Srinivasa Ramanujan was a renowned Indian mathematician who made extraordinary contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions despite having no formal training in pure mathematics. He was born in 1887 in India and showed an extraordinary aptitude for mathematics from a young age. Ramanujan struggled to get recognition until he was introduced to the English mathematician G.H. Hardy through letters containing his original research. Hardy arranged for Ramanujan to work at Cambridge University where he spent the last years of his life conducting groundbreaking mathematical research before passing away in 1920 at the young age of 32. Ramanujan made substantial contributions to mathematical functions and analysis and continues to have a significant impact on mathematics despite his short life
2. SRINIVASA IYENGAR RAMANUJAN
Born - 22 December 1887
Kumbakonam, Madras Presidency
British India
Died - 26 April 1920
Chetput, Madras, British India
College - Government Arts College
Pachaiyappa’s College
Cambridge University
Academic Advisors - G.H.Hardy
J.E.Littlewood
3. RAMAJUNA – THE MATHEMATICIAN
No formal training in Mathematics
Made extraordinary contributions to
Mathematical Analysis, Number Theory, Infinite
Series and Continued Fractions.
Expert in Trigonometry at age 12
Discovered theorems of his own
Fellow of the Royal Society and Trinity College,
Cambridge
4. EARLY LIFE
Born in Erode to K. Srinivasa Iyengar and
Komalatmmal
Lived in Sarangapani Street in Kumbakonam
Went school first on 1.10.1892.
Had to switch primary school 3 times due to
circumstances.
Completed Math exam in half the allotted time.
A synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure and
Applied Mathematics. Book acknowledged in
awakening the genius of Ramanujan.
Left college without a degree and pursued
research in Mathematics.
5. ADULTHOOD IN INDIA
Married to a 9 year old bride Janaki Ammal
on 14 July 1909
Went door to door for job
Tutored college students
6. ATTENTION FROM MATHEMATICIANS
Met V. Ramaswamy Aiyer, founder of
Indian Mathematical Society
I was struck by the extraordinary
mathematical results contained in it [the
notebooks]. I had no mind to smother his
genius by an appointment in the lowest
rungs of the revenue department
Introduced to R. Ramachandra Rao,
secretary of the Indian Mathematical
Society
Impressed by Ramanujan but doubted his
integrity.
Continued Mathematical Research with
Rao’s financial help
R.Ramachandra Rao
7. Published his work in Journal of Indian Mathematical Society
First problem which he posed
He then formulated an equation to solve the infinitely nested
radicals problem.
Wrote his 1st formal paper for the journal on the properties
of Bernoulli Numbers
8. In early 1912 he got a job in the Madras Accountant
Generals office with a salary of Rs 20 per month.
Later he applied for a position under the Chief
Accountant of the Madras Port Trust
Accepted as a Class III, Grade IV accounting clerk
making 30 rupees per month
Spent spare time doing Mathematical Research
9. CONTACTING ENGLISH
MATHEMATICIANS
M. J. M. Hill of University College London argued
that though Ramanujan had taste for Mathematics
he lacked the proper educational background and
foundation
He refused to take Ramanujan as student
But gave him professional advice on his work
10. INTRODUCTION WITH
G.H.HARDY
G.H. Hardy was an academician at Cambridge University
He was a prominent English mathematician, known for his
achievements in number theory and mathematical analysis.
Later on Ramanujan wrote to G.H.Hardy
Hardy recognised some of his formulae but other “seemed
scarcely possible to believe”. Some of them were –
Relating to infinite series -
12. LIFE IN ENGLAND
Ramanujan boarded the S.S.Nevasa on 17 March 1914
and arrived in London on 14th April
Ramanujan began working with Hardy and Littlewood
Hardy received 120 theorems from him in 1st 2 letters
but there were many more results in his notebook
After working with Ramanujan Littlewood
commented, "I can believe that he's at least a Jacobi”
Hardy said he "can compare him only with [Leonhard]
Euler or Jacobi”
Ramanujan spent nearly 5 years in Cambridge
13. Awarded BA degree by research
(later called PhD) in March 1916
6.12.1917 – Elected to London
Mathematical Society
Became a ‘Fellow of The Royal
Society’ in 1918
Became the first Indian to be elected
a Fellow of Trinity College,
Cambridge
RAMANUJAN’S HONOURS
14. ILLNESS & RETURN TO INDIA
Ramanujan's health worsened in England
Diagnosed with Tuberculosis and Vitamin
deficiency
Returned to Kumbakonam in 1919 and died soon
thereafter at the age of 32
In 1994 Dr. D.A.B. Young analysed his records and
concluded he had hepatic amoebiasis
15. PERSONALITY AND SPIRITUAL LIFE
A person with a somewhat shy and quiet disposition
A dignified man with pleasant manners
Ramanujan credited his success to his family Goddess,
Namagiri of Namakkal
He claimed to receive visions of scrolls of complex
mathematical content unfolding before his eyes
"An equation for me has no meaning, unless it
represents a thought of God.”
16. RAMANUJAN’S NOTEBOOKS
Recorded his work in 4 notebooks of loose
leaf paper
Results were written without derivation
Mathematician Bruce C. Berndt says that
Ramanujan was able to make the proofs
but chose not to.
Might have worked on slate
Or may be influenced by G.S Carr’s book
which stated results without proofs
Mathematicians such as Hardy, G.N.
Watson, B.M. Wilson and Bruce Berndt
created papers from his work
17. RAMANUJAN - HARDY NUMBER
1729
Hardy arrived in a cab numbered 1729
He commented that the number was
uninteresting
Instantly Ramanujan claimed that it was the
smallest natural number which can be written as
sum of cubes in 2 ways
18. OTHER MATHEMATICIANS’ VIEWS
OF RAMANUJAN
J.H. Hardy was highly impressed by Ramanujan
Hardy said that the solutions were "arrived at by
a process of mingled argument, intuition, and
induction, of which he was entirely unable to
give any coherent account”
On the basis of pure talent Hardy rated himself a
score of 25 out of 100, J.E. Littlewood 30, David
Hilbert 80 and Ramanujan 100 !
Physicist Jayant Narlikar appreciated
Ramanujan’s discoveries
19. RECOGNITION
Tamil Nadu celebrates 22 December as ‘State IT Day’
Stamp released by the Govt. in 1962
22nd December celebrated as Ramanujan Day in Govt
Arts College, Kumbakonam
National Symposium On Mathematical Methods and
Applications (NSMMA)
SASTRA Ramanujan Prize
20. IN POPULAR CULTURE
A play ‘First Class Man’ is centered around Ramanujan
Book by Robert Kanigel titled ‘The Man Who Knew
Infinity: A Life of the Genius Ramanujan’ is his
biography
In the famous film ‘Good Will Hunting’ the main
character is compared to Ramanujan
‘A Disappearing Number’, a show by British Stage
Production is about Ramanujan and Hardy
Character Amita Ramanujan in the show Numb3rs is
named after him
Roger Spottiswoode is working on a movie on
mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan starring Rang