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Sophus Lie

Marius Sophus Lie (/l/ LEE; Norwegian: [liː]; 17 December 1842 – 18 February 1899) was a Norwegian mathematician. He largely created the theory of continuous symmetry and applied it to the study of geometry and differential equations. He also made substantial contributions to the development of algebra.

Sophus Lie
Lie in 1896
Born
Marius Sophus Lie

(1842-12-17)17 December 1842
Nordfjordeid, Norway
Died18 February 1899(1899-02-18) (aged 56)
Kristiania, Norway
NationalityNorwegian
Alma materUniversity of Christiania
Known forOne-parameter group
Differential invariant
Contact transformation
Infinitesimal transformation
W-curve
Carathéodory–Jacobi–Lie theorem
Lie algebra
Lie bracket
Lie group
Lie product formula
Lie sphere geometry
Lie theory
Lie transform
Lie's theorem
Lie's third theorem
Lie–Kolchin theorem
See full list
AwardsLobachevsky Medal (1897)
ForMemRS (1895)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Christiania
University of Leipzig
Doctoral advisorCarl Anton Bjerknes
Cato Maximilian Guldberg
Doctoral studentsHans Blichfeldt
Lucjan Emil Böttcher
Gerhard Kowalewski
Kazimierz Żorawski
Élie Cartan
Elling Holst
Edgar Odell Lovett

Life and career edit

Marius Sophus Lie was born on 17 December 1842 in the small town of Nordfjordeid. He was the youngest of six children born to Lutheran pastor Johann Herman Lie and his wife, who came from a well-known Trondheim family.[1]

He had his primary education in the south-eastern coast of Moss, before attending high school in Oslo (known then as Christiania). After graduating from high school, his ambition towards a military career was dashed when the army rejected him due to poor eyesight. He then enrolled at the University of Christiania.

Sophus Lie's first mathematical work, Repräsentation der Imaginären der Plangeometrie, was published in 1869 by the Academy of Sciences in Christiania and also by Crelle's Journal. That same year he received a scholarship and travelled to Berlin, where he stayed from September to February 1870. There, he met Felix Klein and they became close friends. When he left Berlin, Lie travelled to Paris, where he was joined by Klein two months later. There, they met Camille Jordan and Gaston Darboux. But on 19 July 1870 the Franco-Prussian War began and Klein (who was Prussian) had to leave France very quickly. Lie left for Fontainebleau where he was arrested, suspected of being a German spy, garnering him fame in Norway. He was released from prison after a month, thanks to the intervention of Darboux.[2]

Lie obtained his PhD at the University of Christiania (in present-day Oslo) in 1871 with a thesis entitled Over en Classe geometriske Transformationer (On a Class of Geometric Transformations).[3] It would be described by Darboux as "one of the most handsome discoveries of modern Geometry". The next year, the Norwegian Parliament established an extraordinary professorship for him. That same year, Lie visited Klein, who was then at Erlangen and working on the Erlangen program.

In 1872, Lie spent eight years together with Peter Ludwig Mejdell Sylow, editing and publishing the mathematical works of their countryman, Niels Henrik Abel.

At the end of 1872, Sophus Lie proposed to Anna Birch, then eighteen years old, and they were married in 1874. The couple had three children: Marie (b. 1877), Dagny (b. 1880) and Herman (b. 1884).

From 1876, he co-edited the journal Archiv for Mathematik og Naturvidenskab, together with the physician Jacob Worm-Müller, and the biologist Georg Ossian Sars.

In 1884, Friedrich Engel arrived at Christiania to help him, with the support of Klein and Adolph Mayer (who were both professors at Leipzig by then). Engel would help Lie to write his most important treatise, Theorie der Transformationsgruppen, published in Leipzig in three volumes from 1888 to 1893. Decades later, Engel would also be one of the two editors of Lie's collected works.

