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Srinivasa Ramanujan

Srinivasa Ramanujan FRS (/ˈsrnɪvɑːsə rɑːˈmɑːnʊən/;[1] born Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar, IPA: [sriːniʋaːsa ɾaːmaːnud͡ʑan ajːaŋgar]; 22 December 1887 – 26 April 1920)[2][3] was an Indian mathematician. Though he had almost no formal training in pure mathematics, he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions, including solutions to mathematical problems then considered unsolvable.

Srinivasa Ramanujan

Born
Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar

(1887-12-22)22 December 1887
Died26 April 1920(1920-04-26) (aged 32)
CitizenshipBritish Indian
Education
Known for
AwardsFellow of the Royal Society (1918)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsTrinity College, Cambridge
Thesis (1916)
Academic advisors
InfluencesG. S. Carr
Signature

Ramanujan initially developed his own mathematical research in isolation. According to Hans Eysenck, "he tried to interest the leading professional mathematicians in his work, but failed for the most part. What he had to show them was too novel, too unfamiliar, and additionally presented in unusual ways; they could not be bothered".[4] Seeking mathematicians who could better understand his work, in 1913 he began a postal correspondence with the English mathematician G. H. Hardy at the University of Cambridge, England. Recognising Ramanujan's work as extraordinary, Hardy arranged for him to travel to Cambridge. In his notes, Hardy commented that Ramanujan had produced groundbreaking new theorems, including some that "defeated me completely; I had never seen anything in the least like them before",[5] and some recently proven but highly advanced results.

During his short life, Ramanujan independently compiled nearly 3,900 results (mostly identities and equations).[6] Many were completely novel; his original and highly unconventional results, such as the Ramanujan prime, the Ramanujan theta function, partition formulae and mock theta functions, have opened entire new areas of work and inspired a vast amount of further research.[7] Of his thousands of results, all but a dozen or two have now been proven correct.[8] The Ramanujan Journal, a scientific journal, was established to publish work in all areas of mathematics influenced by Ramanujan,[9] and his notebooks—containing summaries of his published and unpublished results—have been analysed and studied for decades since his death as a source of new mathematical ideas. As late as 2012, researchers continued to discover that mere comments in his writings about "simple properties" and "similar outputs" for certain findings were themselves profound and subtle number theory results that remained unsuspected until nearly a century after his death.[10][11] He became one of the youngest Fellows of the Royal Society and only the second Indian member, and the first Indian to be elected a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Of his original letters, Hardy stated that a single look was enough to show they could have been written only by a mathematician of the highest calibre, comparing Ramanujan to mathematical geniuses such as Euler and Jacobi.

In 1919, ill health—now believed to have been hepatic amoebiasis (a complication from episodes of dysentery many years previously)—compelled Ramanujan's return to India, where he died in 1920 at the age of 32. His last letters to Hardy, written in January 1920, show that he was still continuing to produce new mathematical ideas and theorems. His "lost notebook", containing discoveries from the last year of his life, caused great excitement among mathematicians when it was rediscovered in 1976.

Early life

 
Ramanujan's birthplace on 18 Alahiri Street, Erode, now in Tamil Nadu
 
Ramanujan's home on Sarangapani Sannidhi Street, Kumbakonam

Ramanujan (literally, "younger brother of Rama", a Hindu deity)[12] was born on 22 December 1887 into a Tamil Brahmin Iyengar family in Erode, in present-day Tamil Nadu.[13] His father, Kuppuswamy Srinivasa Iyengar, originally from Thanjavur district, worked as a clerk in a sari shop.[14][2] His mother, Komalatammal, was a housewife and sang at a local temple.[15] They lived in a small traditional home on Sarangapani Sannidhi Street in the town of Kumbakonam.[16] The family home is now a museum. When Ramanujan was a year and a half old, his mother gave birth to a son, Sadagopan, who died less than three months later. In December 1889, Ramanujan contracted smallpox, but recovered, unlike the 4,000 others who died in a bad year in the Thanjavur district around this time. He moved with his mother to her parents' house in Kanchipuram, near Madras (now Chennai). His mother gave birth to two more children, in 1891 and 1894, both of whom died before their first birthdays.[12]

On 1 October 1892, Ramanujan was enrolled at the local school.[17] After his maternal grandfather lost his job as a court official in Kanchipuram,[18] Ramanujan and his mother moved back to Kumbakonam, and he was enrolled in Kangayan Primary School.[19] When his paternal grandfather died, he was sent back to his maternal grandparents, then living in Madras. He did not like school in Madras, and tried to avoid attending. His family enlisted a local constable to make sure he attended school. Within six months, Ramanujan was back in Kumbakonam.[19]

Since Ramanujan's father was at work most of the day, his mother took care of the boy, and they had a close relationship. From her, he learned about tradition and puranas, to sing religious songs, to attend pujas at the temple, and to maintain particular eating habits—all part of Brahmin culture.[20] At Kangayan Primary School, Ramanujan performed well. Just before turning 10, in November 1897, he passed his primary examinations in English, Tamil, geography, and arithmetic with the best scores in the district.[21] That year, Ramanujan entered Town Higher Secondary School, where he encountered formal mathematics for the first time.[21]

A child prodigy by age 11, he had exhausted the mathematical knowledge of two college students who were lodgers at his home. He was later lent a book written by S. L. Loney on advanced trigonometry.[22][23] He mastered this by the age of 13 while discovering sophisticated theorems on his own. By 14, he received merit certificates and academic awards that continued throughout his school career, and he assisted the school in the logistics of assigning its 1,200 students (each with differing needs) to its approximately 35 teachers.[24] He completed mathematical exams in half the allotted time, and showed a familiarity with geometry and infinite series. Ramanujan was shown how to solve cubic equations in 1902. He would later develop his own method to solve the quartic. In 1903, he tried to solve the quintic, not knowing that it was impossible to solve with radicals.[25]

In 1903, when he was 16, Ramanujan obtained from a friend a library copy of A Synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure and Applied Mathematics, G. S. Carr's collection of 5,000 theorems.[26][27] Ramanujan reportedly studied the contents of the book in detail.[28] The next year, Ramanujan independently developed and investigated the Bernoulli numbers and calculated the Euler–Mascheroni constant up to 15 decimal places.[29] His peers at the time said they "rarely understood him" and "stood in respectful awe" of him.[24]

When he graduated from Town Higher Secondary School in 1904, Ramanujan was awarded the K. Ranganatha Rao prize for mathematics by the school's headmaster, Krishnaswami Iyer. Iyer introduced Ramanujan as an outstanding student who deserved scores higher than the maximum.[30] He received a scholarship to study at Government Arts College, Kumbakonam,[31][32] but was so intent on mathematics that he could not focus on any other subjects and failed most of them, losing his scholarship in the process.[33] In August 1905, Ramanujan ran away from home, heading towards Visakhapatnam, and stayed in Rajahmundry[34] for about a month.[33] He later enrolled at Pachaiyappa's College in Madras. There, he passed in mathematics, choosing only to attempt questions that appealed to him and leaving the rest unanswered, but performed poorly in other subjects, such as English, physiology, and Sanskrit.[35] Ramanujan failed his Fellow of Arts exam in December 1906 and again a year later. Without an FA degree, he left college and continued to pursue independent research in mathematics, living in extreme poverty and often on the brink of starvation.[36]

In 1910, after a meeting between the 23-year-old Ramanujan and the founder of the Indian Mathematical Society, V. Ramaswamy Aiyer, Ramanujan began to get recognition in Madras's mathematical circles, leading to his inclusion as a researcher at the University of Madras.[37]

Adulthood in India

On 14 July 1909, Ramanujan married Janaki (Janakiammal; 21 March 1899 – 13 April 1994),[38] a girl his mother had selected for him a year earlier and who was ten years old when they married.[39][40][41] It was not unusual then for marriages to be arranged with girls at a young age. Janaki was from Rajendram, a village close to Marudur (Karur district) Railway Station. Ramanujan's father did not participate in the marriage ceremony.[42] As was common at that time, Janaki continued to stay at her maternal home for three years after marriage, until she reached puberty. In 1912, she and Ramanujan's mother joined Ramanujan in Madras.[43]

After the marriage, Ramanujan developed a hydrocele testis.[44] The condition could be treated with a routine surgical operation that would release the blocked fluid in the scrotal sac, but his family could not afford the operation. In January 1910, a doctor volunteered to do the surgery at no cost.[45]

After his successful surgery, Ramanujan searched for a job. He stayed at a friend's house while he went from door to door around Madras looking for a clerical position. To make money, he tutored students at Presidency College who were preparing for their Fellow of Arts exam.[46]

In late 1910, Ramanujan was sick again. He feared for his health, and told his friend R. Radakrishna Iyer to "hand [his notebooks] over to Professor Singaravelu Mudaliar [the mathematics professor at Pachaiyappa's College] or to the British professor Edward B. Ross, of the Madras Christian College."[47] After Ramanujan recovered and retrieved his notebooks from Iyer, he took a train from Kumbakonam to Villupuram, a city under French control.[48][49] In 1912, Ramanujan moved with his wife and mother to a house in Saiva Muthaiah Mudali street, George Town, Madras, where they lived for a few months.[50] In May 1913, upon securing a research position at Madras University, Ramanujan moved with his family to Triplicane.[51]

Pursuit of career in mathematics

In 1910, Ramanujan met deputy collector V. Ramaswamy Aiyer, who founded the Indian Mathematical Society.[52] Wishing for a job at the revenue department where Aiyer worked, Ramanujan showed him his mathematics notebooks. As Aiyer later recalled:

I was struck by the extraordinary mathematical results contained in [the notebooks]. I had no mind to smother his genius by an appointment in the lowest rungs of the revenue department.[53]

Aiyer sent Ramanujan, with letters of introduction, to his mathematician friends in Madras.[52] Some of them looked at his work and gave him letters of introduction to R. Ramachandra Rao, the district collector for Nellore and the secretary of the Indian Mathematical Society.[54][55][56] Rao was impressed by Ramanujan's research but doubted that it was his own work. Ramanujan mentioned a correspondence he had with Professor Saldhana, a notable Bombay mathematician, in which Saldhana expressed a lack of understanding of his work but concluded that he was not a fraud.[57] Ramanujan's friend C. V. Rajagopalachari tried to quell Rao's doubts about Ramanujan's academic integrity. Rao agreed to give him another chance, and listened as Ramanujan discussed elliptic integrals, hypergeometric series, and his theory of divergent series, which Rao said ultimately convinced him of Ramanujan's brilliance.[57] When Rao asked him what he wanted, Ramanujan replied that he needed work and financial support. Rao consented and sent him to Madras. He continued his research with Rao's financial aid. With Aiyer's help, Ramanujan had his work published in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society.[58]

One of the first problems he posed in the journal[30] was to find the value of:

 

He waited for a solution to be offered in three issues, over six months, but failed to receive any. At the end, Ramanujan supplied an incomplete[59] solution to the problem himself. On page 105 of his first notebook, he formulated an equation that could be used to solve the infinitely nested radicals problem.

 

Using this equation, the answer to the question posed in the Journal was simply 3, obtained by setting x = 2, n = 1, and a = 0.[60] Ramanujan wrote his first formal paper for the Journal on the properties of Bernoulli numbers. One property he discovered was that the denominators (sequence A027642 in the OEIS) of the fractions of Bernoulli numbers are always divisible by six. He also devised a method of calculating Bn based on previous Bernoulli numbers. One of these methods follows:

It will be observed that if n is even but not equal to zero,

  1. Bn is a fraction and the numerator of Bn/n in its lowest terms is a prime number,
  2. the denominator of Bn contains each of the factors 2 and 3 once and only once,
  3. 2n(2n − 1)Bn/n is an integer and 2(2n − 1)Bn consequently is an odd integer.

In his 17-page paper "Some Properties of Bernoulli's Numbers" (1911), Ramanujan gave three proofs, two corollaries and three conjectures.[61] His writing initially had many flaws. As Journal editor M. T. Narayana Iyengar noted:

Mr. Ramanujan's methods were so terse and novel and his presentation so lacking in clearness and precision, that the ordinary [mathematical reader], unaccustomed to such intellectual gymnastics, could hardly follow him.[62]

Ramanujan later wrote another paper and also continued to provide problems in the Journal.[63] In early 1912, he got a temporary job in the Madras Accountant General's office, with a monthly salary of 20 rupees. He lasted only a few weeks.[64] Toward the end of that assignment, he applied for a position under the Chief Accountant of the Madras Port Trust.

