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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  





2 Mathematical contributions  



2.1  Soundness of calculus  





2.2  Calculus of variations  





2.3  Other analytical theorems  







3 Students  





4 Honours and awards  





5 Selected works  





6 See also  





7 References  





8 External links  














Karl Weierstrass






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Karl Weierstrass

Karl Weierstraß

Born

(1815-10-31)31 October 1815

Died

19 February 1897(1897-02-19) (aged 81)
Berlin, Prussia, German Empire

Nationality

German

Alma mater

  • Münster Academy
  • Known for

  • Weierstrass product inequality
  • (ε, δ)-definition of limit
  • Weierstrass–Erdmann condition
  • Weierstrass theorems
  • Bolzano–Weierstrass theorem
  • Awards

  • Copley Medal (1895)
  • Scientific career

    Fields

    Mathematics

    Institutions

    Gewerbeinstitut, Friedrich Wilhelm University

    Academic advisors

    Christoph Gudermann

    Doctoral students

  • Georg Cantor
  • Georg Frobenius
  • Lazarus Fuchs
  • Wilhelm Killing
  • Johannes Knoblauch
  • Leo Königsberger
  • Ernst Kötter
  • Sofia Kovalevskaya
  • Mathias Lerch
  • Hans von Mangoldt
  • Eugen Netto
  • Adolf Piltz
  • Carl Runge
  • Arthur Schoenflies
  • Friedrich Schottky
  • Hermann Schwarz
  • Ludwig Stickelberger
  • Karl Theodor Wilhelm Weierstrass (German: Weierstraß [ˈvaɪɐʃtʁaːs];[1] 31 October 1815 – 19 February 1897) was a German mathematician often cited as the "father of modern analysis". Despite leaving university without a degree, he studied mathematics and trained as a school teacher, eventually teaching mathematics, physics, botany and gymnastics.[2] He later received an honorary doctorate and became professor of mathematics in Berlin.

    Among many other contributions, Weierstrass formalized the definition of the continuity of a function and complex analysis, proved the intermediate value theorem and the Bolzano–Weierstrass theorem, and used the latter to study the properties of continuous functions on closed bounded intervals.

    Biography[edit]

    Weierstrass was born into a Roman Catholic family in Ostenfelde, a village near Ennigerloh, in the Province of Westphalia.[3]

    Weierstrass was the son of Wilhelm Weierstrass, a government official, and Theodora Vonderforst both of whom were Catholic Rhinelanders. His interest in mathematics began while he was a gymnasium student at the TheodorianuminPaderborn. He was sent to the University of Bonn upon graduation to prepare for a government position. Because his studies were to be in the fields of law, economics, and finance, he was immediately in conflict with his hopes to study mathematics. He resolved the conflict by paying little heed to his planned course of study but continuing private study in mathematics. The outcome was that he left the university without a degree. He then studied mathematics at the Münster Academy (which was even then famous for mathematics) and his father was able to obtain a place for him in a teacher training school in Münster. Later he was certified as a teacher in that city. During this period of study, Weierstrass attended the lectures of Christoph Gudermann and became interested in elliptic functions.

    In 1843 he taught in Deutsch KroneinWest Prussia and from 1848 he taught at the Lyceum HosianuminBraunsberg.[4] Besides mathematics he also taught physics, botany, and gymnastics.[3]

    Weierstrass may have had an illegitimate child named Franz with the widow of his friend Carl Wilhelm Borchardt.[5]

    After 1850 Weierstrass suffered from a long period of illness, but was able to publish mathematical articles that brought him fame and distinction. The University of Königsberg conferred an honorary doctor's degree on him on 31 March 1854. In 1856 he took a chair at the Gewerbeinstitut in Berlin (an institute to educate technical workers which would later merge with the Bauakademie to form the Technische Hochschule in Charlottenburg; now Technische Universität Berlin). In 1864 he became professor at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin, which later became the Humboldt Universität zu Berlin.