In 1886, Lie became a professor at Leipzig, replacing Klein, who had moved to Göttingen. In November 1889, Lie suffered a mental breakdown and had to be hospitalized until June 1890. Subsequently he returned to his post, but over the years his anaemia progressed to the point where he returned to his homeland. In 1898 he tendered his resignation in May, and left for home in September the same year. He died the following year in 1899 at the age of 56, due to pernicious anemia, a disease caused by impaired absorption of vitamin B12.

He was made Honorary Member of the London Mathematical Society in 1878, Corresponding Member of the French Academy of Sciences in 1892, Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London in 1895 and foreign associate of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in 1895.

Legacy edit

Lie's principal tool, and one of his greatest achievements, was the discovery that continuous transformation groups (now called, after him, Lie groups) could be better understood by "linearizing" them, and studying the corresponding generating vector fields (the so-called infinitesimal generators). The generators are subject to a linearized version of the group law, now called the commutator bracket, and have the structure of what is today called a Lie algebra.[4][5]

Hermann Weyl used Lie's work on group theory in his papers from 1922 and 1923, and Lie groups today play a role in quantum mechanics.[5] However, the subject of Lie groups as it is studied today is vastly different from what the research by Sophus Lie was about and "among the 19th century masters, Lie's work is in detail certainly the least known today".[6]

Sophus Lie was an eager proponent in the establishment of the Abel Prize. Inspired by the Nansen fund named after Fridtjof Nansen, and the lack of a prize for mathematics in the Nobel Prize. He gathered support for the establishment of an award for outstanding work in pure mathematics.[7]

Lie advised many doctoral students who went on to become successful mathematicians. Élie Cartan became widely regarded as one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century. Kazimierz Żorawski's work was proved to be of importance to a variety of fields. Hans Frederick Blichfeldt made contributions to various fields of mathematics.

Books edit

  • Lie, Sophus (1888), Theorie der Transformationsgruppen I (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Friedrich Engel. English translation available: Edited and translated from the German and with a foreword by Joël Merker, see ISBN 978-3-662-46210-2 and arXiv:1003.3202
  • Lie, Sophus (1890), Theorie der Transformationsgruppen II (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Friedrich Engel.
  • Lie, Sophus (1891), Vorlesungen über differentialgleichungen mit bekannten infinitesimalen transformationen (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Georg Scheffers.[8]
  • Lie, Sophus (1893), Vorlesungen über continuierliche Gruppen (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Georg Scheffers.[9]
  • Lie, Sophus (1893), Theorie der Transformationsgruppen III (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Friedrich Engel.
  • Lie, Sophus (1896), Geometrie der Berührungstransformationen (in German), Leipzig: B. G. Teubner. Written with the help of Georg Scheffers.[10]
  • Lie, Sophus, Engel, Friedrich; Heegaard, Poul (eds.), Gesammelte Abhandlungen, Leipzig: Teubner; 7 vols., 1922–1960{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)[11][12]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ James, Ioan (2002). Remarkable Mathematicians. Cambridge University Press. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-521-52094-2.
  2. ^ Darboux, Gaston (1899). "Sophus Lie". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 5 (7): 367–370. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1899-00628-1.
  3. ^ Lie, Sophus (1871). Over en classe geometriske Transformationer (PhD). University of Christiania.
  4. ^ Helgason, Sigurdur (1994), "Sophus Lie, the Mathematician" (PDF), Proceedings of the Sophus Lie Memorial Conference, Oslo, August, 1992, Oslo: Scandinavian University Press, pp. 3–21.
  5. ^ a b Gale, Thomson. "Marius Sophus Lie Biography". World of Mathematics. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  6. ^ Hermann, Robert, ed. (1975), Sophus Lie's 1880 transformation group paper, Lie groups: History, frontiers and applications, vol. 1, Math Sci Press, p. iii, ISBN 0-915692-10-4
  7. ^ . www.abelprize.no. Archived from the original on 16 March 2018. Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  8. ^ Lovett, E. O. (1898). "Review: Vorlesungen über Differentialgleichungen mit bekannten infinitesimalen Transformationen". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 4 (4): 155–167. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1898-00476-7.
  9. ^ Brooks, J. M. (1895). "Review: Vorlesungen über continuerliche Gruppen mit geometrischen und anderen Anwendungen". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 1 (10): 241–248. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1895-00283-9.
  10. ^ Lovett, E. O. (1897). "Review: Geometrie der Berührungstransformationen". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 3 (9): 321–350. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1897-00430-x.
  11. ^ Schilling, O. F. G. (1939). "Book Review: Sophus Lie's Gesammelte Abhandlungen. Geometrische Abhandlungen, Volumes I & II". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 45 (7): 513–514. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1939-07032-8. ISSN 0002-9904.
  12. ^ Carmichael, R. D. (1930). "Book Review: vol. IV of Sophus Lie's Gesammelte Abhandlungen (Samlede Avhandlinger, Norwegian edition published by Aschehoug)". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 36 (5): 337–338. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1930-04950-2. ISSN 0002-9904. (with links to 1923 review of Vol. III, 1925 review of Vol. V, & 1928 review of Vol. VI)

