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Niels Henrik Abel

 
Scientist: Niels Henrik Abel
 

Norwegian mathematician (1802–1829)

Abel was born in Froland, the son of a poor pastor; he was educated in mathematics at the University of Christiana (Oslo). After the death of his father, Abel had to support a large family; he earned what he could by private teaching and was also helped out by his teacher. He was eventually given a grant by the Norwegian government to make a trip to France and Germany to visit mathematicians. In Germany he met the engineer and mathematician August Crelle, who was to be of great assistance to him. Crelle published Abel's work and exerted what influence he could to obtain him a post in Germany. Tragically Abel died just when Crelle had succeeded in getting him the chair in mathematics at Berlin.

With Evariste Galois (whom he never met), Abel founded the theory of groups (commutative groups are known as Abelian groups in his honor), and his early death ranks as one of the great tragedies of 19th-century mathematics. One of Abel's first achievements was to solve the longstanding problem of whether the general quintic (of the fifth degree) equation was solvable by algebraic methods. He showed that the general quintic is not solvable algebraically and sent this proof to Karl Gauss, but unfortunately Gauss threw it away unread, having assumed that it was yet another unsuccessful attempt to solve the quintic.

Abel's greatest work was in the theory of elliptic and transcendental functions. Mathematicians had previously focused their attention on problems associated with elliptic integrals. Abel showed that these problems could be immensely simplified by considering the inverse functions of these integrals – the so-called ‘elliptic functions’. He also proved a fundamental theorem, Abel's theorem, on transcendental functions, which he submitted to Augustin Cauchy (and unfortunately fared no better than he did with Gauss). The study of elliptic functions inaugurated by Abel was to occupy many of the best mathematicians for the remainder of the 19th century. He also made very important contributions to the theory of infinite series.

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Biography: Niels Abel
 

Niels Henrik Abel (1802-1829) was a Norwegian mathematician who proved that fifth and higher order equations have no algebraic solution. Had he not died prematurely, it is speculated that he might have become one of the most prominent mathematicians of the 19th century. He provided the first general proof of the binomial theorem and made significant discoveries concerning elliptic functions

Abel was born in Finnöy, on the southwestern coast of Norway, on August 5, 1802. He was the second son of Sören Georg Abel, a Lutheran minister, and Anne Marie nee Sorensen, the daughter of a wealthy merchant. Abel's father was appointed to a new parish in 1804, and the family moved to the town of Gjerstad, in southern Norway. Abel received his early education from his father. In 1815, he was sent to the Cathedral School in Oslo, where he soon developed a passion for mathematics. In 1818, a new instructor, Berndt Holmboe, arrived at the school and fueled Abel's interest further, introducing him to the works of such European masters as Isaac Newton, Joseph-Louis Lagrange, and Leonhard Euler. Holmboe was to become a lifelong friend and advocate, eventually helping to raise money that allowed Abel to travel abroad and meet the leading mathematicians of Germany and France.

Abel graduated from the Cathedral School in 1821. His father had died a year earlier and his older brother had developed mental illness. The responsibility of providing for his mother and four younger siblings fell largely on Abel. To make ends meet, he began tutoring. Meanwhile, he took the entrance examination for the university. His performance in geometry and arithmetic was distinguished and he was offered a free dormitory room. In an exceptional move, members of the mathematics faculty, who were already aware of Abel's promise, contributed personal funds to cover his other expenses. Abel enrolled at the University of Kristiania (Oslo) at the age of 19. Within a year he had completed his basic courses and was a degree candidate.

Proved Impossibility of Solutions for Quintic Problem

During his final year at the Cathedral School, Abel had become intrigued by a challenge that had occupied some of the best mathematical minds since the 16th century, that of finding a solution to the "quintic" problem. A quintic equation is one in which the unknown appears to the fifth power. Abel believed he had discovered a general solution and presented his results to his teacher Holmboe, who was wise enough to realize that the mathematical reasoning of Abel was beyond his full comprehension. Holmboe sent the solution to the Danish mathematician Ferdinand Degen, who expressed skepticism but was unable to determine whether Abel's argument was flawed. Degen asked Abel to provide examples of his general solution, and was eventually able to discover the error in his approach. Abel would remain obsessed with the quintic problem for the next few years. Finally, in 1823, he hit upon the realization and derived a proof that an algebraic solution was impossible. Abel sent a paper describing his proof to Johann Karl Friedrich Gauss, who reportedly ignored the treatise. Meanwhile, Abel began working on what would become the first proof of an integral equation, and went on to provide the first general proof of the binomial theorem, which until then had only been proved for special cases. He also investigated elliptic integrals and developed a novel way of examining them through the use of inverse functions.

