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Arthur Cayley

Arthur Cayley FRS (/ˈkli/; 16 August 1821 – 26 January 1895) was a prolific British mathematician who worked mostly on algebra. He helped found the modern British school of pure mathematics.

Arthur Cayley

Born(1821-08-16)16 August 1821
Died26 January 1895(1895-01-26) (aged 73)
Cambridge, England
EducationKing's College School
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge (BA, 1842)
Known for
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsTrinity College, Cambridge
Academic advisors
Notable students

As a child, Cayley enjoyed solving complex maths problems for amusement. He entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where he excelled in Greek, French, German, and Italian, as well as mathematics. He worked as a lawyer for 14 years.

He postulated what is now known as the Cayley–Hamilton theorem—that every square matrix is a root of its own characteristic polynomial, and verified it for matrices of order 2 and 3.[1] He was the first to define the concept of a group in the modern way—as a set with a binary operation satisfying certain laws.[2] Formerly, when mathematicians spoke of "groups", they had meant permutation groups. Cayley tables and Cayley graphs as well as Cayley's theorem are named in honour of Cayley.

Early years

Arthur Cayley was born in Richmond, London, England, on 16 August 1821. His father, Henry Cayley, was a distant cousin of Sir George Cayley, the aeronautics engineer innovator, and descended from an ancient Yorkshire family. He settled in Saint Petersburg, Russia, as a merchant. His mother was Maria Antonia Doughty, daughter of William Doughty. According to some writers she was Russian, but her father's name indicates an English origin. His brother was the linguist Charles Bagot Cayley. Arthur spent his first eight years in Saint Petersburg. In 1829 his parents were settled permanently at Blackheath, near London. Arthur was sent to a private school. At age 14 he was sent to King's College School. The school's master observed indications of mathematical genius and advised the father to educate his son not for his own business, as he had intended, but at the University of Cambridge.

Education

At the unusually early age of 17 Cayley began residence at Trinity College, Cambridge. The cause of the Analytical Society had now triumphed, and the Cambridge Mathematical Journal had been instituted by Gregory and Robert Leslie Ellis. To this journal, at the age of twenty, Cayley contributed three papers, on subjects that had been suggested by reading the Mécanique analytique of Lagrange and some of the works of Laplace.

Cayley's tutor at Cambridge was George Peacock and his private coach was William Hopkins. He finished his undergraduate course by winning the place of Senior Wrangler, and the first Smith's prize.[3] His next step was to take the M.A. degree, and win a Fellowship by competitive examination. He continued to reside at Cambridge University for four years; during which time he took some pupils, but his main work was the preparation of 28 memoirs to the Mathematical Journal.

As a lawyer

Because of the limited tenure of his fellowship it was necessary to choose a profession; like De Morgan, Cayley chose law, and was admitted to Lincoln's Inn, London on 20 April 1846 at the age of 24.[4] He made a specialty of conveyancing. It was while he was a pupil at the bar examination that he went to Dublin to hear Hamilton's lectures on quaternions.[5]

His friend J. J. Sylvester, his senior by five years at Cambridge, was then an actuary, resident in London; they used to walk together round the courts of Lincoln's Inn, discussing the theory of invariants and covariants. During this period of his life, extending over fourteen years, Cayley produced between two and three hundred papers.[5]

As a professor

At Cambridge University the ancient professorship of pure mathematics is denominated as the Lucasian, and is the chair that had been occupied by Isaac Newton. Around 1860, certain funds bequeathed by Lady Sadleir to the university, having become useless for their original purpose, were employed to establish another professorship of pure mathematics, called the Sadleirian. The duties of the new professor were defined to be "to explain and teach the principles of pure mathematics and to apply himself to the advancement of that science." To this chair Cayley was elected when 42 years old. He gave up a lucrative practice for a modest salary; but he never regretted the exchange, for the chair at Cambridge enabled him to end the divided allegiance between law and mathematics, and to devote his energies to the pursuit that he liked best. He at once married and settled down in Cambridge. More fortunate than Hamilton in his choice, he enjoyed a home life of great happiness. His friend and fellow investigator, Sylvester, once remarked that Cayley had been much more fortunate than himself; that they had both lived as bachelors in London, but that Cayley had married and settled down to a quiet and peaceful life at Cambridge; whereas he had never married, and had been fighting the world all his days.