References edit

External links edit

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lie, Marius Sophus" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F. (February 2000), "Sophus Lie", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  • Works by Sophus Lie at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Sophus Lie at Internet Archive
  • "The foundations of the theory of infinite continuous transformation groups – I" An English translation of a key paper by Lie (Part I)
  • "The foundations of the theory of infinite continuous transformation groups – II" An English translation of a key paper by Lie (Part II)
  • "On complexes – in particular, line and sphere complexes – with applications to the theory of partial differential equations" An English translation of a key paper by Lie
  • "Foundations of an invariant theory of contact transformations" An English translation of a key paper by Lie
  • "The infinitesimal contact transformations of mechanics" An English translation of a key paper by Lie
  • U. Amaldi, "On the principal results obtained in the theory of continuous groups since the death of Sophus Lie (1898–1907)" English translation of a survey paper that followed his death

sophus, marius, norwegian, liː, december, 1842, february, 1899, norwegian, mathematician, largely, created, theory, continuous, symmetry, applied, study, geometry, differential, equations, also, made, substantial, contributions, development, algebra, 1896bornm. Marius Sophus Lie l iː LEE Norwegian liː 17 December 1842 18 February 1899 was a Norwegian mathematician He largely created the theory of continuous symmetry and applied it to the study of geometry and differential equations He also made substantial contributions to the development of algebra Sophus LieLie in 1896BornMarius Sophus Lie 1842 12 17 17 December 1842Nordfjordeid NorwayDied18 February 1899 1899 02 18 aged 56 Kristiania NorwayNationalityNorwegianAlma materUniversity of ChristianiaKnown forOne parameter groupDifferential invariantContact transformationInfinitesimal transformationW curveCaratheodory Jacobi Lie theoremLie algebraLie bracketLie groupLie product formulaLie sphere geometryLie theoryLie transformLie s theoremLie s third theoremLie Kolchin theoremSee full listAwardsLobachevsky Medal 1897 ForMemRS 1895 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsUniversity of ChristianiaUniversity of LeipzigDoctoral advisorCarl Anton BjerknesCato Maximilian GuldbergDoctoral studentsHans BlichfeldtLucjan Emil BottcherGerhard KowalewskiKazimierz ZorawskiElie CartanElling HolstEdgar Odell Lovett Contents 1 Life and career 2 Legacy 3 Books 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksLife and career editMarius Sophus Lie was born on 17 December 1842 in the small town of Nordfjordeid He was the youngest of six children born to Lutheran pastor Johann Herman Lie and his wife who came from a well known Trondheim family 1 He had his primary education in the south eastern coast of Moss before attending high school in Oslo known then as Christiania After graduating from high school his ambition towards a military career was dashed when the army rejected him due to poor eyesight He then enrolled at the University of Christiania Sophus Lie s first mathematical work Reprasentation der Imaginaren der Plangeometrie was published in 1869 by the Academy of Sciences in Christiania and also by Crelle s Journal That same year he received a scholarship and travelled to Berlin where he stayed from September to February 1870 There he met Felix Klein and they became close friends When he left Berlin Lie travelled to Paris where he was joined by Klein two months later There they met Camille Jordan and Gaston Darboux But on 19 July 1870 the Franco Prussian War began and Klein who was Prussian had to leave France very quickly Lie left for Fontainebleau where he was arrested suspected of being a German spy garnering him fame in Norway He was released from prison after a month thanks to the intervention of Darboux 2 Lie obtained his PhD at the University of Christiania in present day Oslo in 1871 with a thesis entitled Over en Classe geometriske Transformationer On a Class of Geometric Transformations 3 It would be described by Darboux as one of the most handsome discoveries of modern Geometry The next year the Norwegian