In a letter dated 9 February 1912, Ramanujan wrote:

Sir,
 I understand there is a clerkship vacant in your office, and I beg to apply for the same. I have passed the Matriculation Examination and studied up to the F.A. but was prevented from pursuing my studies further owing to several untoward circumstances. I have, however, been devoting all my time to Mathematics and developing the subject. I can say I am quite confident I can do justice to my work if I am appointed to the post. I therefore beg to request that you will be good enough to confer the appointment on me.[65]

Attached to his application was a recommendation from E. W. Middlemast, a mathematics professor at the Presidency College, who wrote that Ramanujan was "a young man of quite exceptional capacity in Mathematics".[66] Three weeks after he applied, on 1 March, Ramanujan learned that he had been accepted as a Class III, Grade IV accounting clerk, making 30 rupees per month.[67] At his office, Ramanujan easily and quickly completed the work he was given and spent his spare time doing mathematical research. Ramanujan's boss, Sir Francis Spring, and S. Narayana Iyer, a colleague who was also treasurer of the Indian Mathematical Society, encouraged Ramanujan in his mathematical pursuits.[citation needed]

Contacting British mathematicians

In the spring of 1913, Narayana Iyer, Ramachandra Rao and E. W. Middlemast tried to present Ramanujan's work to British mathematicians. M. J. M. Hill of University College London commented that Ramanujan's papers were riddled with holes.[68] He said that although Ramanujan had "a taste for mathematics, and some ability", he lacked the necessary educational background and foundation to be accepted by mathematicians.[69] Although Hill did not offer to take Ramanujan on as a student, he gave thorough and serious professional advice on his work. With the help of friends, Ramanujan drafted letters to leading mathematicians at Cambridge University.[70]

The first two professors, H. F. Baker and E. W. Hobson, returned Ramanujan's papers without comment.[71] On 16 January 1913, Ramanujan wrote to G. H. Hardy.[72] Coming from an unknown mathematician, the nine pages of mathematics made Hardy initially view Ramanujan's manuscripts as a possible fraud.[73] Hardy recognised some of Ramanujan's formulae but others "seemed scarcely possible to believe".[74]: 494  One of the theorems Hardy found amazing was on the bottom of page three (valid for 0 < a < b + 1/2):

 

Hardy was also impressed by some of Ramanujan's other work relating to infinite series:

 
 

The first result had already been determined by G. Bauer in 1859. The second was new to Hardy, and was derived from a class of functions called hypergeometric series, which had first been researched by Euler and Gauss. Hardy found these results "much more intriguing" than Gauss's work on integrals.[75] After seeing Ramanujan's theorems on continued fractions on the last page of the manuscripts, Hardy said the theorems "defeated me completely; I had never seen anything in the least like them before",[76] and that they "must be true, because, if they were not true, no one would have the imagination to invent them".[76] Hardy asked a colleague, J. E. Littlewood, to take a look at the papers. Littlewood was amazed by Ramanujan's genius. After discussing the papers with Littlewood, Hardy concluded that the letters were "certainly the most remarkable I have received" and that Ramanujan was "a mathematician of the highest quality, a man of altogether exceptional originality and power".[74]: 494–495  One colleague, E. H. Neville, later remarked that "not one [theorem] could have been set in the most advanced mathematical examination in the world".[63]

On 8 February 1913, Hardy wrote Ramanujan a letter expressing interest in his work, adding that it was "essential that I should see proofs of some of your assertions".[77] Before his letter arrived in Madras during the third week of February, Hardy contacted the Indian Office to plan for Ramanujan's trip to Cambridge. Secretary Arthur Davies of the Advisory Committee for Indian Students met with Ramanujan to discuss the overseas trip.[78] In accordance with his Brahmin upbringing, Ramanujan refused to leave his country to "go to a foreign land".[79] Meanwhile, he sent Hardy a letter packed with theorems, writing, "I have found a friend in you who views my labour sympathetically."[80]

To supplement Hardy's endorsement, Gilbert Walker, a former mathematical lecturer at Trinity College, Cambridge, looked at Ramanujan's work and expressed amazement, urging the young man to spend time at Cambridge.[81] As a result of Walker's endorsement, B. Hanumantha Rao, a mathematics professor at an engineering college, invited Ramanujan's colleague Narayana Iyer to a meeting of the Board of Studies in Mathematics to discuss "what we can do for S. Ramanujan".[82] The board agreed to grant Ramanujan a monthly research scholarship of 75 rupees for the next two years at the University of Madras.[83]

While he was engaged as a research student, Ramanujan continued to submit papers to the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. In one instance, Iyer submitted some of Ramanujan's theorems on summation of series to the journal, adding, "The following theorem is due to S. Ramanujan, the mathematics student of Madras University." Later in November, British Professor Edward B. Ross of Madras Christian College, whom Ramanujan had met a few years before, stormed into his class one day with his eyes glowing, asking his students, "Does Ramanujan know Polish?" The reason was that in one paper, Ramanujan had anticipated the work of a Polish mathematician whose paper had just arrived in the day's mail.[84] In his quarterly papers, Ramanujan drew up theorems to make definite integrals more easily solvable. Working off Giuliano Frullani's 1821 integral theorem, Ramanujan formulated generalisations that could be made to evaluate formerly unyielding integrals.[85]

Hardy's correspondence with Ramanujan soured after Ramanujan refused to come to England. Hardy enlisted a colleague lecturing in Madras, E. H. Neville, to mentor and bring Ramanujan to England.[86] Neville asked Ramanujan why he would not go to Cambridge. Ramanujan apparently had now accepted the proposal; Neville said, "Ramanujan needed no converting" and "his parents' opposition had been withdrawn".[63] Apparently, Ramanujan's mother had a vivid dream in which the family goddess, the deity of Namagiri, commanded her "to stand no longer between her son and the fulfilment of his life's purpose".[63] On 17 March 1914, Ramanujan traveled to England by ship,[87] leaving his wife to stay with his parents in India.[citation needed]

Life in England

 
Ramanujan (centre) and his colleague G. H. Hardy (rightmost), with other scientists, outside the Senate House, Cambridge, c.1914–19
 
Whewell's Court, Trinity College, Cambridge

Ramanujan departed from Madras aboard the S.S. Nevasa on 17 March 1914.[88] When he disembarked in London on 14 April, Neville was waiting for him with a car. Four days later, Neville took him to his house on Chesterton Road in Cambridge. Ramanujan immediately began his work with Littlewood and Hardy. After six weeks, Ramanujan moved out of Neville's house and took up residence on Whewell's Court, a five-minute walk from Hardy's room.[89]

Hardy and Littlewood began to look at Ramanujan's notebooks. Hardy had already received 120 theorems from Ramanujan in the first two letters, but there were many more results and theorems in the notebooks. Hardy saw that some were wrong, others had already been discovered, and the rest were new breakthroughs.[90] Ramanujan left a deep impression on Hardy and Littlewood. Littlewood commented, "I can believe that he's at least a Jacobi",[91] while Hardy said he "can compare him only with Euler or Jacobi."[92]

Ramanujan spent nearly five years in Cambridge collaborating with Hardy and Littlewood, and published part of his findings there. Hardy and Ramanujan had highly contrasting personalities. Their collaboration was a clash of different cultures, beliefs, and working styles. In the previous few decades, the foundations of mathematics had come into question and the need for mathematically rigorous proofs recognised. Hardy was an atheist and an apostle of proof and mathematical rigour, whereas Ramanujan was a deeply religious man who relied very strongly on his intuition and insights. Hardy tried his best to fill the gaps in Ramanujan's education and to mentor him in the need for formal proofs to support his results, without hindering his inspiration—a conflict that neither found easy.

Ramanujan was awarded a Bachelor of Arts by Research degree[93][94] (the predecessor of the PhD degree) in March 1916 for his work on highly composite numbers, sections of the first part of which had been published the preceding year in the Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. The paper was more than 50 pages long and proved various properties of such numbers. Hardy disliked this topic area but remarked that though it engaged with what he called the 'backwater of mathematics', in it Ramanujan displayed 'extraordinary mastery over the algebra of inequalities'.[95]

On 6 December 1917, Ramanujan was elected to the London Mathematical Society. On 2 May 1918, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society,[96] the second Indian admitted, after Ardaseer Cursetjee in 1841. At age 31, Ramanujan was one of the youngest Fellows in the Royal Society's history. He was elected "for his investigation in elliptic functions and the Theory of Numbers." On 13 October 1918, he was the first Indian to be elected a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.[97]

Illness and death

Ramanujan had numerous health problems throughout his life. His health worsened in England; possibly he was also less resilient due to the difficulty of keeping to the strict dietary requirements of his religion there and because of wartime rationing in 1914–18. He was diagnosed with tuberculosis and a severe vitamin deficiency, and confined to a sanatorium. In 1919, he returned to Kumbakonam, Madras Presidency, and in 1920 he died at the age of 32. After his death, his brother Tirunarayanan compiled Ramanujan's remaining handwritten notes, consisting of formulae on singular moduli, hypergeometric series and continued fractions.[43]

Ramanujan's widow, Smt. Janaki Ammal, moved to Bombay. In 1931, she returned to Madras and settled in Triplicane, where she supported herself on a pension from Madras University and income from tailoring. In 1950, she adopted a son, W. Narayanan, who eventually became an officer of the State Bank of India and raised a family. In her later years, she was granted a lifetime pension from Ramanujan's former employer, the Madras Port Trust, and pensions from, among others, the Indian National Science Academy and the state governments of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal. She continued to cherish Ramanujan's memory, and was active in efforts to increase his public recognition; prominent mathematicians, including George Andrews, Bruce C. Berndt and Béla Bollobás made it a point to visit her while in India. She died at her Triplicane residence in 1994.[42][43]

A 1994 analysis of Ramanujan's medical records and symptoms by Dr. D. A. B. Young[98] concluded that his medical symptoms—including his past relapses, fevers, and hepatic conditions—were much closer to those resulting from hepatic amoebiasis, an illness then widespread in Madras, than tuberculosis. He had two episodes of dysentery before he left India. When not properly treated, amoebic dysentery can lie dormant for years and lead to hepatic amoebiasis, whose diagnosis was not then well established.[99] At the time, if properly diagnosed, amoebiasis was a treatable and often curable disease;[99][100] British soldiers who contracted it during the First World War were being successfully cured of amoebiasis around the time Ramanujan left England.[101]

Personality and spiritual life

While asleep, I had an unusual experience. There was a red screen formed by flowing blood, as it were. I was observing it. Suddenly a hand began to write on the screen. I became all attention. That hand wrote a number of elliptic integrals. They stuck to my mind. As soon as I woke up, I committed them to writing.

—Srinivasa Ramanujan[102]

Ramanujan has been described as a person of a somewhat shy and quiet disposition, a dignified man with pleasant manners.[103] He lived a simple life at Cambridge.[104] Ramanujan's first Indian biographers describe him as a rigorously orthodox Hindu. He credited his acumen to his family goddess, Namagiri Thayar (Goddess Mahalakshmi) of Namakkal. He looked to her for inspiration in his work[105] and said he dreamed of blood drops that symbolised her consort, Narasimha. Later he had visions of scrolls of complex mathematical content unfolding before his eyes.[106] He often said, "An equation for me has no meaning unless it expresses a thought of God."[107]

Hardy cites Ramanujan as remarking that all religions seemed equally true to him.[108] Hardy further argued that Ramanujan's religious belief had been romanticised by Westerners and overstated—in reference to his belief, not practice—by Indian biographers. At the same time, he remarked on Ramanujan's strict vegetarianism.[109]

Similarly, in an interview with Frontline, Berndt said, "Many people falsely promulgate mystical powers to Ramanujan's mathematical thinking. It is not true. He has meticulously recorded every result in his three notebooks," further speculating that Ramanujan worked out intermediate results on slate that he could not afford the paper to record more permanently.[8]

Mathematical achievements

In mathematics, there is a distinction between insight and formulating or working through a proof. Ramanujan proposed an abundance of formulae that could be investigated later in depth. G. H. Hardy said that Ramanujan's discoveries are unusually rich and that there is often more to them than initially meets the eye. As a byproduct of his work, new directions of research were opened up. Examples of the most intriguing of these formulae include infinite series for π, one of which is given below:

 

This result is based on the negative fundamental discriminant d = −4 × 58 = −232 with class number h(d) = 2. Further, 26390 = 5 × 7 × 13 × 58 and 16 × 9801 = 3962, which is related to the fact that

 

This might be compared to Heegner numbers, which have class number 1 and yield similar formulae.