    In 1870, at the age of fifty-five, Weierstrass met Sofia Kovalevsky whom he tutored privately after failing to secure her admission to the university. They had a fruitful intellectual, and kindly personal relationship that "far transcended the usual teacher-student relationship". He mentored her for four years, and regarded her as his best student, helping to secure a doctorate for her from Heidelberg University without the need for an oral thesis defense. He was immobile for the last three years of his life, and died in Berlin from pneumonia.[6]

    From 1870 until her death in 1891, Kovalevsky corresponded with Weierstrass. Upon learning of her death, he burned her letters. About 150 of his letters to her have been preserved. Professor Reinhard Bölling [de] discovered the draft of the letter she wrote to Weierstrass when she arrived in Stockholm in 1883 upon her appointment as PrivatdocentatStockholm University.[7]

    Mathematical contributions[edit]

    Soundness of calculus[edit]

    Weierstrass was interested in the soundness of calculus, and at the time there were somewhat ambiguous definitions of the foundations of calculus so that important theorems could not be proven with sufficient rigour. Although Bolzano had developed a reasonably rigorous definition of a limit as early as 1817 (and possibly even earlier) his work remained unknown to most of the mathematical community until years later, and many mathematicians had only vague definitions of limits and continuity of functions.

    The basic idea behind Delta-epsilon proofs is, arguably, first found in the works of Cauchy in the 1820s.[8][9] Cauchy did not clearly distinguish between continuity and uniform continuity on an interval. Notably, in his 1821 Cours d'analyse, Cauchy argued that the (pointwise) limit of (pointwise) continuous functions was itself (pointwise) continuous, a statement that is false in general. The correct statement is rather that the uniform limit of continuous functions is continuous (also, the uniform limit of uniformly continuous functions is uniformly continuous). This required the concept of uniform convergence, which was first observed by Weierstrass's advisor, Christoph Gudermann, in an 1838 paper, where Gudermann noted the phenomenon but did not define it or elaborate on it. Weierstrass saw the importance of the concept, and both formalized it and applied it widely throughout the foundations of calculus.

    The formal definition of continuity of a function, as formulated by Weierstrass, is as follows:

    is continuous at if such that for every in the domain of ,   In simple English, is continuous at a point if for each close enough to , the function value is very close to , where the "close enough" restriction typically depends on the desired closeness of to Using this definition, he proved the Intermediate Value Theorem. He also proved the Bolzano–Weierstrass theorem and used it to study the properties of continuous functions on closed and bounded intervals.

    Calculus of variations[edit]

    Weierstrass also made advances in the field of calculus of variations. Using the apparatus of analysis that he helped to develop, Weierstrass was able to give a complete reformulation of the theory that paved the way for the modern study of the calculus of variations. Among several axioms, Weierstrass established a necessary condition for the existence of strong extrema of variational problems. He also helped devise the Weierstrass–Erdmann condition, which gives sufficient conditions for an extremal to have a corner along a given extremum and allows one to find a minimizing curve for a given integral.

    Other analytical theorems[edit]

    Students[edit]

    Honours and awards[edit]

    The lunar crater Weierstrass and the asteroid 14100 Weierstrass are named after him. Also, there is the Weierstrass Institute for Applied Analysis and Stochastics in Berlin.