Parliament established an extraordinary professorship for him That same year Lie visited Klein who was then at Erlangen and working on the Erlangen program In 1872 Lie spent eight years together with Peter Ludwig Mejdell Sylow editing and publishing the mathematical works of their countryman Niels Henrik Abel At the end of 1872 Sophus Lie proposed to Anna Birch then eighteen years old and they were married in 1874 The couple had three children Marie b 1877 Dagny b 1880 and Herman b 1884 From 1876 he co edited the journal Archiv for Mathematik og Naturvidenskab together with the physician Jacob Worm Muller and the biologist Georg Ossian Sars In 1884 Friedrich Engel arrived at Christiania to help him with the support of Klein and Adolph Mayer who were both professors at Leipzig by then Engel would help Lie to write his most important treatise Theorie der Transformationsgruppen published in Leipzig in three volumes from 1888 to 1893 Decades later Engel would also be one of the two editors of Lie s collected works In 1886 Lie became a professor at Leipzig replacing Klein who had moved to Gottingen In November 1889 Lie suffered a mental breakdown and had to be hospitalized until June 1890 Subsequently he returned to his post but over the years his anaemia progressed to the point where he returned to his homeland In 1898 he tendered his resignation in May and left for home in September the same year He died the following year in 1899 at the age of 56 due to pernicious anemia a disease caused by impaired absorption of vitamin B12 He was made Honorary Member of the London Mathematical Society in 1878 Corresponding Member of the French Academy of Sciences in 1892 Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London in 1895 and foreign associate of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in 1895 nbsp 1888 copy of Theorie der Transformationsgruppen volume I nbsp Title page to Theorie der Transformationsgruppen nbsp Preface to Theorie der Transformationsgruppen Legacy editLie s principal tool and one of his greatest achievements was the discovery that continuous transformation groups now called after him Lie groups could be better understood by linearizing them and studying the corresponding generating vector fields the so called infinitesimal generators The generators are subject to a linearized version of the group law now called the commutator bracket and have the structure of what is today called a Lie algebra 4 5 Hermann Weyl used Lie s work on group theory in his papers from 1922 and 1923 and Lie groups today play a role in quantum mechanics 5 However the subject of Lie groups as it is studied today is vastly different from what the research by Sophus Lie was about and among the 19th century masters Lie s work is in detail certainly the least known today 6 Sophus Lie was an eager proponent in the establishment of the Abel Prize Inspired by the Nansen fund named after Fridtjof Nansen and the lack of a prize for mathematics in the Nobel Prize He gathered support for the establishment of an award for outstanding work in pure mathematics 7 Lie advised many doctoral students who went on to become successful mathematicians Elie Cartan became widely regarded as one of the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century Kazimierz Zorawski s work was proved to be of importance to a variety of fields Hans Frederick Blichfeldt made contributions to various fields of mathematics Books editLie Sophus 1888 Theorie der Transformationsgruppen I in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Friedrich Engel English translation available Edited and translated from the German and with a foreword by Joel Merker see ISBN 978 3 662 46210 2 and arXiv 1003 3202 Lie Sophus 1890 Theorie der Transformationsgruppen II in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Friedrich Engel Lie Sophus 1891 Vorlesungen uber differentialgleichungen mit bekannten infinitesimalen transformationen in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Georg Scheffers 8 Lie Sophus 1893 Vorlesungen uber continuierliche Gruppen in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Georg Scheffers 9 Lie Sophus 1893 Theorie der Transformationsgruppen III in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Friedrich Engel Lie Sophus 1896 Geometrie der Beruhrungstransformationen