Ramanujan's series for π converges extraordinarily rapidly and forms the basis of some of the fastest algorithms currently used to calculate π. Truncating the sum to the first term also gives the approximation 98012/4412 for π, which is correct to six decimal places; truncating it to the first two terms gives a value correct to 14 decimal places. See also the more general Ramanujan–Sato series.

One of Ramanujan's remarkable capabilities was the rapid solution of problems, illustrated by the following anecdote about an incident in which P. C. Mahalanobis posed a problem:

Imagine that you are on a street with houses marked 1 through n. There is a house in between (x) such that the sum of the house numbers to the left of it equals the sum of the house numbers to its right. If n is between 50 and 500, what are n and x?' This is a bivariate problem with multiple solutions. Ramanujan thought about it and gave the answer with a twist: He gave a continued fraction. The unusual part was that it was the solution to the whole class of problems. Mahalanobis was astounded and asked how he did it. 'It is simple. The minute I heard the problem, I knew that the answer was a continued fraction. Which continued fraction, I asked myself. Then the answer came to my mind', Ramanujan replied."[110][111]

His intuition also led him to derive some previously unknown identities, such as

 

for all θ such that   and  , where Γ(z) is the gamma function, and related to a special value of the Dedekind eta function. Expanding into series of powers and equating coefficients of θ0, θ4, and θ8 gives some deep identities for the hyperbolic secant.

In 1918, Hardy and Ramanujan studied the partition function P(n) extensively. They gave a non-convergent asymptotic series that permits exact computation of the number of partitions of an integer. In 1937, Hans Rademacher refined their formula to find an exact convergent series solution to this problem. Ramanujan and Hardy's work in this area gave rise to a powerful new method for finding asymptotic formulae called the circle method.[112]

In the last year of his life, Ramanujan discovered mock theta functions.[113] For many years, these functions were a mystery, but they are now known to be the holomorphic parts of harmonic weak Maass forms.

The Ramanujan conjecture

Although there are numerous statements that could have borne the name Ramanujan conjecture, one was highly influential on later work. In particular, the connection of this conjecture with conjectures of André Weil in algebraic geometry opened up new areas of research. That Ramanujan conjecture is an assertion on the size of the tau-function, which has as generating function the discriminant modular form Δ(q), a typical cusp form in the theory of modular forms. It was finally proven in 1973, as a consequence of Pierre Deligne's proof of the Weil conjectures. The reduction step involved is complicated. Deligne won a Fields Medal in 1978 for that work.[7][114]

In his paper "On certain arithmetical functions", Ramanujan defined the so-called delta-function, whose coefficients are called τ(n) (the Ramanujan tau function).[115] He proved many congruences for these numbers, such as τ(p) ≡ 1 + p11 mod 691 for primes p. This congruence (and others like it that Ramanujan proved) inspired Jean-Pierre Serre (1954 Fields Medalist) to conjecture that there is a theory of Galois representations that "explains" these congruences and more generally all modular forms. Δ(z) is the first example of a modular form to be studied in this way. Deligne (in his Fields Medal-winning work) proved Serre's conjecture. The proof of Fermat's Last Theorem proceeds by first reinterpreting elliptic curves and modular forms in terms of these Galois representations. Without this theory, there would be no proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.[116]

Ramanujan's notebooks

While still in Madras, Ramanujan recorded the bulk of his results in four notebooks of looseleaf paper. They were mostly written up without any derivations. This is probably the origin of the misapprehension that Ramanujan was unable to prove his results and simply thought up the final result directly. Mathematician Bruce C. Berndt, in his review of these notebooks and Ramanujan's work, says that Ramanujan most certainly was able to prove most of his results, but chose not to record the proofs in his notes.

This may have been for any number of reasons. Since paper was very expensive, Ramanujan did most of his work and perhaps his proofs on slate, after which he transferred the final results to paper. At the time, slates were commonly used by mathematics students in the Madras Presidency. He was also quite likely to have been influenced by the style of G. S. Carr's book, which stated results without proofs. It is also possible that Ramanujan considered his work to be for his personal interest alone and therefore recorded only the results.[117]

The first notebook has 351 pages with 16 somewhat organised chapters and some unorganised material. The second has 256 pages in 21 chapters and 100 unorganised pages, and the third 33 unorganised pages. The results in his notebooks inspired numerous papers by later mathematicians trying to prove what he had found. Hardy himself wrote papers exploring material from Ramanujan's work, as did G. N. Watson, B. M. Wilson, and Bruce Berndt.[117]

In 1976, George Andrews rediscovered a fourth notebook with 87 unorganised pages, the so-called "lost notebook".[99]

Hardy–Ramanujan number 1729

The number 1729 is known as the Hardy–Ramanujan number after a famous visit by Hardy to see Ramanujan at a hospital. In Hardy's words:[118]

I remember once going to see him when he was ill at Putney. I had ridden in taxi cab number 1729 and remarked that the number seemed to me rather a dull one, and that I hoped it was not an unfavorable omen. "No", he replied, "it is a very interesting number; it is the smallest number expressible as the sum of two cubes in two different ways."

Immediately before this anecdote, Hardy quoted Littlewood as saying, "Every positive integer was one of [Ramanujan's] personal friends."[119]

The two different ways are:

 

Generalisations of this idea have created the notion of "taxicab numbers".

Mathematicians' views of Ramanujan

In his obituary of Ramanujan, written for Nature in 1920, Hardy observed that Ramanujan's work primarily involved fields less known even among other pure mathematicians, concluding:

His insight into formulae was quite amazing, and altogether beyond anything I have met with in any European mathematician. It is perhaps useless to speculate as to his history had he been introduced to modern ideas and methods at sixteen instead of at twenty-six. It is not extravagant to suppose that he might have become the greatest mathematician of his time. What he actually did is wonderful enough… when the researches which his work has suggested have been completed, it will probably seem a good deal more wonderful than it does to-day.[74]

Hardy further said:[120]

He combined a power of generalisation, a feeling for form, and a capacity for rapid modification of his hypotheses, that were often really startling, and made him, in his own peculiar field, without a rival in his day. The limitations of his knowledge were as startling as its profundity. Here was a man who could work out modular equations and theorems... to orders unheard of, whose mastery of continued fractions was... beyond that of any mathematician in the world, who had found for himself the functional equation of the zeta function and the dominant terms of many of the most famous problems in the analytic theory of numbers; and yet he had never heard of a doubly periodic function or of Cauchy's theorem, and had indeed but the vaguest idea of what a function of a complex variable was..."

When asked about the methods Ramanujan employed to arrive at his solutions, Hardy said they were "arrived at by a process of mingled argument, intuition, and induction, of which he was entirely unable to give any coherent account."[121] He also said that he had "never met his equal, and can compare him only with Euler or Jacobi".[121] Littlewood reportedly said that helping Ramanujan catch up with European mathematics beyond what was available in India was very difficult, because each new point mentioned to Ramanujan caused him to produce original ideas that prevented Littlewood from continuing the lesson.[122]

K. Srinivasa Rao has said,[123] "As for his place in the world of Mathematics, we quote Bruce C. Berndt: 'Paul Erdős has passed on to us Hardy's personal ratings of mathematicians. Suppose that we rate mathematicians on the basis of pure talent on a scale from 0 to 100. Hardy gave himself a score of 25, J. E. Littlewood 30, David Hilbert 80 and Ramanujan 100.'" During a May 2011 lecture at IIT Madras, Berndt said that over the last 40 years, as nearly all of Ramanujan's conjectures had been proven, there had been greater appreciation of Ramanujan's work and brilliance, and that Ramanujan's work was now pervading many areas of modern mathematics and physics.[113][124]

Posthumous recognition

 
Bust of Ramanujan in the garden of Birla Industrial & Technological Museum in Kolkata, India

The year after his death, Nature listed Ramanujan among other distinguished scientists and mathematicians on a "Calendar of Scientific Pioneers" who had achieved eminence.[125] Ramanujan's home state of Tamil Nadu celebrates 22 December (Ramanujan's birthday) as 'State IT Day'. Stamps picturing Ramanujan were issued by the government of India in 1962, 2011, 2012 and 2016.[126]

Since Ramanujan's centennial year, his birthday, 22 December, has been annually celebrated as Ramanujan Day by the Government Arts College, Kumbakonam, where he studied, and at the IIT Madras in Chennai. The International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) has created a prize in Ramanujan's name for young mathematicians from developing countries in cooperation with the International Mathematical Union, which nominates members of the prize committee. SASTRA University, a private university based in Tamil Nadu, has instituted the SASTRA Ramanujan Prize of US$10,000 to be given annually to a mathematician not exceeding age 32 for outstanding contributions in an area of mathematics influenced by Ramanujan.[127]

Based on the recommendations of a committee appointed by the University Grants Commission (UGC), Government of India, the Srinivasa Ramanujan Centre, established by SASTRA, has been declared an off-campus centre under the ambit of SASTRA University. House of Ramanujan Mathematics, a museum of Ramanujan's life and work, is also on this campus. SASTRA purchased and renovated the house where Ramanujan lived at Kumabakonam.[127]

In 2011, on the 125th anniversary of his birth, the Indian government declared that 22 December will be celebrated every year as National Mathematics Day.[128] Then Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also declared that 2012 would be celebrated as National Mathematics Year and 22 December as National Mathematics Day of India.[129]

Ramanujan IT City is an information technology (IT) special economic zone (SEZ) in Chennai that was built in 2011. Situated next to the Tidel Park, it includes 25 acres (10 ha) with two zones, with a total area of 5.7 million square feet (530,000 m2), including 4.5 million square feet (420,000 m2) of office space.[130]

Commemorative postal stamps

Commemorative stamps released by India Post (by year):

 
1962
 
2011
 
2012
 
2016

In popular culture

Selected papers

  • Ramanujan, S. (1914). "Some definite integrals". Messenger Math. 44: 10–18.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1914). "Some definite integrals connected with Gauss's sums". Messenger Math. 44: 75–85.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1915). "On certain infinite series". Messenger Math. 45: 11–15.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1915). "Highly Composite Numbers". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 14 (1): 347–409. doi:10.1112/plms/s2_14.1.347.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1915). "On the number of divisors of a number". The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. 7 (4): 131–133.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1915). "Short Note: On the sum of the square roots of the first n natural numbers". The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. 7 (5): 173–175.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1916). "Some formulae in the analytical theory of numbers". Messenger Math. 45: 81–84.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1916). "A Series for Euler's Constant γ". Messenger Math. 46: 73–80.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1917). "On the expression of numbers in the form ax2 + by2 + cz2 + du2". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 19: 11–21.
  • Hardy, G. H.; Ramanujan, S. (1917). "Asymptotic Formulae for the Distribution of Integers of Various Types". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 16 (1): 112–132. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-16.1.112.
  • Hardy, G. H.; Ramanujan, Srinivasa (1918). "Asymptotic Formulae in Combinatory Analysis". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 17 (1): 75–115. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-17.1.75.
  • Hardy, G. H.; Ramanujan, Srinivasa (1918). "On the coefficients in the expansions of certain modular functions". Proc. R. Soc. A. 95 (667): 144–155. Bibcode:1918RSPSA..95..144H. doi:10.1098/rspa.1918.0056.
  • Ramanujan, Srinivasa (1919). "Some definite integrals". The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. 11 (2): 81–88.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1919). "A proof of Bertrand's postulate". The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. 11 (5): 181–183.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1920). "A class of definite integrals". Quart. J. Pure. Appl. Math. 48: 294–309. hdl:2027/uc1.$b417568.
  • Ramanujan, S. (1921). "Congruence properties of partitions". Math. Z. 9 (1–2): 147–153. doi:10.1007/BF01378341. S2CID 121753215. Posthumously published extract of a longer, unpublished manuscript.

