EducationWorld

Life and times of Srinivasa Ramanujan

Srinivas Ramanujan

The story of how maths genius Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920) was discovered by the world is one of the most engaging accounts in the history of mathematics. In 1913, Ramanujan wrote a ten-page letter containing 120 theorems to eminent English mathematician G.H. Hardy of Trinity College, Cambridge (UK). Hardy took hours to analyse the authenticity of the letter — to ascertain whether it was written by a “crank or a genius”. After consultations with several math professors he came to the latter conclusion. “They must be true, because if they were not true, no one would have had the imagination to invent them,’’ he remarked. Born on December 22, 1887, into a poor Hindu Brahmin family in Erode, Tamil Nadu, Ramanujan was an autodidact who cultivated his love for mathematics in total isolation. His introduction to formal mathematics was at age ten when a friend gave him a trigonometry text by S.L. Loney (published by Cambridge University Press, 1894) which he mastered in a short span of two years, proving some important theorems and identities independently. However the book that changed his life was George Schoobridge Carr’s A Synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure and Applied Mathematics — a compilation of 6,615 theorems. By age 17, he was researching advance number theory, including Bernoulli numbers and the Euler-Mascheroni constant. In 1903, Ramanujan was awarded a scholarship to study at the Government College, Kumbakonam which was later rescinded when he failed in all subjects except mathematics. Four years later, he enrolled in Pachaiyappa’s College (estb. 1842), Chennai, but could not pass his undergrad degree exam. In 1909, he married Janakiammal and to support his family, took a job as a clerk in the Madras Port Trust (MPT). At the suggestion of MPT manager S.N. Aiyar, he wrote to three Cambridge mathematicians including G.H. Hardy at Trinity College describing his work. Hardy’s approval of his work exalted Ramanujan’s status almost immediately and he was appointed a research scholar of the University of Madras, at twice his clerical salary. Hardy invited Ramanujan to Trinity College and on March 1914, Ramanujan sailed to England just a few months before the First World War broke out in Europe.  Ramanujan’s arrival at Cambridge was the beginning of a successful five-year collaboration with Hardy although they were contrasting personalities. Hardy was rigourous in his analysis, while Ramanujan’s conclusions were “arrived at by a process of mingled argument, intuition, and induction, of which he was entirely unable to give any coherent account”. During the period 1914-1917, Hardy and Ramanujan jointly wrote more than half a dozen research papers with Ramanujan publishing more than 30 papers independently. But the paper that really changed the course of 20th century mathematics was one written by Ramanujan in 1916 in which he investigated the properties of Fourier coefficients of modular forms. Ramanujan soon began to attract international recognition. He was awarded a BA degree (later upgraded to a Ph D) by Cambridge University in March 1916 for his work on highly composite numbers,

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