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Riemann |
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Georg Friedrich Bernhard RiemannArticle by: J J O'Connor and E F RobertsonFrom: http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Riemann.htmlBernhard Riemann's father, Friedrich Bernhard Riemann, was a Lutheran
minister. Friedrich Riemann married Charlotte Ebell when he was
in his middle age. Bernhard was the second of their six children,
two boys and four girls. Friedrich Riemann acted as teacher to his
children and he taught Bernhard until he was ten years old. At this
time a teacher from a local school named Schulz assisted in Bernhard's
education. In the spring of 1846 Riemann enrolled at the University of Göttingen. His father had encouraged him to study theology and so he entered the theology faculty. However he attended some mathematics lectures and asked his father if he could transfer to the faculty of philosophy so that he could study mathematics. Riemann was always very close to his family and he would never have changed courses without his father's permission. This was granted, however, and Riemann then took courses in mathematics from Moritz Stern and Gauss. It may be thought that Riemann was in just the right place to study mathematics at Göttingen, but at this time the University of Göttingen was a rather poor place for mathematics. Gauss did lecture to Riemann but he was only giving elementary courses and there is no evidence that at this time he recognised Riemann's genius. Stern, however, certainly did realise that he had a remarkable student and later described Riemann at this time saying that he:-
Riemann moved from Göttingen to Berlin University in the spring of 1847 to study under Steiner, Jacobi, Dirichlet and Eisenstein. This was an important time for Riemann. He learnt much from Eisenstein and discussed using complex variables in elliptic function theory. The main person to influence Riemann at this time, however, was Dirichlet. Klein writes in [4]:-
Riemann's work always was based on intuitive reasoning which fell
a little below the rigour required to make the conclusions watertight.
However, the brilliant ideas which his works contain are so much
clearer because his work is not overly filled with lengthy computations.
It was during his time at the University of Berlin that Riemann
worked out his general theory of complex variables that formed the
basis of some of his most important work. Riemann's thesis studied the theory of complex variables and, in particular, what we now call Riemann surfaces. It therefore introduced topological methods into complex function theory. The work builds on Cauchy's foundations of the theory of complex variables built up over many years and also on Puiseux's ideas of branch points. However, Riemann's thesis is a strikingly original piece of work which examined geometric properties of analytic functions, conformal mappings and the connectivity of surfaces. In proving some of the results in his thesis Riemann used a variational principle which he was later to call the Dirichlet Principle since he had learnt it from Dirichlet's lectures in Berlin. The Dirichlet Principle did not originate with Dirichlet, however, as Gauss, Green and Thomson had all made use if it. Riemann's thesis, one of the most remarkable pieces of original work to appear in a doctoral thesis, was examined on 16 December 1851. In his report on the thesis Gauss described Riemann as having:-
On Gauss's recommendation Riemann was appointed to a post in Göttingen and he worked for his Habilitation, the degree which would allow him to become a lecturer. He spent thirty months working on his Habilitation dissertation which was on the representability of functions by trigonometric series. He gave the conditions of a function to have an integral, what we now call the condition of Riemann integrability. In the second part of the dissertation he examined the problem which he described in these words:-
To complete his Habilitation Riemann had to give a lecture. He
prepared three lectures, two on electricity and one on geometry.
Gauss had to choose one of the three for Riemann to deliver and,
against Riemann's expectations, Gauss chose the lecture on geometry.
Riemann's lecture Über die Hypothesen welche der Geometrie
zu Grunde liegen (On the hypotheses that lie at the foundations
of geometry), delivered on 10 June 1854, became a classic of mathematics.
In fact the main point of this part of Riemann's lecture was the definition of the curvature tensor. The second part of Riemann's lecture posed deep questions about the relationship of geometry to the world we live in. He asked what the dimension of real space was and what geometry described real space. The lecture was too far ahead of its time to be appreciated by most scientists of that time. Monastyrsky writes in [6]:-
It was not fully understood until sixty years later. Freudenthal writes in [1]:-
So this brilliant work entitled Riemann to begin to lecture. However [6]:-
Gauss's chair at Göttingen was filled by Dirichlet in 1855.