Further works of Ramanujan's mathematics

  • George E. Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Lost Notebook: Part I (Springer, 2005, ISBN 0-387-25529-X)[155]
  • George E. Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Lost Notebook: Part II, (Springer, 2008, ISBN 978-0-387-77765-8)
  • George E. Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Lost Notebook: Part III, (Springer, 2012, ISBN 978-1-4614-3809-0)
  • George E. Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Lost Notebook: Part IV, (Springer, 2013, ISBN 978-1-4614-4080-2)
  • George E. Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt, Ramanujan's Lost Notebook: Part V, (Springer, 2018, ISBN 978-3-319-77832-7)
  • M. P. Chaudhary, A simple solution of some integrals given by Srinivasa Ramanujan, (Resonance: J. Sci. Education – publication of Indian Academy of Science, 2008)[156]
  • M.P. Chaudhary, Mock theta functions to mock theta conjectures, SCIENTIA, Series A : Math. Sci., (22)(2012) 33–46.
  • M.P. Chaudhary, On modular relations for the Roger-Ramanujan type identities, Pacific J. Appl. Math., 7(3)(2016) 177–184.

Selected publications on Ramanujan and his work

Selected publications on works of Ramanujan

This book was originally published in 1927[157] after Ramanujan's death. It contains the 37 papers published in professional journals by Ramanujan during his lifetime. The third reprint contains additional commentary by Bruce C. Berndt.
  • S. Ramanujan (1957). Notebooks (2 Volumes). Bombay: Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.
These books contain photocopies of the original notebooks as written by Ramanujan.
  • S. Ramanujan (1988). The Lost Notebook and Other Unpublished Papers. New Delhi: Narosa. ISBN 978-3-540-18726-4.
This book contains photo copies of the pages of the "Lost Notebook".
  • Problems posed by Ramanujan, Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society.
  • S. Ramanujan (2012). Notebooks (2 Volumes). Bombay: Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.
This was produced from scanned and microfilmed images of the original manuscripts by expert archivists of Roja Muthiah Research Library, Chennai.

See also

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  153. ^ "Srinivasa Ramanujan's 125th Birthday". www.google.com. from the original on 10 May 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  154. ^ Kumar, V. Krishna (2 February 2018). "A Legendary Creative Math Genius: Srinivasa Ramanujan". Psychology Today. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  155. ^ Bressoud, David (2006). "Review: Ramanujan's Lost Notebook, Part I, by George Andrews and Bruce C. Berndt" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 43 (4): 585–591. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-06-01110-4. (PDF) from the original on 23 June 2015.
  156. ^ "A simple solution of some integrals given by Srinivasa Ramanujan" (PDF). Resonance. 13 (9): 882–884. (PDF) from the original on 6 October 2018.
  157. ^ Bell, E. T. (1928). "Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan edited by G. H. Hardy, P. V. Seshu Aiyar and B. M. Wilson". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 34 (6): 783–784. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1928-04651-7.

External links

Media links

  • Biswas, Soutik (16 March 2006). "Film to celebrate mathematics genius". BBC. Retrieved 24 August 2006.
  • Feature Film on Mathematics Genius Ramanujan by Dev Benegal and Stephen Fry
  • BBC radio programme about Ramanujan – episode 5
  • A biographical song about Ramanujan's life
  • "Why Did This Mathematician's Equations Make Everyone So Angry?". Youtube.com. Thoughty2. 11 April 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2022.

Biographical links

Other links

  • Wolfram, Stephen (27 April 2016). "Who Was Ramanujan?".
  • A Study Group For Mathematics: Srinivasa Ramanujan Iyengar
  • – An international journal devoted to Ramanujan
  • , including a Ramanujan Prize
  • Hindu.com: , Ramanujan – Essays and Surveys 6 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, ,
  • Hindu.com: The sponsor of Ramanujan
  • Bruce C. Berndt; Robert A. Rankin (2000). "The Books Studied by Ramanujan in India". American Mathematical Monthly. 107 (7): 595–601. doi:10.2307/2589114. JSTOR 2589114. MR 1786233.
  • "Ramanujan's mock theta function puzzle solved"
  • Ramanujan's papers and notebooks
  • on Fried Eye
  • Clark, Alex. . Numberphile. Brady Haran. Archived from the original on 4 February 2018. Retrieved 23 June 2018.

