyed
    unprecedented success in all fields, but his
    undergraduate days were cut short abruptly by his
    appointment as Trinity Professor of Astronomy at
    the age of 22. He soon began publishing his
    revolutionary treatises on optics, in which he
    developed the Principle of Least Action. He
    predicted that some crystals would have an
    hitherto unknown "conical" refraction mode this
    was confirmed experimentally.Born (1805-1865)

12
William Rowan (sir) Hamilton
  • Hamilton's Principle of Least Action, and its
    associated equations and concept of configuration
    space, led to a revolution in mathematical
    physics. Since Maupertuis had named this
    Principle a century earlier, it is possible to
    underestimate Hamilton's contribution. However
    Maupertuis, along with others credited with
    anticipating the idea (Fermat, Leibniz, Euler and
    Lagrange) failed to state the full Principle
    correctly. Rather than minimizing action,
    physical systems sometimes achieve a non-minimal
    but stationary action in configuration space.
    (Poisson and d' Alembert had noticed exceptions
    to Euler-Lagrange least action, but failed to
    find Hamilton's solution.

13
William Rowan (sir) Hamilton
  • Hamilton also made revolutionary contributions to
    dynamics, differential equations, the theory of
    equations, numerical analysis, fluctuating
    functions, and graph theory (he marketed a puzzle
    based on his Hamiltonian paths). He invented the
    ingenious hodograph. He coined several
    mathematical terms including "vector," "scalar,"
    "associative," and "tensor." In addition to his
    brilliance and creativity, Hamilton was renowned
    for thoroughness and produced voluminous writings
    on several subjects.

14
William Rowan (sir) Hamilton
  • Hamilton himself considered his greatest
    accomplishment to be the development of
    quaternions, a non-Abelian field to handle 3-D
    rotations. While there is no 3-D analog to the
    Gaussian complex-number plane (based on the
    equation   i2 -1  ), quaternions derive from a
    4-D analog based on   i2 j2 k2 ijk -1.
    (Despite their being "obsoleted" by more general
    matrix and tensor methods, quaternions are still
    in wide engineering use because of certain
    practical advantages.)

15
Picture of William Rowan (sir) Hamilton
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