At this time there was an attempt to get Riemann a personal chair
but this failed. Two years later, however, he was appointed as professor
and in the same year, 1857, another of his masterpieces was published.
The paper Theory of abelian functions was the result of work carried
out over several years and contained in a lecture course he gave
to three people in 1855-56. One of the three was Dedekind who was
able to make the beauty of Riemann's lectures available by publishing
the material after Riemann's early death.
The Dirichlet Principle which Riemann had used in his doctoral thesis was used by him again for the results of this 1857 paper. Weierstrass, however, showed that there was a problem with the Dirichlet Principle. Klein writes [4]:-
We return at the end of this article to indicate how the problem
of the use of Dirichlet's Principle in Riemann's work was sorted
out. In 1859 Dirichlet died and Riemann was appointed to the chair of mathematics at Göttingen on 30 July. A few days later he was elected to the Berlin Academy of Sciences. He had been proposed by three of the Berlin mathematicians, Kummer, Borchardt and Weierstrass. Their proposal read [6]:-
A newly elected member of the Berlin Academy of Sciences had to report on their most recent research and Riemann sent a report on On the number of primes less than a given magnitude another of his great masterpieces which were to change the direction of mathematical research in a most significant way. In it Riemann examined the zeta function
which had already been considered by Euler. Here the sum is over
all natural numbers n while the product is over all prime numbers.
Riemann considered a very different question to the one Euler had
considered, for he looked at the zeta function as a complex function
rather than a real one. Except for a few trivial exceptions, the
roots of (s) all lie between 0 and 1. In the paper he stated that
the zeta function had infinitely many nontrivial roots and that
it seemed probable that they all have real part 1/2. This is the
famous Riemann hypothesis which remains today one of the most important
of the unsolved problems of mathematics. In June 1862 Riemann married Elise Koch who was a friend of his sister. They had one daughter. In the autumn of the year of his marriage Riemann caught a heavy cold which turned to tuberculosis. He had never had good health all his life and in fact his serious heath problems probably go back much further than this cold he caught. In fact his mother had died when Riemann was 20 while his brother and three sisters all died young. Riemann tried to fight the illness by going to the warmer climate of Italy. The winter of 1862-63 was spent in Sicily and he then travelled through Italy, spending time with Betti and other Italian mathematicians who had visited Göttingen. He returned to Göttingen in June 1863 but his health soon deteriorated and once again he returned to Italy. Having spent from August 1864 to October 1865 in northern Italy, Riemann returned to Göttingen for the winter of 1865-66, then returned to Selasca on the shores of Lake Maggiore on 16 June 1866. Dedekind writes in [3]:-
Finally let us return to Weierstrass's criticism of Riemann's use of the Dirichlet's Principle. Weierstrass had shown that a minimising function was not guaranteed by the Dirichlet Principle. This had the effect of making people doubt Riemann's methods. Freudenthal writes in [1]:-
Weierstrass firmly believed Riemann's results, despite his own discovery of the problem with the Dirichlet Principle. He asked his student Hermann Schwarz to try to find other proofs of Riemann's existence theorems which did not use the Dirichlet Principle. He managed to do this during 1869-70. Klein, however, was fascinated by Riemann's geometric approach and he wrote a book in 1892 giving his version of Riemann's work yet written very much in the spirit of Riemann. Freudenthal writes in [1]:-
In 1901 Hilbert mended Riemann's approach by giving the correct form of Dirichlet's Principle needed to make Riemann's proofs rigorous. The search for a rigorous proof had not been a waste of time, however, since many important algebraic ideas were discovered by Clebsch, Gordan, Brill and Max Noether while they tried to prove Riemann's results. Monastyrsky writes in [6]:-
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