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Brief life of a mathematician
On the occasion of the 113th birth anniversary of Srinivasa
Ramanujan, KRISHNASWAMI ALLADI pays tribute by describing the
life and contributions of Evariste Galois, the mathematical
genius who founded Group Theory, and who, like Ramanujan, died
very young.
G. H. HARDY of Cambridge University, Ramanujan's mentor, said
that the real tragedy of Ramanujan's life was not his early
death, but that in his formative years, the genius spent much
time proving results which were rediscoveries of past work due to
lack of proper guidance in India. Hardy argued that in
mathematics especially, the most brilliant work is done when one
is very young, so had Ramanujan lived longer, he would have
proved more theorems, but might not have produced work of higher
quality. Hardy cited as an example Evariste Galois, founder of
Group Theory, who met an untimely end in a duel at the age of
twenty. Hardy pointed out that Galois, like mathematicians Abel
who died at 22, and Riemann at 40, had done his best work by
then. Even the great Gauss, the prince of mathematicians, who
lived a full life, made most of his discoveries in his teens, and
spent the rest of his life polishing up his results for suitable
presentation.
In this article I shall describe the all too brief life of Galois
and the path breaking discoveries he made. I shall also make a
comparison with the life and contributions of Ramanujan. Finally
I shall describe the impact that Group Theory has made in various
fields and the present state of its research. In doing so, I will
talk briefly about the contributions of my distinguished
colleague Professor John G. Thompson of the University of
Florida, arguably the greatest group theorist since Galois.
For biographical details pertaining to the life of Galois, I have
relied on MacTutor History and for the development of Group
Theory, I have consulted an article by O'Connor and Robertson.
With regard to the work of Ramanujan, I profited from the article
entitled "Ramanujan's Association with Radicals in India" by
Berndt, Chan, and Zhang, that appeared in 1997 in the American
Mathematical Monthly.
Life of Galois
Evariste Galois was born on October 25, 1811 in Bourg La Reine
near Paris, France. His parents were well educated but there is
no indication of mathematical talent in his family. Galois's
father was well known in the community and was elected mayor of
his township in 1815. This period in France was quite tumultous
and saw rapid changes in leadership. Napoleon who was at the
height of his power in 1811 was thrown out in 1815 after the
defeat at Waterloo. The political instability that followed was
to have a devasting effect on the young Galois.
Galois's performance in elementary school at the Lycee in Louis-
le-Grand was very good and he won several prizes. However, in
1826 he was asked to repeat a year because his work in rhetoric
was not up to the standard. Age 16 was a turning point in his
career because it was then that he took his first mathematics
course under M. Vernier. Like Ramanujan, he became engrossed in
mathematics to such an extent that the Director of Studies wrote,
"It is the passion for mathematics that dominates him. I think it
would be best if his parents would allow him to study nothing but
this. He is wasting his time here and does nothing but torment
his teachers and overwhelm himself with punishment."
The Ecole Polytechnique was the premier university in Paris, but
Galois failed the entrance exam in 1828. So he was back at the
Louis-le-Grand and enrolled in a mathematics course by Loius
Richard. It was at this time that he read Legendre's classic
treatise on Geometry. As Richard wrote "This student works only
in the highest realms of mathematics." In April 1829 Galois
published his first paper on continued fractions (a favourite
topic of Ramanujan's) in the Annales de Mathematiques. Shortly
thereafter he started submitting articles on algebraic solutions
to equations, a topic for which he would soon contribute
revolutionary and far reaching ideas. Unfortunately, as a result
of a politically based conspiracy, Galois' father committed
suicide on July 2, 1829. This tragedy that struck the family had
a telling effect on the young Galois. For one thing, Galois
failed the entrance exam to the Ecole Polytechnique the second
time he took it shortly after his father's death. This forced him
to enter the Ecole Normale which was an annex to the Louis-le-
Grand. His total immersion in mathematics like Ramanujan's, cost
him in his performance in other subjects. His literature examiner
wrote "This is the only student who answered me poorly, he knows
absolutely nothing. I was told that this student has an
extraordinary capacity for mathematics. This astonishes me
greatly, because after the examination, I believed him to have
but little intelligence." Whatever be the opinion of the
literature examiner, Galois at that time wrote a beautiful
mathematical paper entitled "On the condition that an equation be
soluble by radicals" that was being considered for the Grand
Prize by the Academy. Unfortunately, the paper was in the
possession of Fourier who died in April; the paper was
subsequently never found and so was not considered for the prize
after all.
Sophie Germain (known now for a major contribution in connection
with Fermat's Last Theorem) wrote a letter to a mathematical
friend describing Galois' situation: "... the death of M. Fourier
has been too much for this student Galois .... He has been
expelled from the Ecole Normale. He is without money... They say
that he will go completely mad. I fear that this is true."
To make matters worse, in the midst of this mental depression
following Fourier's death and that of his father, Galois got
involved in political controversies that were raging in France.