srinivasa, ramanujan, ramanujan, redirects, here, other, uses, ramanujan, disambiguation, this, indian, name, name, srinivasa, patronymic, person, should, referred, given, name, ramanujan, ɑː, ɑː, ɑː, born, aiyangar, sriːniʋaːsa, ɾaːmaːnud, ʑan, ajːaŋgar, dece. Ramanujan redirects here For other uses see Ramanujan disambiguation In this Indian name the name Srinivasa is a patronymic and the person should be referred to by the given name Ramanujan Srinivasa Ramanujan FRS ˈ s r iː n ɪ v ɑː s e r ɑː ˈ m ɑː n ʊ dʒ en 1 born Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar IPA sriːniʋaːsa ɾaːmaːnud ʑan ajːaŋgar 22 December 1887 26 April 1920 2 3 was an Indian mathematician Though he had almost no formal training in pure mathematics he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis number theory infinite series and continued fractions including solutions to mathematical problems then considered unsolvable Srinivasa RamanujanFRSBornSrinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar 1887 12 22 22 December 1887Erode Mysore State British India now in Tamil Nadu India Died26 April 1920 1920 04 26 aged 32 Kumbakonam Tanjore District Madras Presidency British India now Thanjavur district Tamil Nadu India CitizenshipBritish IndianEducationGovernment Arts College no degree Pachaiyappa s College no degree Trinity College Cambridge BA Known forRamanujan s sum Landau Ramanujan constant Mock theta functions Ramanujan conjecture Ramanujan prime Ramanujan Soldner constant Ramanujan theta function Rogers Ramanujan identities Ramanujan s master theorem Hardy Ramanujan asymptotic formula Ramanujan Sato seriesAwardsFellow of the Royal Society 1918 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsTrinity College CambridgeThesisHighly Composite Numbers 1916 Academic advisorsG H Hardy J E LittlewoodInfluencesG S CarrSignatureRamanujan initially developed his own mathematical research in isolation According to Hans Eysenck he tried to interest the leading professional mathematicians in his work but failed for the most part What he had to show them was too novel too unfamiliar and additionally presented in unusual ways they could not be bothered 4 Seeking mathematicians who could better understand his work in 1913 he began a postal correspondence with the English mathematician G H Hardy at the University of Cambridge England Recognising Ramanujan s work as extraordinary Hardy arranged for him to travel to Cambridge In his notes Hardy commented that Ramanujan had produced groundbreaking new theorems including some that defeated me completely I had never seen anything in the least like them before 5 and some recently proven but highly advanced results During his short life Ramanujan independently compiled nearly 3 900 results mostly identities and equations 6 Many were completely novel his original and highly unconventional results such as the Ramanujan prime the Ramanujan theta function partition formulae and mock theta functions have opened entire new areas of work and inspired a vast amount of further research 7 Of his thousands of results all but a dozen or two have now been proven correct 8 The Ramanujan Journal a scientific journal was established to publish work in all areas of mathematics influenced by Ramanujan 9 and his notebooks containing summaries of his published and unpublished results have been analysed and studied for decades since his death as a source of new mathematical ideas As late as 2012 researchers continued to discover that mere comments in his writings about simple properties and similar outputs for certain findings were themselves profound and subtle number theory results that remained unsuspected until nearly a century after his death 10 11 He became one of the youngest Fellows of the Royal Society and only the second Indian member and the first Indian to be elected a Fellow of Trinity College Cambridge Of his original letters Hardy stated that a single look was enough to show they could have been written only by a mathematician of the highest calibre comparing Ramanujan to mathematical geniuses such as Euler and Jacobi In 1919 ill health now believed to have been hepatic amoebiasis a complication from episodes of dysentery many years previously compelled Ramanujan s return to India where he died in 1920 at the age of 32 His last letters to Hardy written in January 1920 show that he was still continuing to produce new mathematical ideas and theorems His lost notebook containing discoveries from the last year of his life caused great excitement among mathematicians when it was rediscovered in 1976 Contents 1 Early life 2 Adulthood in India 2 1 Pursuit of career in mathematics 2 2 Contacting British mathematicians 3 Life in England 4 Illness and death 5 Personality and spiritual life 6 Mathematical achievements 6 1 The Ramanujan conjecture 6 2 Ramanujan s notebooks 7 Hardy Ramanujan number 1729 8 Mathematicians views of Ramanujan 9 Posthumous recognition 10 Commemorative postal stamps 11 In popular culture 12 Selected papers 13 Further works of Ramanujan s mathematics 14 Selected publications on Ramanujan and his work 15 Selected publications on works of Ramanujan 16 See also 17 References 18 External links 18 1 Media links 18 2 Biographical links 18 3 Other linksEarly life Ramanujan s birthplace on 18 Alahiri Street Erode now in Tamil Nadu Ramanujan s home on Sarangapani Sannidhi Street KumbakonamRamanujan literally younger brother of Rama a Hindu deity 12 was born on 22 December 1887 into a Tamil Brahmin Iyengar family in Erode in present day Tamil Nadu 13 His father Kuppuswamy Srinivasa Iyengar originally from Thanjavur district worked as a clerk in a sari shop 14 2 His mother Komalatammal was a housewife and sang at a local temple 15 They lived in a small traditional home on Sarangapani Sannidhi Street in the town of Kumbakonam 16 The family home is now a museum When Ramanujan was a year and a half old his mother gave birth to a son Sadagopan who died less than three months later In December 1889 Ramanujan contracted smallpox but recovered unlike the 4 000 others who died in a bad year in the Thanjavur district around this time He moved with his mother to her parents house in Kanchipuram near Madras now Chennai His mother gave birth to two more children in 1891 and 1894 both of whom died before their first birthdays 12 On 1 October 1892 Ramanujan was enrolled at the local school 17 After his maternal grandfather lost his job as a court official in Kanchipuram 18 Ramanujan and his mother moved back to Kumbakonam and he was enrolled in Kangayan Primary School 19 When his paternal grandfather died he was sent back to his maternal grandparents then living in Madras He did not like school in Madras and tried to avoid attending His family enlisted a local constable to make sure he attended school Within six months Ramanujan was back in Kumbakonam 19 Since Ramanujan s father was at work most of the day his mother took care of the boy and they had a close relationship From her he learned about tradition and puranas to sing religious songs to attend pujas at the temple and to maintain particular eating habits all part of Brahmin culture 20 At Kangayan Primary School Ramanujan performed well Just before turning 10 in November 1897 he passed his primary examinations in English Tamil geography and arithmetic with the best scores in the district 21 That year Ramanujan entered Town Higher Secondary School where he encountered formal mathematics for the first time 21 A child prodigy by age 11 he had exhausted the mathematical knowledge of two college students who were lodgers at his home He was later lent a book written by S L Loney on advanced trigonometry 22 23 He mastered this by the age of 13 while discovering sophisticated theorems on his own By 14 he received merit certificates and academic awards that continued throughout his school career and he assisted the school in the logistics of assigning its 1 200 students each with differing needs to its approximately 35 teachers 24 He completed mathematical exams in half the allotted time and showed a familiarity with geometry and infinite series Ramanujan was shown how to solve cubic equations in 1902 He would later develop his own method to solve the quartic In 1903 he tried to solve the quintic not knowing that it was impossible to solve with radicals 25 In 1903 when he was 16 Ramanujan obtained from a friend a library copy of A Synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure and Applied Mathematics G S Carr s collection of 5 000 theorems 26 27 Ramanujan reportedly studied the contents of the book in detail 28 The next year Ramanujan independently developed and investigated the Bernoulli numbers and calculated the Euler Mascheroni constant up to 15 decimal places 29 His peers at the time said they rarely understood him and stood in respectful awe of him 24 When he graduated from Town Higher Secondary School in 1904 Ramanujan was awarded the K Ranganatha Rao prize for mathematics by the school s headmaster Krishnaswami Iyer Iyer introduced Ramanujan as an outstanding student who deserved scores higher than the maximum 30 He received a scholarship to study at Government Arts College Kumbakonam 31 32 but was so intent on mathematics that he could not focus on any other subjects and failed most of them losing his scholarship in the process 33 In August 1905 Ramanujan ran away from home heading towards Visakhapatnam and stayed in Rajahmundry 34 for about a month 33 He later enrolled at Pachaiyappa s College in Madras There he passed in mathematics choosing only to attempt questions that appealed to him and leaving the rest unanswered but performed poorly in other subjects such as English physiology and Sanskrit 35 Ramanujan failed his Fellow of Arts exam in December 1906 and again a year later Without an FA degree he left college and continued to pursue independent research in mathematics living in extreme poverty and often on the brink of starvation 36 In 1910 after a meeting between the 23 year old Ramanujan and the founder of the Indian Mathematical Society V Ramaswamy Aiyer Ramanujan began to get recognition in Madras s mathematical circles leading to his inclusion as a researcher at the University of Madras 37 Adulthood in IndiaOn 14 July 1909 Ramanujan married Janaki Janakiammal 21 March 1899 13 April 1994 38 a girl his mother had selected for him a year earlier and who was ten years old when they married 39 40 41 It was not unusual then for marriages to be arranged with girls at a young age Janaki was from Rajendram a village close to Marudur Karur district Railway Station Ramanujan s father did not participate in the marriage ceremony 42 As was common at that time Janaki continued to stay at her maternal home for three years after marriage until she reached puberty In 1912 she and Ramanujan s mother joined Ramanujan in Madras 43 After the marriage Ramanujan developed a hydrocele testis 44 The condition could be treated with a routine surgical operation that would release the blocked fluid in the scrotal sac but his family could not afford the operation In January 1910 a doctor volunteered to do the surgery at no cost 45 After his successful surgery Ramanujan searched for a job He stayed at a friend s house while he went from door to door around Madras looking for a clerical position To make money he tutored students at Presidency College who were preparing for their Fellow of Arts exam 46 In late 1910 Ramanujan was sick again He feared for his health and told his friend R Radakrishna Iyer to hand his notebooks over to Professor Singaravelu Mudaliar the mathematics professor at Pachaiyappa s College or to the British professor Edward B Ross of the Madras Christian College 47 After Ramanujan recovered and retrieved his notebooks from Iyer he took a train from Kumbakonam to Villupuram a city under French control 48 49 In 1912 Ramanujan moved with his wife and mother to a house in Saiva Muthaiah Mudali street George Town Madras where they lived for a few months 50 In May 1913 upon securing a research position at Madras University Ramanujan moved with his family to Triplicane 51 Pursuit of career in mathematics In 1910 Ramanujan met deputy collector V Ramaswamy Aiyer who founded the Indian Mathematical Society 52 Wishing for a job at the revenue department where Aiyer worked Ramanujan showed him his mathematics notebooks As Aiyer later recalled I was struck by the extraordinary mathematical results contained in the notebooks I had no mind to smother his genius by an appointment in the lowest rungs of the revenue department 53 Aiyer sent Ramanujan with letters of introduction to his mathematician friends in Madras 52 Some of them looked at his work and gave him letters of introduction to R Ramachandra Rao the district collector for Nellore and the secretary of the Indian Mathematical Society 54 55 56 Rao was impressed by Ramanujan s research but doubted that it was his own work Ramanujan mentioned a correspondence he had with Professor Saldhana a notable Bombay mathematician in which Saldhana expressed a lack of understanding of his work but concluded that he was not a fraud 57 Ramanujan s friend C V Rajagopalachari tried to quell Rao s doubts about Ramanujan s academic integrity Rao agreed to give him another chance and listened as Ramanujan discussed elliptic integrals hypergeometric series and his theory of divergent series which Rao said ultimately convinced him of Ramanujan s brilliance 57 When Rao asked him what he wanted Ramanujan replied that he needed work and financial support Rao consented and sent him to Madras He continued his research with Rao s financial aid With Aiyer s help Ramanujan had his work published in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 58 One of the first problems he posed in the journal 30 was to find the value of 1 2 1 3 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 2 sqrt 1 3 sqrt 1 cdots He waited for a solution to be offered in three issues over six months but failed to receive any At the end Ramanujan supplied an incomplete 59 solution to the problem himself On page 105 of his first notebook he formulated an equation that could be used to solve the infinitely nested radicals problem x n a a x n a 2 x a x n n a 2 x n x n a sqrt ax n a 2 x sqrt a x n n a 2 x n sqrt cdots Using this equation the answer to the question posed in the Journal was simply 3 obtained by setting x 2 n 1 and a 0 60 Ramanujan wrote his first formal paper for the Journal on the properties of Bernoulli numbers One property he discovered was that the denominators sequence A027642 in the OEIS of the fractions of Bernoulli numbers are always divisible by six He also devised a method of calculating Bn based on previous Bernoulli numbers One of these methods follows It will be observed that if n is even but not equal to zero Bn is a fraction and the numerator of Bn n in its lowest terms is a prime number the denominator of Bn contains each of the factors 2 and 3 once and only once 2n 2n 1 Bn n is an integer and 2 2n 1 Bn consequently is an odd integer In his 17 page paper Some Properties of Bernoulli s Numbers 1911 Ramanujan gave three proofs two corollaries and three conjectures 61 His writing initially had many flaws As Journal editor M T Narayana Iyengar noted Mr Ramanujan s methods were so terse and novel and his presentation so lacking in clearness and precision that the ordinary mathematical reader unaccustomed to such intellectual gymnastics could hardly follow him 62 Ramanujan later wrote another paper and also continued to provide problems in the Journal 63 In early 1912 he got a temporary job in the Madras Accountant General s office with a monthly salary of 20 rupees He lasted only a few weeks 64 Toward the end of that assignment he applied for a position under the Chief Accountant of the Madras Port Trust In a letter dated 9 February 1912 Ramanujan wrote Sir I understand there is a clerkship vacant in your office and I beg to apply for the same I have passed the Matriculation Examination and studied up to the F A but was prevented from pursuing my studies further owing to several untoward circumstances I have however been devoting all my time to Mathematics and developing the