In 1825, Abel left home and traveled to Berlin, where he met August Leopold Crelle, a civil engineer and the builder of the first German railroad. Crelle had a strong reverence for mathematics, and was about to publish the first edition of Journal for Pure and Applied Mathematics, the first periodical devoted entirely to mathematical research. Recognizing in Abel a man of genius, Crelle asked if the young man would contribute to the premiere edition. Abel obliged, providing Crelle with a manuscript that described his proof that an algebraic solution to the general equation of the fifth and higher degrees was impossible. The paper would insure both Abel's fame and the success of Crelle's fledgling journal. From Germany, Abel toured southern Europe. He then traveled to France, where he made the acquaintance of Adrien Marie Legendre, Augustin Louis Cauchy, and others. In their company, he wrote the Memoir on a General Property of a Very Extensive Class of Transcendental Functions, which was submitted to the Paris Académie Royale des Sciences. The memoir expounded on Abel's earlier work on elliptical functions, and proposed what has come to be known as Abel's theorem. Unfortunately, it was received poorly, rejected by Legendre because it was "illegible," then temporarily lost by Cauchy. Two years after Abel's death, the manuscript finally resurfaced, but it was not published until 1841.

By 1827, Abel had run out of money and was forced to return to Norway. He had hoped to take up a university post, but could only find work as a tutor. At this time, he discovered that he had contracted tuberculosis. Later in 1827, he wrote a lengthy paper on elliptic functions for Crelle's journal and began working for Crelle as an editor.

Abel died on April 6, 1829, while visiting his Danish fiancée, Christine Kemp, who was living in Froland. A few days later, unaware of Abel's death, Crelle wrote to say he had secured a position for him at the University of Berlin. Abel was honored posthumously, in 1830, when the French Académie awarded him the Grand Prix, a prize he shared with Karl Jacobi.

Further Reading

Bell, E.T., Men of Mathematics, Simon and Schuster, 1986. Ore, Oystein, Niels Henrik Abel: Mathematician Extraordinary,

University of Minnesota Press, 1957.

"Niels Henrik Abel," MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive.http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematics/abel.html (March 1997).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Niels Henrik Abel
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Abel, Niels Henrik (nēls hĕn'rĭk ä'bəl) , 1802–29, Norwegian mathematician. While a student at the Univ. of Christiania (Oslo) he did fundamental work on the integration of functional expressions and proved the impossiblity of representing a solution of a general equation of fifth degree or higher by a radical expression. He investigated generalizations of the binomial theorem, pioneered in the general theory of elliptic functions, and showed that elliptic functions are a generalization of trigonometric functions. Commutative groups are also called Abelian groups in his honor. He died of tuberculosis at the age of 26, leaving contributions that rank him as one of the greatest mathematicians of the 19th cent.

Bibliography

See O. Ore, Niels Henrik Abel: Mathematician Extraordinary (1957, repr. 1973).

 
WordNet: Niels Abel
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: Norwegian mathematician (1802-1829)
  Synonyms: Abel, Niels Henrik Abel


 
Wikipedia: Niels Henrik Abel
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Niels Henrik Abel
Niels Henrik Abel
Niels Henrik Abel
Born August 5, 1802(1802-08-05)
Nedstrand, Norway
Died April 6, 1829 (aged 26)
Froland, Norway
Residence Norway
Nationality Norwegian
Fields Mathematics
Alma mater Royal Frederick University
Known for Abelian function
Abelian group
Abel's theorem
Influences Bernt Michael Holmboe
Religious stance Lutheran

Niels Henrik Abel (August 5, 1802 – April 6, 1829) was a noted Norwegian mathematician[1] who proved the impossibility of solving the quintic equation in radicals.