At first the teaching duty of the Sadleirian professorship was limited to a course of lectures extending over one of the terms of the academic year; but when the university was reformed about 1886, and part of the college funds applied to the better endowment of the university professors, the lectures were extended over two terms. For many years the attendance was small, and came almost entirely from those who had finished their career of preparation for competitive examinations; after the reform the attendance numbered about fifteen. The subject lectured on was generally that of the memoir on which the professor was for the time engaged.

The other duty of the chair — the advancement of mathematical science — was discharged in a handsome manner by the long series of memoirs that he published, ranging over every department of pure mathematics. But it was also discharged in a much less obtrusive way; he became the standing referee on the merits of mathematical papers to many societies both at home and abroad.

In 1872 he was made an honorary fellow of Trinity College, and three years later an ordinary fellow, which meant stipend as well as honour. About this time his friends subscribed for a presentation portrait. Maxwell wrote an address to the committee of subscribers who had charge of the Cayley portrait fund. The verses refer to the subjects investigated in several of Cayley's most elaborate memoirs; such as, Chapters on the Analytical Geometry of   dimensions; On the theory of Determinants; Memoir on the theory of Matrices; Memoirs on skew surfaces, otherwise Scrolls; On the delineation of a Cubic Scroll, etc.[6]

In addition to his work on algebra, Cayley made fundamental contributions to algebraic geometry. Cayley and Salmon discovered the 27 lines on a cubic surface. Cayley constructed the Chow variety of all curves in projective 3-space.[7] He founded the algebro-geometric theory of ruled surfaces.

In 1876 he published a Treatise on Elliptic Functions. He took great interest in the movement for the university education of women. At Cambridge the women's colleges are Girton and Newnham. In the early days of Girton College he gave direct help in teaching, and for some years he was chairman of the council of Newnham College, in the progress of which he took the keenest interest to the last.

In 1881 he received from the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, where Sylvester was then professor of mathematics, an invitation to deliver a course of lectures. He accepted the invitation, and lectured at Baltimore during the first five months of 1882 on the subject of the Abelian and Theta Functions.

In 1893 Cayley became a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.[8]

British Association presidency

In 1883 Cayley was President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. The meeting was held at Southport, in the north of England. As the President's address is one of the great popular events of the meeting, and brings out an audience of general culture, it is usually made as little technical as possible. Cayley (1996) took for his subject the Progress of Pure Mathematics.

The Collected Papers

In 1889 the Cambridge University Press requested him to prepare his mathematical papers for publication in a collected form—a request which he appreciated very much. They are printed in quarto volumes, of which seven appeared under his own editorship. While editing these volumes, he was suffering from a painful internal malady, to which he succumbed on 26 January 1895, in the 74th year of his age. When the funeral took place, a great assemblage met in Trinity Chapel, comprising members of the university, official representatives of Russia and America, and many of the most illustrious philosophers of Britain.

The remainder of his papers were edited by Andrew Forsyth, his successor in the Sadleirian Chair. The Collected Mathematical papers number thirteen quarto volumes, and contain 967 papers. Cayley retained to the last his fondness for novel-reading and for travelling. He also took special pleasure in paintings and architecture, and he practiced water-colour painting, which he found useful sometimes in making mathematical diagrams.

Legacy

Cayley is buried in the Mill Road cemetery, Cambridge.

An 1874 portrait of Cayley by Lowes Cato Dickinson and an 1884 portrait by William Longmaid are in the collection of Trinity College, Cambridge.[9]

A number of mathematical terms are named after him:

Bibliography

  • Cayley, Arthur (2009) [1876], An elementary treatise on elliptic functions, Cornell University Library, ISBN 978-1-112-28006-1, MR 0124532
  • Cayley, Arthur (2009) [1889], The Collected Mathematical Papers, Cambridge Library Collection – Mathematics, vol. 14 volumes, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-1-108-00507-4, archive
  • Cayley, Arthur (1894), The principles of book-keeping by double entry, Cambridge University Press