subject I can say I am quite confident I can do justice to my work if I am appointed to the post I therefore beg to request that you will be good enough to confer the appointment on me 65 Attached to his application was a recommendation from E W Middlemast a mathematics professor at the Presidency College who wrote that Ramanujan was a young man of quite exceptional capacity in Mathematics 66 Three weeks after he applied on 1 March Ramanujan learned that he had been accepted as a Class III Grade IV accounting clerk making 30 rupees per month 67 At his office Ramanujan easily and quickly completed the work he was given and spent his spare time doing mathematical research Ramanujan s boss Sir Francis Spring and S Narayana Iyer a colleague who was also treasurer of the Indian Mathematical Society encouraged Ramanujan in his mathematical pursuits citation needed Contacting British mathematicians In the spring of 1913 Narayana Iyer Ramachandra Rao and E W Middlemast tried to present Ramanujan s work to British mathematicians M J M Hill of University College London commented that Ramanujan s papers were riddled with holes 68 He said that although Ramanujan had a taste for mathematics and some ability he lacked the necessary educational background and foundation to be accepted by mathematicians 69 Although Hill did not offer to take Ramanujan on as a student he gave thorough and serious professional advice on his work With the help of friends Ramanujan drafted letters to leading mathematicians at Cambridge University 70 The first two professors H F Baker and E W Hobson returned Ramanujan s papers without comment 71 On 16 January 1913 Ramanujan wrote to G H Hardy 72 Coming from an unknown mathematician the nine pages of mathematics made Hardy initially view Ramanujan s manuscripts as a possible fraud 73 Hardy recognised some of Ramanujan s formulae but others seemed scarcely possible to believe 74 494 One of the theorems Hardy found amazing was on the bottom of page three valid for 0 lt a lt b 1 2 0 1 x 2 b 1 2 1 x 2 a 2 1 x 2 b 2 2 1 x 2 a 1 2 d x p 2 G a 1 2 G b 1 G b a 1 G a G b 1 2 G b a 1 2 displaystyle int limits 0 infty frac 1 dfrac x 2 b 1 2 1 dfrac x 2 a 2 times frac 1 dfrac x 2 b 2 2 1 dfrac x 2 a 1 2 times cdots dx frac sqrt pi 2 times frac Gamma left a frac 1 2 right Gamma b 1 Gamma b a 1 Gamma a Gamma left b frac 1 2 right Gamma left b a frac 1 2 right Hardy was also impressed by some of Ramanujan s other work relating to infinite series 1 5 1 2 3 9 1 3 2 4 3 13 1 3 5 2 4 6 3 2 p displaystyle 1 5 left frac 1 2 right 3 9 left frac 1 times 3 2 times 4 right 3 13 left frac 1 times 3 times 5 2 times 4 times 6 right 3 cdots frac 2 pi 1 9 1 4 4 17 1 5 4 8 4 25 1 5 9 4 8 12 4 2 2 p G 2 3 4 displaystyle 1 9 left frac 1 4 right 4 17 left frac 1 times 5 4 times 8 right 4 25 left frac 1 times 5 times 9 4 times 8 times 12 right 4 cdots frac 2 sqrt 2 sqrt pi Gamma 2 left frac 3 4 right The first result had already been determined by G Bauer in 1859 The second was new to Hardy and was derived from a class of functions called hypergeometric series which had first been researched by Euler and Gauss Hardy found these results much more intriguing than Gauss s work on integrals 75 After seeing Ramanujan s theorems on continued fractions on the last page of the manuscripts Hardy said the theorems defeated me completely I had never seen anything in the least like them before 76 and that they must be true because if they were not true no one would have the imagination to invent them 76 Hardy asked a colleague J E Littlewood to take a look at the papers Littlewood was amazed by Ramanujan s genius After discussing the papers with Littlewood Hardy concluded that the letters were certainly the most remarkable I have received and that Ramanujan was a mathematician of the highest quality a man of altogether exceptional originality and power 74 494 495 One colleague E H Neville later remarked that not one theorem could have been set in the most advanced mathematical examination in the world 63 On 8 February 1913 Hardy wrote Ramanujan a letter expressing interest in his work adding that it was essential that I should see proofs of some of your assertions 77 Before his letter arrived in Madras during the third week of February Hardy contacted the Indian Office to plan for Ramanujan s trip to Cambridge Secretary Arthur Davies of the Advisory Committee for Indian Students met with Ramanujan to discuss the overseas trip 78 In accordance with his Brahmin upbringing Ramanujan refused to leave his country to go to a foreign land 79 Meanwhile he sent Hardy a letter packed with theorems writing I have found a friend in you who views my labour sympathetically 80 To supplement Hardy s endorsement Gilbert Walker a former mathematical lecturer at Trinity College Cambridge looked at Ramanujan s work and expressed amazement urging the young man to spend time at Cambridge 81 As a result of Walker s endorsement B Hanumantha Rao a mathematics professor at an engineering college invited Ramanujan s colleague Narayana Iyer to a meeting of the Board of Studies in Mathematics to discuss what we can do for S Ramanujan 82 The board agreed to grant Ramanujan a monthly research scholarship of 75 rupees for the next two years at the University of Madras 83 While he was engaged as a research student Ramanujan continued to submit papers to the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society In one instance Iyer submitted some of Ramanujan s theorems on summation of series to the journal adding The following theorem is due to S Ramanujan the mathematics student of Madras University Later in November British Professor Edward B Ross of Madras Christian College whom Ramanujan had met a few years before stormed into his class one day with his eyes glowing asking his students Does Ramanujan know Polish The reason was that in one paper Ramanujan had anticipated the work of a Polish mathematician whose paper had just arrived in the day s mail 84 In his quarterly papers Ramanujan drew up theorems to make definite integrals more easily solvable Working off Giuliano Frullani s 1821 integral theorem Ramanujan formulated generalisations that could be made to evaluate formerly unyielding integrals 85 Hardy s correspondence with Ramanujan soured after Ramanujan refused to come to England Hardy enlisted a colleague lecturing in Madras E H Neville to mentor and bring Ramanujan to England 86 Neville asked Ramanujan why he would not go to Cambridge Ramanujan apparently had now accepted the proposal Neville said Ramanujan needed no converting and his parents opposition had been withdrawn 63 Apparently Ramanujan s mother had a vivid dream in which the family goddess the deity of Namagiri commanded her to stand no longer between her son and the fulfilment of his life s purpose 63 On 17 March 1914 Ramanujan traveled to England by ship 87 leaving his wife to stay with his parents in India citation needed Life in England Ramanujan centre and his colleague G H Hardy rightmost with other scientists outside the Senate House Cambridge c 1914 19 Whewell s Court Trinity College CambridgeRamanujan departed from Madras aboard the S S Nevasa on 17 March 1914 88 When he disembarked in London on 14 April Neville was waiting for him with a car Four days later Neville took him to his house on Chesterton Road in Cambridge Ramanujan immediately began his work with Littlewood and Hardy After six weeks Ramanujan moved out of Neville s house and took up residence on Whewell s Court a five minute walk from Hardy s room 89 Hardy and Littlewood began to look at Ramanujan s notebooks Hardy had already received 120 theorems from Ramanujan in the first two letters but there were many more results and theorems in the notebooks Hardy saw that some were wrong others had already been discovered and the rest were new breakthroughs 90 Ramanujan left a deep impression on Hardy and Littlewood Littlewood commented I can believe that he s at least a Jacobi 91 while Hardy said he can compare him only with Euler or Jacobi 92 Ramanujan spent nearly five years in Cambridge collaborating with Hardy and Littlewood and published part of his findings there Hardy and Ramanujan had highly contrasting personalities Their collaboration was a clash of different cultures beliefs and working styles In the previous few decades the foundations of mathematics had come into question and the need for mathematically rigorous proofs recognised Hardy was an atheist and an apostle of proof and mathematical rigour whereas Ramanujan was a deeply religious man who relied very strongly on his intuition and insights Hardy tried his best to fill the gaps in Ramanujan s education and to mentor him in the need for formal proofs to support his results without hindering his inspiration a conflict that neither found easy Ramanujan was awarded a Bachelor of Arts by Research degree 93 94 the predecessor of the PhD degree in March 1916 for his work on highly composite numbers sections of the first part of which had been published the preceding year in the Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society The paper was more than 50 pages long and proved various properties of such numbers Hardy disliked this topic area but remarked that though it engaged with what he called the backwater of mathematics in it Ramanujan displayed extraordinary mastery over the algebra of inequalities 95 On 6 December 1917 Ramanujan was elected to the London Mathematical Society On 2 May 1918 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society 96 the second Indian admitted after Ardaseer Cursetjee in 1841 At age 31 Ramanujan was one of the youngest Fellows in the Royal Society s history He was elected for his investigation in elliptic functions and the Theory of Numbers On 13 October 1918 he was the first Indian to be elected a Fellow of Trinity College Cambridge 97 Illness and deathRamanujan had numerous health problems throughout his life His health worsened in England possibly he was also less resilient due to the difficulty of keeping to the strict dietary requirements of his religion there and because of wartime rationing in 1914 18 He was diagnosed with tuberculosis and a severe vitamin deficiency and confined to a sanatorium In 1919 he returned to Kumbakonam Madras Presidency and in 1920 he died at the age of 32 After his death his brother Tirunarayanan compiled Ramanujan s remaining handwritten notes consisting of formulae on singular moduli hypergeometric series and continued fractions 43 Ramanujan s widow Smt Janaki Ammal moved to Bombay In 1931 she returned to Madras and settled in Triplicane where she supported herself on a pension from Madras University and income from tailoring In 1950 she adopted a son W Narayanan who eventually became an officer of the State Bank of India and raised a family In her later years she was granted a lifetime pension from Ramanujan s former employer the Madras Port Trust and pensions from among others the Indian National Science Academy and the state governments of Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal She continued to cherish Ramanujan s memory and was active in efforts to increase his public recognition prominent mathematicians including George Andrews Bruce C Berndt and Bela Bollobas made it a point to visit her while in India She died at her Triplicane residence in 1994 42 43 A 1994 analysis of Ramanujan s medical records and symptoms by Dr D A B Young 98 concluded that his medical symptoms including his past relapses fevers and hepatic conditions were much closer to those resulting from hepatic amoebiasis an illness then widespread in Madras than tuberculosis He had two episodes of dysentery before he left India When not properly treated amoebic dysentery can lie dormant for years and lead to hepatic amoebiasis whose diagnosis was not then well established 99 At the time if properly diagnosed amoebiasis was a treatable and often curable disease 99 100 British soldiers who contracted it during the First World War were being successfully cured of amoebiasis around the time Ramanujan left England 101 Personality and spiritual lifeWhile asleep I had an unusual experience There was a red screen formed by flowing blood as it were I was observing it Suddenly a hand began to write on the screen I became all attention That hand wrote a number of elliptic integrals They stuck to my mind As soon as I woke up I committed them to writing Srinivasa Ramanujan 102 Ramanujan has been described as a person of a somewhat shy and quiet disposition a dignified man with pleasant manners 103 He lived a simple life at Cambridge 104 Ramanujan s first Indian biographers describe him as a rigorously orthodox Hindu He credited his acumen to his family goddess Namagiri Thayar Goddess Mahalakshmi of Namakkal He looked to her for inspiration in his work 105 and said he dreamed of blood drops that symbolised her consort Narasimha Later he had visions of scrolls of complex mathematical content unfolding before his eyes 106 He often said An equation for me has no meaning unless it expresses a thought of God 107 Hardy cites Ramanujan as remarking that all religions seemed equally true to him 108 Hardy further argued that Ramanujan s religious belief had been romanticised by Westerners and overstated in reference to his belief not practice by Indian biographers At the same time he remarked on Ramanujan s strict vegetarianism 109 Similarly in an interview with Frontline Berndt said Many people falsely promulgate mystical powers to Ramanujan s mathematical thinking It is not true He has meticulously recorded every result in his three notebooks further speculating that Ramanujan worked out intermediate results on slate that he could not afford the paper to record more permanently 8 Mathematical achievementsIn mathematics there is a distinction between insight and formulating or working through a proof Ramanujan proposed an abundance of formulae that could be investigated later in depth G H Hardy said that Ramanujan s discoveries are unusually rich and that there is often more to them than initially meets the eye As a byproduct of his work new directions of research were opened up Examples of the most intriguing of these formulae include infinite series for p one of which is given below 1 p 2 2 9801 k 0 4 k 1103 26390 k k 4 396 4 k displaystyle frac 1 pi frac 2 sqrt 2 9801 sum k 0 infty frac 4k 1103 26390k k 4 396 4k This result is based on the negative fundamental discriminant d 4 58 232 with class number h d 2 Further 26390 5 7 13 58 and 16 9801 3962 which is related to the fact that e p 58 396 4 104 000000177 textstyle e pi sqrt 58 396 4 104 000000177 dots This might be compared to Heegner numbers which have class number 1 and yield similar formulae Ramanujan s series for p converges extraordinarily rapidly and forms the basis of some of the fastest algorithms currently used to calculate p Truncating the sum to the first term also gives the approximation 9801 2 4412 for p which is correct to six decimal places truncating it to the first two terms gives a value correct to 14 decimal places See also the more general Ramanujan Sato series One of Ramanujan s remarkable capabilities was the rapid solution of problems illustrated by the following anecdote about an incident in which P C Mahalanobis posed a problem Imagine that you are on a street with houses marked 1 through n There is a house in between x such that the sum of the house numbers to the left of it equals the sum of the house numbers to its right If n is between 50 and 500 what are n and x This is a bivariate problem with multiple solutions Ramanujan thought about it and gave the answer with a twist He gave a continued fraction The unusual part was that it was the solution to the whole class of problems Mahalanobis was astounded and asked how he did it It is simple The minute I heard the problem I knew that the answer was a continued fraction Which continued fraction I asked myself Then the answer came to my mind Ramanujan replied 110 111 His intuition also led him to derive some previously unknown identities such as 1 2 n 1 cos n 8 cosh n p 2 1 2 n 1 cosh n 8 cosh n p 2 2 G 4 3 4 p 8 p 3 G 4 1 4 displaystyle begin aligned amp left 