Contents

Early life

Abel was born in Nedstrand, Norway (near Finnøy) to Søren Georg Abel and Anne Marie Simonsen, "the daughter of a shipping merchant."[2] Abel's father had a degree in theology and philosophy and his grandfather was an active Protestant minister at Gjerstad near Risør. After the latter's death, Abel's father was appointed as minister at Gjerstad. In 1815, Abel entered the Cathedral School in Christiania (now known as Oslo). A new mathematics teacher, Bernt Michael Holmboe, was appointed in 1817. Seeing Abel's talent in mathematics he encouraged him to study the subject to an advanced level. When Abel's father died in 1820, the family was left in strained circumstances, and Holmboe supported Abel with a scholarship to remain at school and raised money from his friends to enable Abel to study at the Royal Frederick University. Abel entered the university in 1821 and graduated in 1822.

Career

After returning from a visit to Ferdinand Degen and other mathematicians in Copenhagen, Abel applied for economic support in order to visit top mathematicians in Germany and France. Instead, he was given funds to stay in Cristiania for two years, and he learned German and French in those years. While learning languages, Abel published his first notable work in 1824, Mémoire sur les équations algébriques ou on démontre l'impossibilité de la résolution de l'équation générale du cinquième degré (Memoir on algebraic equations, in which the impossibility of solving the general equation of the fifth degree is proven). Abel proved the impossibility of solving the quintic equation in radicals in 1823 (now referred to as the Abel–Ruffini theorem). This work was in abstruse and difficult form, in part because the page count was severely restricted in order to save money on printing. A more detailed proof was published in 1826 in the first volume of Crelle's Journal. In 1825, he was given a government scholarship that enabled him to travel abroad. During the travel, Abel visited the astronomer Heinrich Christian Schumacher in Altona, now a district of Hamburg. He spent six months in Berlin, where he became well acquainted with August Leopold Crelle, who was then about to publish his mathematical journal. This project was warmly encouraged by Abel, who contributed much to the success of the venture. From Berlin he passed to Freiburg, and here he made his brilliant researches in the theory of functions: elliptic, hyperelliptic, and a new class now known as abelian functions being particularly intensely studied.

In 1826 Abel moved to Paris, and during a ten-month stay he met the leading mathematicians of France; but he was poorly appreciated, as his work was scarcely known, and his modesty restrained him from proclaiming his research. Abel's limited finances finally compelled him to abandon his tour, and on his return to Norway he taught for some time at Christiania.

Death

While in Paris, Abel had contracted tuberculosis. For Christmas 1828, he traveled by sled to again visit his fiancée in Froland. He became seriously ill on the journey, although a temporary improvement allowed the couple to enjoy the holiday together. Crelle, at the same time, had been searching for a new job for Abel in Berlin, and did manage to have him appointed professor at a university. Crelle wrote to Abel on April 8, 1829 to tell him the good news, but Abel had died two days before.

Legacy

The early death of this talented mathematician, of whom Adrien-Marie Legendre said "quelle tête celle du jeune Norvégien!" ("what a head the young Norwegian has!"), cut short a career of extraordinary brilliance and promise. Under Abel's guidance, the prevailing obscurities of analysis began to be cleared, new fields were entered upon and the study of functions so advanced as to provide mathematicians with numerous ramifications along which progress could be made. His works, the greater part of which originally appeared in Crelle's Journal, were edited by Holmboe and published in 1839 by the Norwegian government, and a more complete edition by Ludwig Sylow and Sophus Lie was published in 1881. The adjective "abelian", derived from his name, has become so commonplace in mathematical writing that it is conventionally spelled with a lower-case initial "a" (e.g., abelian group, abelian category, and abelian variety).

On April 6, 1929, four Norwegian stamps were issued for the centenary of Abel's death. His portrait appears on the 500-kroner banknote (version V) issued during 1978–1985. On June 5, 2002, four Norwegian stamps were issued in honour of Abel two months before the bicentenary of his birth. There is also a 20-kroner coin issued by Norway in his honour. In Oslo stands a statue of Abel, and crater Abel on the Moon was named after him. In 2002, the Abel Prize was established in his memory.

See also

References

  1. ^ Chambers Biographical Dictionary, ISBN 0-550-18022-2, page 3
  2. ^ See page 91 of Livio, Mario (2005). The Equation That Couldn't be Solved. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743258215. 

Further reading

  • Livio, Mario (2005). The Equation That Couldn't be Solved. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743258215. 
  • Stubhaug, Arild (2000). Niels Henrik Abel and his Times. Springer. ISBN 3540668349.  - translated by Richard R. Daly

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Scientist. A Dictionary of Scientists. Copyright © Market House Books Ltd 1993, 1999, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Niels Henrik Abel" Read more