He was imprisoned for open demonstrations, and even attempted to
commit suicide in prison. In March 1832, a cholera epidemic swept
through Paris, and all prisoners including Galois were
transferred to the Pension Sieur Faultrier. There he fell in love
with Stephanie-Felice du Montel, daughter of the resident
physician. Although he was released shortly thereafter, his
freedom was short lived. Once again, for political reasons he was
imprisoned, but this time he was to fight a duel to get out.
Galois was aware that he was fighting a superior adversary, and
that most likely he would be killed in the duel. So on the night
before the duel, he wrote a letter to a friend outlining the
wonderful new ideas he had in connection with the solvability of
algebraic equations. Galois died in the duel on May 31, 1832, at
the tender age of 20. The reasons for the duel are not entirely
clear, but Stephanie's name appears as a marginal note in the
manuscript that Galois wrote the night before he was killed.
Fortunately, his letter was preserved. The revolutionary
mathematical ideas in this letter led to the birth of Group
Theory, a central branch of mathematics with important
applications in several other fields as well.
The birth and growth of Group Theory
The subject of Group Theory deals with symmetries in general such
as those that arise in geometry and in solutions to polynomial
equations. Although certain key properties associated with groups
can be traced to earlier mathematicians, it was only with the
work of Galois that the concept of a group crystallised and
concrete applications of the concept emerged. Three different
streams that gave rise to group theory were
(i) geometry at the beginning of the 19th century, (ii) number
theory at the end of the 18th century, and (iii) the theory of
algebraic equations at the end of the 18th century leading to the
study of permutations. Since the study of geometry goes back to
antiquity, it is natural to ask what was the reason for the
emergence of the group concept via geometry. During the 19th
century, a mathematical revolution was taking place with the
emergence of non-Euclidean geometry and synthetic geometry.
Suddenly, instead of just angles and lengths dominating the
discussions, invariances under transformations were the key to
geometrical study, and indeed, this eventually led to the study
of transformation groups. Euler, the most prolific mathematician
in history, systematically studied remainder arithmetic in number
theory during the mid 18th century.This was subsequently called
modular arithmetic by Gauss who took it several steps further. In
the work of Euler and Gauss in number theory, group theoretical
properties (as we know today) associated with remainders were
crucial, but neither of them formulated the group concept in
generality.
We all learn the quadratic formula in school, namely the formula
which gives the solutions to the general quadratic equation. We
are told that there are similar but more complicated formulae for
roots of the general cubic and quartic equations, but we are not
given these formulae. The French mathematician Lagrange wanted to
find out why the cubic and quartic equations could be solved
algebraically. In this connection, permutations were first
studied by Lagrange in a classic paper of 1770 on the theory of
algebraic equations. Although the beginnings of permutation
groups can be seen in this work, Lagrange does not discuss the
general group concept at all. The first person to claim that
there is no general quintic formula, namely, the non-existence of
a formula to solve all quintics, was Ruffini in 1799. Ruffini's
work on quintics was based on Lagrange's permutation approach,
but had gaps in his reasoning. It was Abel in 1824 who gave the
first complete proof of the insolvability of general quintics. It
is here that Galois enters the picture.
Galois in 1831 was the first to really understand that the
algebraic solvability of a polynomial equation was intimately
related to the group structure of certain permutations associated
with the equation. In his now famous letter of 1832 written on
the eve of his death, Galois had demonstrated by the study of
groups, that there is no general formula that will give the roots
of all polynomials of degree n, when n is at least five. Galois'
work was not known until Liouville published it posthumously in
1846. But even then, Liouville failed to grasp the group concept
that was the key to Galois' work. The understanding of the
general group concept, and the realisation that it was the basis
of Galois' work, came only in the second half of the 19th
century. Thus like Ramanujan, Galois was much ahead of his time,
and a full grasp of his ideas came only decades later.
By 1872, Group Theory was becoming the centre stage of
mathematics because Felix Klein of Gottingen in his famous
Erlangen Programme called for the group theoretic classification
of geometry. Group Theory really came of age with the publication
of the book Theory of Groups of Finite Order by Burnside in 1897.
Also the two volume book Lehrbuch der Algebra by Weber in 1895
and 1896 became a standard text. These books influenced the next
generation of mathematicians to make group theory perhaps the
most major single branch in 20th century mathematics.
With advanced and abstract mathematics playing a prominent role
in the sciences during the 20th century, group theory became a
crucial tool outside of mathematics as well - in quantum
mechanics in physics, and crystal structure in chemistry, for
instance.