See also

References

  1. ^ See Cayley (1858) "A Memoir on the Theory of Matrices", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 148 : 24 : "I have verified the theorem, in the next simplest case, of a matrix of the order 3, … but I have not thought it necessary to undertake the labour of a formal proof of the theorem in the general case of a matrix of any degree."
  2. ^ Cayley (1854) "On the theory of groups, as depending on the symbolic equation θn = 1," Philosophical Magazine, 4th series, 7 (42) : 40–47. However, see also the criticism of this definition in: MacTutor: The abstract group concept.
  3. ^ "Cayley, Arthur (CLY838A)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ The Records of the Honorable Society of Lincoln's Inn Vol II, Admission Register 1420 - 1893. London: Lincoln's Inn. 1896. p. 226.
  5. ^ a b Forsyth, Andrew Russell (1901). "Cayley, Arthur" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  6. ^ "To the Committee of the Cayley Portrait Fund", 1874
  7. ^ A. Cayley, Collected Mathematical Papers, Cambridge (1891), v. 4, 446−455. W. V. D. Hodge and D. Pedoe, Methods of Algebraic Geometry, Cambridge (1952), v. 2, p. 388.
  8. ^ "A. Cayley (1821 - 1895)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  9. ^ "Trinity College, University of Cambridge". BBC Your Paintings. Archived from the original on 11 May 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2018.

Sources

External links

  This article incorporates text from the 1916 Lectures on Ten British Mathematicians of the Nineteenth Century by Alexander Macfarlane, which is in the public domain.