1 2 sum n 1 infty frac cos n theta cosh n pi right 2 left 1 2 sum n 1 infty frac cosh n theta cosh n pi right 2 6pt amp frac 2 Gamma 4 left frac 3 4 right pi frac 8 pi 3 Gamma 4 left frac 1 4 right end aligned for all 8 such that ℜ 8 lt p displaystyle Re theta lt pi and ℑ 8 lt p displaystyle Im theta lt pi where G z is the gamma function and related to a special value of the Dedekind eta function Expanding into series of powers and equating coefficients of 80 84 and 88 gives some deep identities for the hyperbolic secant In 1918 Hardy and Ramanujan studied the partition function P n extensively They gave a non convergent asymptotic series that permits exact computation of the number of partitions of an integer In 1937 Hans Rademacher refined their formula to find an exact convergent series solution to this problem Ramanujan and Hardy s work in this area gave rise to a powerful new method for finding asymptotic formulae called the circle method 112 In the last year of his life Ramanujan discovered mock theta functions 113 For many years these functions were a mystery but they are now known to be the holomorphic parts of harmonic weak Maass forms The Ramanujan conjecture Main article Ramanujan Petersson conjecture Although there are numerous statements that could have borne the name Ramanujan conjecture one was highly influential on later work In particular the connection of this conjecture with conjectures of Andre Weil in algebraic geometry opened up new areas of research That Ramanujan conjecture is an assertion on the size of the tau function which has as generating function the discriminant modular form D q a typical cusp form in the theory of modular forms It was finally proven in 1973 as a consequence of Pierre Deligne s proof of the Weil conjectures The reduction step involved is complicated Deligne won a Fields Medal in 1978 for that work 7 114 In his paper On certain arithmetical functions Ramanujan defined the so called delta function whose coefficients are called t n the Ramanujan tau function 115 He proved many congruences for these numbers such as t p 1 p11 mod 691 for primes p This congruence and others like it that Ramanujan proved inspired Jean Pierre Serre 1954 Fields Medalist to conjecture that there is a theory of Galois representations that explains these congruences and more generally all modular forms D z is the first example of a modular form to be studied in this way Deligne in his Fields Medal winning work proved Serre s conjecture The proof of Fermat s Last Theorem proceeds by first reinterpreting elliptic curves and modular forms in terms of these Galois representations Without this theory there would be no proof of Fermat s Last Theorem 116 Ramanujan s notebooks Further information Ramanujan s lost notebook While still in Madras Ramanujan recorded the bulk of his results in four notebooks of looseleaf paper They were mostly written up without any derivations This is probably the origin of the misapprehension that Ramanujan was unable to prove his results and simply thought up the final result directly Mathematician Bruce C Berndt in his review of these notebooks and Ramanujan s work says that Ramanujan most certainly was able to prove most of his results but chose not to record the proofs in his notes This may have been for any number of reasons Since paper was very expensive Ramanujan did most of his work and perhaps his proofs on slate after which he transferred the final results to paper At the time slates were commonly used by mathematics students in the Madras Presidency He was also quite likely to have been influenced by the style of G S Carr s book which stated results without proofs It is also possible that Ramanujan considered his work to be for his personal interest alone and therefore recorded only the results 117 The first notebook has 351 pages with 16 somewhat organised chapters and some unorganised material The second has 256 pages in 21 chapters and 100 unorganised pages and the third 33 unorganised pages The results in his notebooks inspired numerous papers by later mathematicians trying to prove what he had found Hardy himself wrote papers exploring material from Ramanujan s work as did G N Watson B M Wilson and Bruce Berndt 117 In 1976 George Andrews rediscovered a fourth notebook with 87 unorganised pages the so called lost notebook 99 Hardy Ramanujan number 1729Main article 1729 number The number 1729 is known as the Hardy Ramanujan number after a famous visit by Hardy to see Ramanujan at a hospital In Hardy s words 118 I remember once going to see him when he was ill at Putney I had ridden in taxi cab number 1729 and remarked that the number seemed to me rather a dull one and that I hoped it was not an unfavorable omen No he replied it is a very interesting number it is the smallest number expressible as the sum of two cubes in two different ways Immediately before this anecdote Hardy quoted Littlewood as saying Every positive integer was one of Ramanujan s personal friends 119 The two different ways are 1729 1 3 12 3 9 3 10 3 displaystyle 1729 1 3 12 3 9 3 10 3 Generalisations of this idea have created the notion of taxicab numbers Mathematicians views of RamanujanIn his obituary of Ramanujan written for Nature in 1920 Hardy observed that Ramanujan s work primarily involved fields less known even among other pure mathematicians concluding His insight into formulae was quite amazing and altogether beyond anything I have met with in any European mathematician It is perhaps useless to speculate as to his history had he been introduced to modern ideas and methods at sixteen instead of at twenty six It is not extravagant to suppose that he might have become the greatest mathematician of his time What he actually did is wonderful enough when the researches which his work has suggested have been completed it will probably seem a good deal more wonderful than it does to day 74 Hardy further said 120 He combined a power of generalisation a feeling for form and a capacity for rapid modification of his hypotheses that were often really startling and made him in his own peculiar field without a rival in his day The limitations of his knowledge were as startling as its profundity Here was a man who could work out modular equations and theorems to orders unheard of whose mastery of continued fractions was beyond that of any mathematician in the world who had found for himself the functional equation of the zeta function and the dominant terms of many of the most famous problems in the analytic theory of numbers and yet he had never heard of a doubly periodic function or of Cauchy s theorem and had indeed but the vaguest idea of what a function of a complex variable was When asked about the methods Ramanujan employed to arrive at his solutions Hardy said they were arrived at by a process of mingled argument intuition and induction of which he was entirely unable to give any coherent account 121 He also said that he had never met his equal and can compare him only with Euler or Jacobi 121 Littlewood reportedly said that helping Ramanujan catch up with European mathematics beyond what was available in India was very difficult because each new point mentioned to Ramanujan caused him to produce original ideas that prevented Littlewood from continuing the lesson 122 K Srinivasa Rao has said 123 As for his place in the world of Mathematics we quote Bruce C Berndt Paul Erdos has passed on to us Hardy s personal ratings of mathematicians Suppose that we rate mathematicians on the basis of pure talent on a scale from 0 to 100 Hardy gave himself a score of 25 J E Littlewood 30 David Hilbert 80 and Ramanujan 100 During a May 2011 lecture at IIT Madras Berndt said that over the last 40 years as nearly all of Ramanujan s conjectures had been proven there had been greater appreciation of Ramanujan s work and brilliance and that Ramanujan s work was now pervading many areas of modern mathematics and physics 113 124 Posthumous recognitionFurther information List of things named after Srinivasa Ramanujan Bust of Ramanujan in the garden of Birla Industrial amp Technological Museum in Kolkata IndiaThe year after his death Nature listed Ramanujan among other distinguished scientists and mathematicians on a Calendar of Scientific Pioneers who had achieved eminence 125 Ramanujan s home state of Tamil Nadu celebrates 22 December Ramanujan s birthday as State IT Day Stamps picturing Ramanujan were issued by the government of India in 1962 2011 2012 and 2016 126 Since Ramanujan s centennial year his birthday 22 December has been annually celebrated as Ramanujan Day by the Government Arts College Kumbakonam where he studied and at the IIT Madras in Chennai The International Centre for Theoretical Physics ICTP has created a prize in Ramanujan s name for young mathematicians from developing countries in cooperation with the International Mathematical Union which nominates members of the prize committee SASTRA University a private university based in Tamil Nadu has instituted the SASTRA Ramanujan Prize of US 10 000 to be given annually to a mathematician not exceeding age 32 for outstanding contributions in an area of mathematics influenced by Ramanujan 127 Based on the recommendations of a committee appointed by the University Grants Commission UGC Government of India the Srinivasa Ramanujan Centre established by SASTRA has been declared an off campus centre under the ambit of SASTRA University House of Ramanujan Mathematics a museum of Ramanujan s life and work is also on this campus SASTRA purchased and renovated the house where Ramanujan lived at Kumabakonam 127 In 2011 on the 125th anniversary of his birth the Indian government declared that 22 December will be celebrated every year as National Mathematics Day 128 Then Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also declared that 2012 would be celebrated as National Mathematics Year and 22 December as National Mathematics Day of India 129 Ramanujan IT City is an information technology IT special economic zone SEZ in Chennai that was built in 2011 Situated next to the Tidel Park it includes 25 acres 10 ha with two zones with a total area of 5 7 million square feet 530 000 m2 including 4 5 million square feet 420 000 m2 of office space 130 Commemorative postal stampsCommemorative stamps released by India Post by year 1962 2011 2012 2016In popular cultureThe Man Who Loved Numbers is a 1988 PBS NOVA documentary about Ramanujan S15 E9 131 The Man Who Knew Infinity is a 2015 film based on Kanigel s book of the same name British actor Dev Patel portrays Ramanujan 132 133 134 Ramanujan an Indo British collaboration film chronicling Ramanujan s life was released in 2014 by the independent film company Camphor Cinema 135 The cast and crew include director Gnana Rajasekaran cinematographer Sunny Joseph and editor B Lenin 136 137 Indian and English stars Abhinay Vaddi Suhasini Maniratnam Bhama Kevin McGowan and Michael Lieber star in pivotal roles 138 Nandan Kudhyadi directed the Indian documentary films The Genius of Srinivasa Ramanujan 2013 and Srinivasa Ramanujan The Mathematician and His Legacy 2016 about the mathematician 139 Ramanujan The Man Who Reshaped 20th Century Mathematics an Indian docudrama film directed by Akashdeep released in 2018 140 M N Krish s thriller novel The Steradian Trail weaves Ramanujan and his accidental discovery into its plot connecting religion mathematics finance and economics 141 142 Partition a play by Ira Hauptman about Hardy and Ramanujan was first performed in 2013 143 144 145 146 The play First Class Man by Alter Ego Productions 147 was based on David Freeman s First Class Man The play centres around Ramanujan and his complex and dysfunctional relationship with Hardy On 16 October 2011 it was announced that Roger Spottiswoode best known for his James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies is working on the film version starring Siddharth 148 A Disappearing Number is a British stage production by the company Complicite that explores the relationship between Hardy and Ramanujan 149 David Leavitt s novel The Indian Clerk explores the events following Ramanujan s letter to Hardy 150 151 Google honoured Ramanujan on his 125th birth anniversary by replacing its logo with a doodle on its home page 152 153 Ramanujan was mentioned in the 1997 film Good Will Hunting in a scene where professor Gerald Lambeau Stellan Skarsgard explains to Sean Maguire Robin Williams the genius of Will Hunting Matt Damon by comparing him to Ramanujan 154 Selected papersRamanujan S 1914 Some definite integrals Messenger Math 44 10 18 Ramanujan S 1914 Some definite integrals connected with Gauss s sums Messenger Math 44 75 85 Ramanujan S 1915 On certain infinite series Messenger Math 45 11 15 Ramanujan S 1915 Highly Composite Numbers Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 14 1 347 409 doi 10 1112 plms s2 14 1 347 Ramanujan S 1915 On the number of divisors of a number The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 7 4 131 133 Ramanujan S 1915 Short Note On the sum of the square roots of the first n natural numbers The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 7 5 173 175 Ramanujan S 1916 Some formulae in the analytical theory of numbers Messenger Math 45 81 84 Ramanujan S 1916 A Series for Euler s Constant g Messenger Math 46 73 80 Ramanujan S 1917 On the expression of numbers in the form ax2 by2 cz2 du2 Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 19 11 21 Hardy G H Ramanujan S 1917 Asymptotic Formulae for the Distribution of Integers of Various Types Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 16 1 112 132 doi 10 1112 plms s2 16 1 112 Hardy G H Ramanujan Srinivasa 1918 Asymptotic Formulae in Combinatory Analysis Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 17 1 75 115 doi 10 1112 plms s2 17 1 75 Hardy G H Ramanujan Srinivasa 1918 On the coefficients in the expansions of certain modular functions Proc R Soc A 95 667 144 155 Bibcode 1918RSPSA 95 144H doi 10 1098 rspa 1918 0056 Ramanujan Srinivasa 1919 Some definite integrals The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 11 2 81 88 Ramanujan S 1919 A proof of Bertrand s postulate The Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 11 5 181 183 Ramanujan S 1920 A class of definite integrals Quart J Pure Appl Math 48 294 309 hdl 2027 uc1 b417568 Ramanujan S 1921 Congruence properties of partitions Math Z 9 1 2 147 153 doi 10 1007 BF01378341 S2CID 121753215 Posthumously published extract of a longer unpublished manuscript Further works of Ramanujan s mathematicsGeorge E Andrews and Bruce C Berndt Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part I Springer 2005 ISBN 0 387 25529 X 155 George E Andrews and Bruce C Berndt Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part II Springer 2008 ISBN 978 0 387 77765 8 George E Andrews and Bruce C Berndt Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part III Springer 2012 ISBN 978 1 4614 3809 0 George E Andrews and Bruce C Berndt Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part IV Springer 2013 ISBN 978 1 4614 4080 2 George E Andrews and Bruce C Berndt Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part V Springer 2018 ISBN 978 3 319 77832 7 M P Chaudhary A simple solution of some integrals given by Srinivasa Ramanujan Resonance J Sci Education publication of Indian Academy of Science 2008 156 M P Chaudhary Mock theta functions to mock theta conjectures SCIENTIA Series A Math Sci 22 2012 33 46 M P Chaudhary On modular relations for the Roger Ramanujan type identities Pacific J Appl Math 7 3 2016 177 184 Selected publications on Ramanujan and his workBerndt Bruce C 1998 Butzer P L Oberschelp W Jongen H Th eds Charlemagne and His Heritage 1200 Years of Civilization and Science in Europe PDF Turnhout Belgium Brepols Verlag pp 119 146 ISBN 978 2 503 50673 9 Archived PDF from the original on 9 September 2004 Berndt Bruce C Rankin Robert A 1995 Ramanujan Letters and Commentary Vol 9 Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 0287 8 Berndt Bruce C Rankin Robert A 2001 Ramanujan Essays and Surveys Vol 22 Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 2624 9 Berndt Bruce C 2006 Number Theory in the