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  2. Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar[ a ] (22 December 1887 – 26 April 1920) 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.

    • When A Constable Was Appointed to Force Him to Attend School
    • The Unquenchable Thirst For Knowledge: Working on Theorems Since 13
    • Paper - The Unaffordable Commodity
    • Making Contact with Cambridge and Being Labelled A Fraud
    • Cultural Holdbacks from Crossing The Sea
    • England: The Strangeness of A Foreign Country
    • Mahalakshmi of Namakkal: The Goddess Behind Ramanujan's Work
    • Ramanujan's Untimely Death and The Questions Surrounding It
    • Ramanujan's Treasure Trove
    • The Genius Whose Work Is Inspiring Research Even Now

    Ramanujan was one of several siblings in a Tamil Brahmin family in Madras. But he lost all of them to a small pox epidemic in 1889. The young genius didn't like attending school and a constable was enlisted to make sure he did. His mind worked differently from his peers. He didn't have friends as few could understand him. Leaving aside sports, Rama...

    At the age of 11, he came across two college students who lodged at his home for a period of time and he took the opportunity to learn all he could from them. Later, when he was 12, he got a tougher book from a senior school student--- S.L. Linney's Plane Trigonometry. By the time he was 13, the young genius had mastered this book completely and wa...

    As he worked on his theorems, Ramanujan couldn't use paper as it was quite expensive. He worked on his derivations on slate, choosing to note down only the important results and summaries in his notebooks. Despite his unemployment and abject poverty, he had filled an entire notebook by the age of 23.

    A few years later, he found himself quite inspired by a book 'Orders of Infinity', and in January 1913, with the help of his office colleagues, Ramanujan wrote to the writer-- G H Hardy at Cambridge University and sent him some of his own work. The renowned mathematician took a look at Ramanujan's work and ticked them off as "fraud". After all, Ram...

    In February, 1913, flummoxed by the incredible findings of Ramanujan, Hardy wrote back to him, inviting him to Cambridge. However, having been strictly brought up as a Brahmin, Ramanujan considered the culinary and cultural differences he would face; and combined with the vehement objections from his mother, Ramanujan refused to go. It was only lat...

    In England, Ramanujan struggled to adjust with the culture and cuisine. The English weather was not quite suitable, and he also faced mild racism from his peers. However, at Cambridge, he was quickly hailed as the most remarkable mathematician of his time. The man soon realised that he was very detached from the Western findings already carried out...

    Ramanujan frequently said, "An equation for me has no meaning, unless it represents a thought of God."-and he wasn't kidding. Like ancient Indian mathematicians, Ramanujan only noted the results and summaries of his works; no proof was worked out for the formulae he came up with. He straightaway credited his work to the divine providence of Mahalak...

    Ramanujan's insufficient diet in England during the time of war, while trying to maintain his staunch Brahmin eating habits, combined with his long hours of study and research gradually broke down his health. He was admitted to a Cambridge nursing home and it was a year before he showed some signs of improvement. After the war ended, he headed back...

    After his early and untimely death, Ramanujan left behind a treasure that was more priceless than the largest diamond on earth--- his three notebooks and a few scraps of paper covering around 3900 equations, summaries and results. However, there was no proof with them. And even now, after almost 100 years, scientists and scholars are still working ...

    Srinivasa Ramanujan had a sort of child-like simplicity and with his penetrative intuition, he was a seer in mathematics. Except for the classical number theory, there is hardly a field of Maths that the genius did not add to. His birthday is celebrated as National Mathematics Day and he even has a prime number named after him-the Ramanujan Prime. ...

  3. One of the greatest mathematicians of all time, Srinivasa Ramanujan was born in 1887 in the Southern part of India. He is still remembered for his contributions to the field of mathematics.

  4. Srinivasa Ramanujan was a largely self-taught pure mathematician. Hindered by poverty and ill-health, his highly original work has considerably enriched number theory. More recently his discoveries have been applied to physics, where his theta function lies at the heart of string theory. Advertisements. Beginnings.

  5. Srinivasa Ramanujan - Mathematician Biography, Contributions and Facts. Srinivasa Ramanujan was born on December 22, 1887 in Erode, a city in the Tamil Nadu state of India. His father, K. Srinivasa Iyengar was a clerk while his mother, Komalatammal performed as a singer, in a temple.

  6. Dec 21, 2023 · Srinivasa Ramanujan Biography: He was born on 22 December 1887 at Erode, India to a Tamil Brahmin Iyengar family. He was an Indian greatest mathematician given contributions to number theory,...