in German Leipzig B G Teubner Written with the help of Georg Scheffers 10 Lie Sophus Engel Friedrich Heegaard Poul eds Gesammelte Abhandlungen Leipzig Teubner 7 vols 1922 1960 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link 11 12 See also editLie derivative List of simple Lie groups List of things named after Sophus LieNotes edit James Ioan 2002 Remarkable Mathematicians Cambridge University Press p 201 ISBN 978 0 521 52094 2 Darboux Gaston 1899 Sophus Lie Bull Amer Math Soc 5 7 367 370 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1899 00628 1 Lie Sophus 1871 Over en classe geometriske Transformationer PhD University of Christiania Helgason Sigurdur 1994 Sophus Lie the Mathematician PDF Proceedings of the Sophus Lie Memorial Conference Oslo August 1992 Oslo Scandinavian University Press pp 3 21 a b Gale Thomson Marius Sophus Lie Biography World of Mathematics Retrieved 23 January 2009 Hermann Robert ed 1975 Sophus Lie s 1880 transformation group paper Lie groups History frontiers and applications vol 1 Math Sci Press p iii ISBN 0 915692 10 4 The History of the Abel Prize www abelprize no Archived from the original on 16 March 2018 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Lovett E O 1898 Review Vorlesungen uber Differentialgleichungen mit bekannten infinitesimalen Transformationen Bull Amer Math Soc 4 4 155 167 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1898 00476 7 Brooks J M 1895 Review Vorlesungen uber continuerliche Gruppen mit geometrischen und anderen Anwendungen Bull Amer Math Soc 1 10 241 248 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1895 00283 9 Lovett E O 1897 Review Geometrie der Beruhrungstransformationen Bull Amer Math Soc 3 9 321 350 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1897 00430 x Schilling O F G 1939 Book Review Sophus Lie s Gesammelte Abhandlungen Geometrische Abhandlungen Volumes I amp II Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 45 7 513 514 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1939 07032 8 ISSN 0002 9904 Carmichael R D 1930 Book Review vol IV of Sophus Lie s Gesammelte Abhandlungen Samlede Avhandlinger Norwegian edition published by Aschehoug Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 36 5 337 338 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1930 04950 2 ISSN 0002 9904 with links to 1923 review of Vol III 1925 review of Vol V amp 1928 review of Vol VI References editFritzsche Bernd 1999 Sophus Lie A Sketch of his Life and Work Journal of Lie Theory vol 9 no 1 pp 1 38 ISSN 0949 5932 MR 1680023 Zbl 0927 01029 retrieved 2 December 2010 Freudenthal Hans 1970 1980 Lie Marius Sophus Dictionary of Scientific Biography Charles Scribner s Sons Stubhaug Arild 2002 The mathematician Sophus Lie It was the audacity of my thinking Springer Verlag ISBN 3 540 42137 8 Yaglom Isaak Moiseevich 1988 Grant Hardy Shenitzer Abe eds Felix Klein and Sophus Lie Evolution of the idea of symmetry in the nineteenth century Birkhauser ISBN 3 7643 3316 2External links editChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lie Marius Sophus Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F February 2000 Sophus Lie MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Works by Sophus Lie at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Sophus Lie at Internet Archive The foundations of the theory of infinite continuous transformation groups I An English translation of a key paper by Lie Part I The foundations of the theory of infinite continuous transformation groups II An English translation of a key paper by Lie Part II On complexes in particular line and sphere complexes with applications to the theory of partial differential equations An English translation of a key paper by Lie Foundations of an invariant theory of contact transformations An English translation of a key paper by Lie The infinitesimal contact transformations of mechanics An English translation of a key paper by Lie U Amaldi On the principal results obtained in the theory of continuous groups since the death of Sophus Lie 1898 1907 English translation of a survey paper that followed his death Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sophus Lie amp oldid 1196409262, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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