Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) : The Man Who Knew Infinity
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) : The Man Who Knew Infinity
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) : The Man Who Knew Infinity
Midway through his stay in London, Ramanujan developed a debilitating
illness of obscure nature which remained undiagnosed to the end. It was
suspected to be tuberculosis but later thought not to be so. He returned to
India in 1918 to great acclaim but died a year later. During this last year, he
worked feverishly right to the end, making perhaps his most important
discovery Mock Theta Functions.
A couple of top mathematicians at Cambridge, Watson and Wilson, spent
some twelve years working on Ramanujan's notebooks and managed to
edit only part of them. It was left to Bruce. E. Berndt, Professor of
Mathematics at the University of Illinois, USA, to undertake proper editing
of these notebooks and, after 20 years of doing nothing else, published the
results in five volumes in the 1990's. Berndt and Andrews (Professor of
Mathematics at the University of Pensylvania, USA) next edited the "Lost
Notebook", containing Ramanujan's work during the last year before his
death and recently published their results in another four volumes.
Therefore, it is only relatively recently that the full impact of the work of
Ramanujan has been appreciated. Thus has it been written "Ramanujan's
legacy in the Notebooks promises not only to enrich pure mathematics but
also to find application in various fields of mathematical physics such as the
hard hexagon model, the super string theory and the behaviour of black
holes as well as in polymer chemistry and cancer research.
Said Hardy at one stage: I have never met his equal and can compare him
only with Euler or Jacobi before continuing "Suppose we rate
mathematicians on the basis of pure talent on a scale from 0 to 100, I
would give myself 25, Littlewood 30, Hilbert 80 and Ramanujan 100 ".