arthur, cayley, baronet, cayley, baronets, august, 1821, january, 1895, prolific, british, mathematician, worked, mostly, algebra, helped, found, modern, british, school, pure, mathematics, frsborn, 1821, august, 1821richmond, surrey, ukdied26, january, 1895, . For Sir Arthur Cayley Baronet see Cayley baronets Arthur Cayley FRS ˈ k eɪ l i 16 August 1821 26 January 1895 was a prolific British mathematician who worked mostly on algebra He helped found the modern British school of pure mathematics Arthur CayleyFRSBorn 1821 08 16 16 August 1821Richmond Surrey UKDied26 January 1895 1895 01 26 aged 73 Cambridge EnglandEducationKing s College SchoolAlma materTrinity College Cambridge BA 1842 Known forAlgebraic geometryGroup theoryCayley Hamilton theoremCayley Dickson constructionAwardsSmith s Prize 1842 De Morgan Medal 1884 Royal Medal 1859 Copley Medal 1882 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsTrinity College CambridgeAcademic advisorsGeorge PeacockWilliam HopkinsNotable studentsH F BakerAndrew ForsythCharlotte ScottAs a child Cayley enjoyed solving complex maths problems for amusement He entered Trinity College Cambridge where he excelled in Greek French German and Italian as well as mathematics He worked as a lawyer for 14 years He postulated what is now known as the Cayley Hamilton theorem that every square matrix is a root of its own characteristic polynomial and verified it for matrices of order 2 and 3 1 He was the first to define the concept of a group in the modern way as a set with a binary operation satisfying certain laws 2 Formerly when mathematicians spoke of groups they had meant permutation groups Cayley tables and Cayley graphs as well as Cayley s theorem are named in honour of Cayley Contents 1 Early years 2 Education 3 As a lawyer 4 As a professor 5 British Association presidency 6 The Collected Papers 7 Legacy 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly years EditArthur Cayley was born in Richmond London England on 16 August 1821 His father Henry Cayley was a distant cousin of Sir George Cayley the aeronautics engineer innovator and descended from an ancient Yorkshire family He settled in Saint Petersburg Russia as a merchant His mother was Maria Antonia Doughty daughter of William Doughty According to some writers she was Russian but her father s name indicates an English origin His brother was the linguist Charles Bagot Cayley Arthur spent his first eight years in Saint Petersburg In 1829 his parents were settled permanently at Blackheath near London Arthur was sent to a private school At age 14 he was sent to King s College School The school s master observed indications of mathematical genius and advised the father to educate his son not for his own business as he had intended but at the University of Cambridge Education EditAt the unusually early age of 17 Cayley began residence at Trinity College Cambridge The cause of the Analytical Society had now triumphed and the Cambridge Mathematical Journal had been instituted by Gregory and Robert Leslie Ellis To this journal at the age of twenty Cayley contributed three papers on subjects that had been suggested by reading the Mecanique analytique of Lagrange and some of the works of Laplace Cayley s tutor at Cambridge was George Peacock and his private coach was William Hopkins He finished his undergraduate course by winning the place of Senior Wrangler and the first Smith s prize 3 His next step was to take the M A degree and win a Fellowship by competitive examination He continued to reside at Cambridge University for four years during which time he took some pupils but his main work was the preparation of 28 memoirs to the Mathematical Journal As a lawyer EditBecause of the limited tenure of his fellowship it was necessary to choose a profession like De Morgan Cayley chose law and was admitted to Lincoln s Inn London on 20 April 1846 at the age of 24 4 He made a specialty of conveyancing It was while he was a pupil at the bar examination that he went to Dublin to hear Hamilton s lectures on quaternions 5 His friend J J Sylvester his senior by five years at Cambridge was then an actuary resident in London they used to walk together round the courts of Lincoln s Inn discussing the theory of invariants and covariants During this period of his life extending over fourteen years Cayley produced between two and three hundred papers 5 As a professor EditAt Cambridge University the ancient professorship of pure mathematics is denominated as the Lucasian and is the chair that had been occupied by Isaac Newton Around 1860 certain funds bequeathed by Lady Sadleir to the university having become useless for their original purpose were employed to establish another professorship of pure mathematics called the Sadleirian The duties of the new professor were defined to be to explain and teach the principles of pure mathematics and to apply himself to the advancement of that science To this chair Cayley was elected when 42 years old He gave up a lucrative practice for a modest salary but he never regretted the exchange for the chair at Cambridge enabled him to end the divided allegiance between law and mathematics and to devote his energies to the pursuit that he liked best He at once married and settled down in Cambridge More fortunate than Hamilton in his choice he enjoyed a home life of great happiness His friend and fellow investigator Sylvester once remarked that Cayley had been much more fortunate than himself that they had both lived as bachelors in London but that Cayley had married and settled down to a quiet and peaceful life at Cambridge whereas he had never married and had been fighting the world all his days At first the teaching duty of the Sadleirian professorship was limited to a course of lectures extending over one of the terms of the academic year but when the university was reformed about 1886 and part of the college funds applied to the better endowment of the university professors the lectures were extended over two terms For many years the attendance was small and came almost entirely from those who had finished their career of preparation for competitive examinations after the reform the attendance numbered about fifteen The subject lectured on was generally that of the memoir on which the professor was for the time engaged The other duty of the chair the advancement of mathematical science was discharged in a handsome manner by the long series of memoirs that he published ranging over every department of pure mathematics But it was also discharged in a much less obtrusive way he became the standing referee on the merits of mathematical papers to many societies both at home and abroad In 1872 he was made an honorary fellow of Trinity College and three years later an ordinary fellow which meant stipend as well as honour About this time his friends subscribed for a presentation portrait Maxwell wrote an address to the committee of subscribers who had charge of the Cayley portrait fund The verses refer to the subjects investigated in several of Cayley s most elaborate memoirs such as Chapters on the Analytical Geometry of n displaystyle n dimensions On the theory of Determinants Memoir on the theory of Matrices Memoirs on skew surfaces otherwise Scrolls On the delineation of a Cubic Scroll etc 6 In addition to his work on algebra Cayley made fundamental contributions