Group Theory today
In the modern era, the most prominent figure in Group Theory is
John Griggs Thompson. Born in Ottawa, Kansas, in 1932, Thompson
entered Yale University in the early 1950s to earn his B.A. in
Theology with the desire to become a Presbyterian minister. His
interest in mathematics was sparked when his roommate drew his
attention to George Gamow's book, One, Two, Three, Infinity. From
then on, the rest is history. The call of mathematics was too
strong to resist. Thompson changed his major and received a
Bachelors in Mathematics at Yale in 1955 and moved to the
University of Chicago for his Ph.D. His Ph.D. thesis of 1959 was
a masterpiece. It was not just an extension of known techniques,
but full of new and powerful ideas that soon led to major
developments in group theory. The most sensational of these was
the resolution of a long standing conjecture that all finite
groups with an odd number of elements are solvable. Thompson
proved this in collaboration with Walter Feit, and their 253 page
proof in 1963 occupied one entire issue of the Pacific Journal of
Mathematics!
For this magnum opus, Feit and Thompson received the Cole Prize
of the American Mathematical Society in 1966. Thompson continued
establishing further fundamental results, and in 1970 was awarded
the Fields Medal, the highest prize in mathematics equivalent in
prestige to the Nobel Prize, at the International Congress of
Mathematicians in Nice. That year he was also appointed Rouse
Ball Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University, a position
that he held until 1993, when he moved over to The University of
Florida as Graduate Research Professor.
Thompson's name is also closely associated with one of the
monumental achievements of the 20th century, namely, the
classification of finite simple groups. In any field of study,
one tries to understand complex objects in terms of those simpler
in structure. For example, in number theory, we try to understand
properties of integers by decomposition into prime factors. In
group theory, finite simple groups are basic building blocks.
Starting at the time of Thompson's thesis, group theory leapt
into prominence as the mathematical topic undergoing the most
rapid development.
The main reason for this was that it became clear that the
classification of all finite simple groups was now realisable,
and not just a dream. The classification was completed only in
the early 1980s as a collective effort of many noted
mathematicians, and Thompson's ideas were crucial in this effort.
In the past few years, Thompson has been working on, and made
major contributions to, the famous Inverse Galois problem which
has remained unsolved. Certain special types of groups that
Galois investigated in connection with the algebraic solvability
of polynomial equations are called Galois groups today. The
Inverse Galois Problem states that given an arbitrary finite
group, one can produce a setting in which the given group is the
Galois group of a certain polynomial.
Since Thompson's productivity over the years at the highest level
has remained unabated, he has received numerous awards and
recognitions in a steady stream. He was elected to the U.S.
National Academy of Sciences in 1971 and made Fellow of the Royal
Society in 1979. He was awarded the Sylvester Medal of the Royal
Society in 1987 and the Wolf Prize of Israel in 1992.
That year he received the Poincare golden medal by the Academie
des Sciences, Paris. This medal is awarded only on exceptional
occasions, the two previous recipients being Jaques Hadamard
(1962) and Pierre Deligne (1974). And on December 1, 2000,
Thompson was awarded the National Medal of Science by President
Clinton for his lifelong contributions to mathematics. I had the
honour of representing the University of Florida at the Medals
Ceremony, and the pleasure of seeing Thompson receiving the
medal. We at the University of Florida feel priviledged to have
Thompson as a colleague and to know personally one of the
greatest mathematicians of the 20th century.
Ramanujan and radicals
Ramanujan's interest in algebraic solutions to polynomial
equations can be seen by his work on radicals. A radical is an
expression involving combinations of various n-th roots of
integers. When one solves a polynomial equation algebraically,
such as with the quadratic formula, one expresses the solution in
terms of radicals. Out of the 58 problems that Ramanujan
submitted to the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society, ten
of them involve equalities between radicals.
During Ramanujan's time, especially among British mathematicians,
establishing identities involving radicals was quite common.
Ramanujan investigated radicals in connection with the study of
class invariants. German mathematician Weber had studied class
invariants extensively, but Ramanujan found an astonishing number
of new ones. It was only after his arrival in Cambridge that
Ramanujan knew of Weber's work. Ramanujan used class invariants
to find excellent approximations to pi, as well as determine
explicitly values of theta functions at certain points. It is
still a puzzle as to what methods Ramanujan used to compute these
class invariants. He has left no clues in his notebooks. Since
Weber's methods were highly algebraic, it is unlikely that
Ramanujan pursued such techniques. Thus, as Berndt, Chan, and
Zhang say in their paper on Ramanujan and radicals, "Ramanujan's
ideas still remain hidden behind an opaque curtain."
In summary there are many similarities in the life stories of
Galois and Ramanujan. Both faced numerous obstacles. Undaunted,
both continued to pursue mathematics with a passion and made
outstanding discoveries marked with supreme originality. The
tragedy is that both died very young, and we can only contemplate
what more they might have accomplished had they lived longer.
Finally, what a remarkable coincidence, that both communicated
their most important findings in letters just before their death.
Galois's letter gave birth to Group Theory, and Ramanujan's last
letter to Hardy created the subject of mock theta functions. We
should be thankful that these genuises have left behind ideas for
succeeding generations to ponder on and develop and that their
legacy remains strong even in this new millenium.
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