Spirit of Ramanujan Vol 9 Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 4178 5 Berndt Bruce C 1985 Ramanujan s Notebooks Part I New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 96110 1 Berndt Bruce C 1999 Ramanujan s Notebooks Part II New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 96794 3 Berndt Bruce C 2004 Ramanujan s Notebooks Part III New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 97503 0 Berndt Bruce C 1993 Ramanujan s Notebooks Part IV New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 94109 7 Berndt Bruce C 2005 Ramanujan s Notebooks Part V New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 94941 3 Hardy G H March 1937 The Indian Mathematician Ramanujan The American Mathematical Monthly 44 3 137 155 doi 10 2307 2301659 JSTOR 2301659 Hardy G H 1978 Ramanujan New York Chelsea Pub Co ISBN 978 0 8284 0136 4 Hardy G H 1999 Ramanujan Twelve Lectures on Subjects Suggested by His Life and Work Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 2023 0 Henderson Harry 1995 Modern Mathematicians New York Facts on File Inc ISBN 978 0 8160 3235 8 Kanigel Robert 1991 The Man Who Knew Infinity a Life of the Genius Ramanujan New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 19259 8 Leavitt David 2007 The Indian Clerk paperback ed London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 9370 6 Narlikar Jayant V 2003 Scientific Edge the Indian Scientist From Vedic to Modern Times New Delhi India Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 303028 7 Ono Ken Aczel Amir D 13 April 2016 My Search for Ramanujan How I Learned to Count Springer ISBN 978 3319255668 Sankaran T M 2005 Srinivasa Ramanujan Ganitha lokathile Mahaprathibha in Malayalam Kochi India Kerala Sastra Sahithya Parishath a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Selected publications on works of RamanujanRamanujan Srinivasa Hardy G H Seshu Aiyar P V Wilson B M Berndt Bruce C 2000 Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan AMS ISBN 978 0 8218 2076 6 This book was originally published in 1927 157 after Ramanujan s death It contains the 37 papers published in professional journals by Ramanujan during his lifetime The third reprint contains additional commentary by Bruce C Berndt S Ramanujan 1957 Notebooks 2 Volumes Bombay Tata Institute of Fundamental Research These books contain photocopies of the original notebooks as written by Ramanujan S Ramanujan 1988 The Lost Notebook and Other Unpublished Papers New Delhi Narosa ISBN 978 3 540 18726 4 This book contains photo copies of the pages of the Lost Notebook Problems posed by Ramanujan Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society S Ramanujan 2012 Notebooks 2 Volumes Bombay Tata Institute of Fundamental Research This was produced from scanned and microfilmed images of the original manuscripts by expert archivists of Roja Muthiah Research Library Chennai See also Mathematics portal Biography portal India portal1729 number Brown numbers List of amateur mathematicians List of Indian mathematicians Ramanujan graph Ramanujan summation Ramanujan s constant Ramanujan s ternary quadratic form Rank of a partitionReferences Olausson Lena Sangster Catherine 2006 Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation Oxford University Press p 322 ISBN 978 0 19 280710 6 a b Kanigel Robert 2004 Ramanujan Srinivasa Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 51582 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ramanujan Aiyangar Srinivasa 1887 1920 trove nla gov au Hans Eysenck 1995 Genius p 197 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 48508 8 Hardy Godfrey Harold 1940 Ramanujan Twelve Lectures on Subjects Suggested by His Life and Work Cambridge University Press p 9 ISBN 0 8218 2023 0 Berndt Bruce C 12 December 1997 Ramanujan s Notebooks Vol Part 5 Springer Science amp Business p 4 ISBN 978 0 38794941 3 a b Ono Ken June July 2006 Honoring a Gift from Kumbakonam PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 53 6 640 51 649 50 Archived PDF from the original on 21 June 2007 Retrieved 23 June 2007 a b Rediscovering Ramanujan Frontline 16 17 650 August 1999 Archived from the original on 25 September 2013 Retrieved 20 December 2012 Alladi Krishnaswami Elliott P D T A Granville A 30 September 1998 Analytic and Elementary Number Theory A Tribute to Mathematical Legend Paul Erdos Springer Science amp Business p 6 ISBN 978 0 79238273 7 Deep meaning in Ramanujan s simple pattern Archived 3 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Mathematical proof reveals magic of Ramanujan s genius Archived 9 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine New Scientist a b Kanigel 1991 p 12 Kanigel 1991 p 11 Kanigel 1991 pp 17 18 Berndt amp Rankin 2001a p 89harvnb error no target CITEREFBerndtRankin2001a help Srinivasan Pankaja 19 October 2012 The Nostalgia Formula The Hindu Retrieved 7 September 2016 Kanigel 1991 p 13 Kanigel 1991 p 19 a b Kanigel 1991 p 14 Kanigel 1991 p 20 a b Kanigel 1991 p 25 Berndt amp Rankin 2001b p 9harvnb error no target CITEREFBerndtRankin2001b help Hardy G H 1999 Ramanujan Twelve Lectures on Subjects Suggested by His Life and Work Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society p 2 ISBN 978 0 8218 2023 0 a b Kanigel 1991 p 27 Srinivasa Ramanujan Biography Maths History Retrieved 29 October 2022 Kanigel 1991 p 39 McElroy Tucker 2005 A to Z of mathematicians Facts on File p 221 ISBN 0 8160 5338 3 Ramanujan Aiyangar Srinivasa Hardy Godfrey Harold Aiyar P Veṅkatesvara Seshu 2000 Collected papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan Nature 123 3104 xii Bibcode 1929Natur 123 631L doi 10 1038 123631a0 ISBN 978 0 8218 2076 6 S2CID 44812911 Kanigel 1991 p 90 a b Kanigel 1991 p Kanigel 1991 p 28 Kanigel 1991 p 45 a b Kanigel 1991 pp 47 48 Ramanujan lost and found a 1905 letter from The Hindu The Hindu Chennai India 25 December 2011 permanent dead link Krishnamachari Suganthi 27 June 2013 Travails of a Genius The Hindu Archived from the original on 26 August 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Kanigel 1991 p 55 56 Krishnamurthy V Srinivasa Ramanujan His life and his genius www krishnamurthys com Expository address delivered on Sep 16 1987 at Visvesvarayya Auditorium as part of the celebrations of Ramanujan Centenary by the IISC Bangalore Archived from the original on 21 September 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 The seamstress and the mathematician Live mint 20 April 2018 gt Kanigel 1991 p 71 Bullough V L 1990 2 History in adult human sexual behavior with children and adolescents in Western societies Pedophilia Biosocial Dimensions New York Springer Verlag p 71 ISBN 978 1 46139684 0 Kolata Gina 19 June 1987 Remembering a Magical Genius Science New Series 236 4808 1519 21 Bibcode 1987Sci 236 1519K doi 10 1126 science 236 4808 1519 PMID 17835731 a b Ramanujan s wife Janakiammal Janaki PDF Chennai Institute of Mathematical Sciences Archived from the original PDF on 24 December 2012 Retrieved 10 November 2012 a b c Janardhanan Arun 6 December 2015 A passage to infinity Indian Express Archived from the original on 5 September 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 gt Kanigel 1991 p 72 Ramanujan Srinivasa 1968 P K Srinivasan ed Ramanujan Memorial Number Letters and Reminiscences Vol 1 Madras Muthialpet High School 100 Kanigel 1991 p 73 Kanigel 1991 pp 74 75 Ranganathan Shiyali Ramamrita 1967 Ramanujan The Man and the Mathematician Bombay Asia Publishing House p 23 ISBN 9788185273372 Srinivasan 1968 Vol 1 p 99 Rao K Srinivasa Ramanujan s wife Janakiammal Janaki PDF IMSC Institute of Mathematical Sciences Chennai Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2016 About Ramanujan The Ramanujan Institute Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 7 September 2016 a b Kanigel 1991 p 77 Srinivasan 1968 Vol 1 p 129 Srinivasan 1968 Vol 1 p 86 Neville Eric Harold January 1921 The Late Srinivasa Ramanujan Nature 106 2673 661 662 Bibcode 1921Natur 106 661N doi 10 1038 106661b0 S2CID 4185656 Ranganathan 1967 p 24 a b Kanigel 1991 p 80 Kanigel 1991 p 86 Herschfeld Aaron August 1935 On Infinite Radicals The American Mathematical Monthly 42 7 419 429 doi 10 1080 00029890 1935 11987745 ISSN 0002 9890 Kanigel 1991 p 87 Kanigel 1991 p 91 Seshu Iyer P V June 1920 The Late Mr S Ramanujan B A F R S Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society 12 3 83 a b c d Neville Eric Harold 1942 Srinivasa Ramanujan Nature 149 3776 292 293 Bibcode 1942Natur 149 292N doi 10 1038 149292a0 Srinivasan 1968 p 176 Srinivasan 1968 p 31 Srinivasan 1968 p 49 Kanigel 1991 p 96 Kanigel 1991 p 105 Letter from M J M Hill to a C L T Griffith a former student who sent the request to Hill on Ramanujan s behalf 28 November 1912 Kanigel 1991 p 106 Kanigel 1991 pp 170 171 The letter that revealed Ramanujan s genius YouTube Snow C P 1966 Variety of Men New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 30 31 a b c Hardy G H 1920 Obituary S Ramanujan Nature 105 7 494 495 Bibcode 1920Natur 105 494H doi 10 1038 105494a0 S2CID 4174904 Kanigel 1991 p 167 a b Kanigel 1991 p 168 Letter Hardy to Ramanujan 8 February 1913 Letter Ramanujan to Hardy 22 January 1914 Kanigel 1991 p 185 Letter Ramanujan to Hardy 27 February 1913 Cambridge University Library Kanigel 1991 p 175 Ram Suresh 1972 Srinivasa Ramanujan New Delhi National Book Trust p 29 Ranganathan 1967 pp 30 31 Ranganathan 1967 p 12 Kanigel 1991 p 183 Kanigel 1991 p 184 A very Brief History of Srinivasa Ramanujan YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Kanigel 1991 p 196 Kanigel 1991 p 202 Hardy G H 1940 Ramanujan Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 10 Letter Littlewood to Hardy early March 1913 Hardy G H 1979 Collected Papers of G H Hardy Vol 7 Oxford England Clarendon Press 720 The Cambridge University Reporter of 18 March 1916 reports Bachelors designate in Arts Srinivasa Ramanujan Research Student Trin A clear photographic image of said document can be viewed on the following YouTube video at the specified timestamp https www youtube com watch v uhNGCn 3hmc amp t 1636 The Maths PhD in the UK Notes on its History www economics soton ac uk Retrieved 9 August 2020 Jean Louis Nicolas Guy Robin eds Highly Composite Numbers by Srinivasa Ramanujan The Ramanujan Journal 1997 1 119 153 p 121 Embleton Ellen 2 October 2018 Revisiting Ramanujan The Royal Society The Royal Society Archived from the original on 16 February 2020 Retrieved 16 February 2020 Kanigel 1991 pp 299 300 Young D A B 1994 Ramanujan s illness Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 48 1 107 119 doi 10 1098 rsnr 1994 0009 PMID 11615274 S2CID 33416179 a b c Peterson Doug Raiders of the Lost Notebook UIUC College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 11 January 2014 Gunn J W C Savage B 1919 Report on the treatment of Entamoeba histolytica infections Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps 33 5 418 426 Langley George J 24 December 1921 The Difficulties in Diagnosis And Treatment of Hepatic Abscess British Medical Journal 2 3182 1073 1074 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 3182 1073 JSTOR 20429465 PMC 2339657 PMID 20770524 Baaquie Belal E Willeboordse Frederick H 1 December 2009 Exploring Integrated Science CRC Press p 38 ISBN 978 1 4200 8794 9 Ramanujan s Personality Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 23 June 2018 Kanigel 1991 pp 234 241 Kanigel 1991 p 36 Kanigel 1991 p 281 Chaitin Gregory 28 July 2007 Less Proof More Truth New Scientist 2614 49 doi 10 1016 S0262 4079 07 61908 3 Kanigel 1991 p 283 Berndt Bruce C Rankin Robert Alexander 2001 Ramanujan Essays and Surveys American Mathematical Society p 47 ISBN 978 0 82182624 9 Retrieved 8 June 2015 Ranganathan 1967 p 82 Calyampudi Radhakrishna Rao 1997 Statistics and truth putting chance to work World Scientific p 185 ISBN 978 981 02 3111 8 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Iwaniec Henryk 1989 The circle method and the Fourier coefficients of modular forms Number theory and related topics Bombay 1988 Tata Inst Fund Res Stud Math Vol 12 Tata Inst Fund Res Bombay pp 47 55 MR 1441326 a b 100 Year Old Deathbed Dreams of Mathematician Proved True Fox News 28 December 2012 Archived from the original on 7 January 2013 Winnie Wen Ching 9 December 2019 The Ramanujan conjecture and its applications Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 378 2163 doi 10 1098 rsta 2018 0441 PMC 6939229 PMID 31813366 Ramanujan Srinivasa 1916 On certain arithmetical functions PDF Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society XXII 9 Archived from the original PDF on 11 June 2016 Retrieved 15 May 2016 The tau function is discussed in pages 194 197 Ono Ken Aczel Amir D 13 April 2016 My Search for Ramanujan How I Learned to Count Springer pp 236 237 ISBN 978 3319255668 ideas that were critical to the proof of Fermat s last 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24 April 2018 Freudenberger Nell 16 September 2007 Lust for Numbers The New York Times Archived from the original on 10 January 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Taylor D J 26 January 2008 Adding up to a life The Guardian UK Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Google doodles for Ramanujan s 125th birthday Times of India 22 December 2012 Archived from the original on 22 December 2012 Retrieved 22 December 2012 Srinivasa Ramanujan s 125th Birthday www google com Archived from the original on 10 May 2016 Retrieved 30 April 2016 Kumar V Krishna 2 February 2018 A Legendary Creative Math Genius Srinivasa Ramanujan Psychology Today Retrieved 24 April 2018 Bressoud David 2006 Review Ramanujan s Lost Notebook Part I by George Andrews and Bruce C Berndt PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 43 4 585 591 doi 10 1090 s0273 0979 06 01110 4 Archived PDF from the original on 23 June 2015 A simple solution of some integrals given by Srinivasa Ramanujan PDF Resonance 13 9 882 884 Archived PDF from the original on 6 October 2018 Bell E T 1928 Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan edited by G H Hardy P V Seshu Aiyar and B M Wilson Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 34 6 783 784 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1928 04651 7 External linksSrinivasa Ramanujan at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Media links Biswas Soutik 16 March 2006 Film to celebrate mathematics genius BBC Retrieved 24 August 2006 Feature Film on Mathematics Genius Ramanujan by Dev Benegal and Stephen Fry BBC radio programme about Ramanujan episode 5 A biographical song about Ramanujan s life Why Did This Mathematician s Equations Make Everyone So Angry Youtube com Thoughty2 11 April 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Biographical links Srinivasa Ramanujan at the Mathematics Genealogy Project O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Srinivasa Ramanujan MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Weisstein Eric Wolfgang ed Ramanujan Srinivasa 1887 1920 ScienceWorld A short biography of Ramanujan Our Devoted Site for Great Mathematical Genius Other links Wolfram Stephen 27 April 2016 Who Was Ramanujan A Study Group For Mathematics Srinivasa Ramanujan Iyengar The Ramanujan Journal An international journal devoted to Ramanujan International Math Union Prizes including a Ramanujan Prize Hindu com Norwegian and Indian mathematical geniuses Ramanujan Essays and Surveys Archived 6 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Ramanujan s growing influence Ramanujan s mentor Hindu com The sponsor of Ramanujan Bruce C Berndt Robert A Rankin 2000 The Books Studied by Ramanujan in India American Mathematical Monthly 107 7 595 601 doi 10 2307 2589114 JSTOR 2589114 MR 1786233 Ramanujan s mock theta function puzzle solved Ramanujan s papers and notebooks Sample page from the second notebook Ramanujan on Fried Eye Clark Alex 163 and Ramanujan Constant Numberphile Brady Haran Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Retrieved 23 June 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Srinivasa Ramanujan amp oldid 1158140678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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