to algebraic geometry Cayley and Salmon discovered the 27 lines on a cubic surface Cayley constructed the Chow variety of all curves in projective 3 space 7 He founded the algebro geometric theory of ruled surfaces In 1876 he published a Treatise on Elliptic Functions He took great interest in the movement for the university education of women At Cambridge the women s colleges are Girton and Newnham In the early days of Girton College he gave direct help in teaching and for some years he was chairman of the council of Newnham College in the progress of which he took the keenest interest to the last In 1881 he received from the Johns Hopkins University Baltimore where Sylvester was then professor of mathematics an invitation to deliver a course of lectures He accepted the invitation and lectured at Baltimore during the first five months of 1882 on the subject of the Abelian and Theta Functions In 1893 Cayley became a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences 8 British Association presidency EditIn 1883 Cayley was President of the British Association for the Advancement of Science The meeting was held at Southport in the north of England As the President s address is one of the great popular events of the meeting and brings out an audience of general culture it is usually made as little technical as possible Cayley 1996 took for his subject the Progress of Pure Mathematics The Collected Papers EditIn 1889 the Cambridge University Press requested him to prepare his mathematical papers for publication in a collected form a request which he appreciated very much They are printed in quarto volumes of which seven appeared under his own editorship While editing these volumes he was suffering from a painful internal malady to which he succumbed on 26 January 1895 in the 74th year of his age When the funeral took place a great assemblage met in Trinity Chapel comprising members of the university official representatives of Russia and America and many of the most illustrious philosophers of Britain The remainder of his papers were edited by Andrew Forsyth his successor in the Sadleirian Chair The Collected Mathematical papers number thirteen quarto volumes and contain 967 papers Cayley retained to the last his fondness for novel reading and for travelling He also took special pleasure in paintings and architecture and he practiced water colour painting which he found useful sometimes in making mathematical diagrams Legacy EditCayley is buried in the Mill Road cemetery Cambridge An 1874 portrait of Cayley by Lowes Cato Dickinson and an 1884 portrait by William Longmaid are in the collection of Trinity College Cambridge 9 A number of mathematical terms are named after him Cayley s theorem Cayley Hamilton theorem in linear algebra Cayley Bacharach theorem Grassmann Cayley algebra Cayley Menger determinant Cayley diagrams used for finding cognate linkages in mechanical engineering Cayley Dickson construction Cayley algebra Octonion Cayley graph Cayley numbers Cayley s sextic Cayley table Cayley Purser algorithm Cayley s formula Cayley Klein metric Cayley Klein model of hyperbolic geometry Cayley s W process Cayley surface Cayley transform Cayley s nodal cubic surface Cayley s ruled cubic surface The crater Cayley on the Moon and consequently the Cayley Formation a geological unit named after the crater Cayley s mousetrap a card game Cayleyan Chasles Cayley Brill formula Hyperdeterminant Quippian TetrahedroidBibliography EditCayley Arthur 2009 1876 An elementary treatise on elliptic functions Cornell University Library ISBN 978 1 112 28006 1 MR 0124532 Cayley Arthur 2009 1889 The Collected Mathematical Papers Cambridge Library Collection Mathematics vol 14 volumes Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 00507 4 archive Cayley Arthur 1894 The principles of book keeping by double entry Cambridge University PressSee also EditList of things named after Arthur CayleyReferences Edit See Cayley 1858 A Memoir on the Theory of Matrices Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 148 24 I have verified the theorem in the next simplest case of a matrix of the order 3 but I have not thought it necessary to undertake the labour of a formal proof of the theorem in the general case of a matrix of any degree Cayley 1854 On the theory of groups as depending on the symbolic equation 8n 1 Philosophical Magazine 4th series 7 42 40 47 However see also the criticism of this definition in MacTutor The abstract group concept Cayley Arthur CLY838A A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge The Records of the Honorable Society of Lincoln s Inn Vol II Admission Register 1420 1893 London Lincoln s Inn 1896 p 226 a b Forsyth Andrew Russell 1901 Cayley Arthur In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography 1st supplement London Smith Elder amp Co To the Committee of the Cayley Portrait Fund 1874 A Cayley Collected Mathematical Papers Cambridge 1891 v 4 446 455 W V D Hodge and D Pedoe Methods of Algebraic Geometry Cambridge 1952 v 2 p 388 A Cayley 1821 1895 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 19 April 2016 Trinity College University of Cambridge BBC Your Paintings Archived from the original on 11 May 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2018 Sources EditCayley Arthur 1996 1883 Presidential address to the British Association in Ewald William ed From Kant to Hilbert a source book in the foundations of mathematics Vol I II Oxford Science Publications The Clarendon Press Oxford University Press pp 542 573 ISBN 978 0 19 853271 2 MR 1465678 Reprinted in collected mathematical papers volume 11 Crilly Tony 1995 A Victorian Mathematician Arthur Cayley 1821 1895 The Mathematical Gazette The Mathematical Association 79 485 259 262 doi 10 2307 3618297 ISSN 0025 5572 JSTOR 3618297 S2CID 188006684 Crilly Tony 2006 Arthur Cayley Mathematician laureate of the Victorian age Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8011 7 MR 2284396 Macfarlane Alexander 2009 1916 Lectures on Ten British Mathematicians of the Nineteenth Century Mathematical monographs vol 17 Cornell University Library ISBN 978 1 112 28306 2 complete text at Project Gutenberg External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arthur Cayley Wikisource has original works by or about Arthur Cayley O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Arthur Cayley MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Arthur Cayley at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Weisstein Eric Wolfgang ed Cayley Arthur 1821 1895 ScienceWorld Arthur Cayley Letters to Robert Harley 1859 1863 Available online through Lehigh University s I Remain A Digital Archive of Letters Manuscripts and Ephemera Salmon George 20 September 1883 Science Worthies XXII Arthur Cayley Nature 28 481 485 doi 10 1038 028481a0 Scott Charlotte Angas 1895 Arthur Cayley Born August 16th 1821 Died January 26th 1895 Bull Amer Math Soc 1 6 133 141 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1895 00261 x MR 1557369 This article incorporates text from the 1916Lectures on Ten British Mathematicians of the Nineteenth Centuryby Alexander Macfarlane which is in the public domain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Cayley amp oldid 1152297523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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