    Selected works[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Duden. Das Aussprachewörterbuch. 7. Auflage. Bibliographisches Institut, Berlin 2015, ISBN 978-3-411-04067-4
  • ^ Weierstrass, Karl Theodor Wilhelm. (2018). In Helicon (Ed.), The Hutchinson unabridged encyclopedia with atlas and weather guide. [Online]. Abington: Helicon. Available from: http://libezproxy.open.ac.uk/login?url= Link Accessed 8 July 2018.
  • ^ a b O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. (October 1998). "Karl Theodor Wilhelm Weierstrass". School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  • ^ Elstrodt, Jürgen (2016), König, Wolfgang; Sprekels, Jürgen (eds.), "Die prägenden Jahre im Leben von Karl Weierstraß", Karl Weierstraß (1815–1897) (in German), Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, pp. 11–51, doi:10.1007/978-3-658-10619-5_2, ISBN 978-3-658-10618-8, retrieved 2023-08-12
  • ^ Biermann, Kurt-R.; Schubring, Gert (1996). "Einige Nachträge zur Biographie von Karl Weierstraß. (German) [Some postscripts to the biography of Karl Weierstrass]". History of mathematics. San Diego, CA: Academic Press. pp. 65–91.
  • ^ Dictionary of scientific biography. Gillispie, Charles Coulston,, American Council of Learned Societies. New York. 1970. p. 223. ISBN 978-0-684-12926-6. OCLC 89822.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  • ^ Kuznetsov, Vadim B., ed. (2002). "The life of S. V. Kovalevskaya by Roger L. Cooke". The Kowalevski Property (Leeds, 2000) CRM Proceedings & Lecture Notes, vol. 32. American Mathematical Soc. pp. 1–19. ISBN 978-0-8218-7330-4; See p. 7 in 2002 book.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) online text
  • ^ Grabiner, Judith V. (March 1983), "Who Gave You the Epsilon? Cauchy and the Origins of Rigorous Calculus" (PDF), The American Mathematical Monthly, 90 (3): 185–194, doi:10.2307/2975545, JSTOR 2975545, archived (PDF) from the original on 2014-11-29
  • ^ Cauchy, A.-L. (1823), "Septième Leçon – Valeurs de quelques expressions qui se présentent sous les formes indéterminées Relation qui existe entre le rapport aux différences finies et la fonction dérivée", Résumé des leçons données à l'école royale polytechnique sur le calcul infinitésimal, Paris, p. 44, archived from the original on 2009-05-04, retrieved 2009-05-01
  • External links[edit]

    Copley Medallists (1851–1900)

  • Alexander von Humboldt (1852)
  • Heinrich Wilhelm Dove (1853)
  • Johannes Peter Müller (1854)
  • Léon Foucault (1855)
  • Henri Milne-Edwards (1856)
  • Michel Eugène Chevreul (1857)
  • Charles Lyell (1858)
  • Wilhelm Eduard Weber (1859)
  • Robert Bunsen (1860)
  • Louis Agassiz (1861)
  • Thomas Graham (1862)
  • Adam Sedgwick (1863)
  • Charles Darwin (1864)
  • Michel Chasles (1865)
  • Julius Plücker (1866)
  • Karl Ernst von Baer (1867)
  • Charles Wheatstone (1868)
  • Henri Victor Regnault (1869)
  • James Prescott Joule (1870)
  • Julius Robert von Mayer (1871)
  • Friedrich Wöhler (1872)
  • Hermann von Helmholtz (1873)
  • Louis Pasteur (1874)
  • August Wilhelm von Hofmann (1875)
  • Claude Bernard (1876)
  • James Dwight Dana (1877)
  • Jean-Baptiste Boussingault (1878)
  • Rudolf Clausius (1879)
  • James Joseph Sylvester (1880)
  • Charles Adolphe Wurtz (1881)
  • Arthur Cayley (1882)
  • William Thomson (1883)
  • Carl Ludwig (1884)
  • Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz (1885)
  • Franz Ernst Neumann (1886)
  • Joseph Dalton Hooker (1887)
  • Thomas Henry Huxley (1888)
  • George Salmon (1889)
  • Simon Newcomb (1890)
  • Stanislao Cannizzaro (1891)
  • Rudolf Virchow (1892)
  • George Gabriel Stokes (1893)
  • Edward Frankland (1894)
  • Karl Weierstrass (1895)
  • Carl Gegenbaur (1896)
  • Albert von Kölliker (1897)
  • William Huggins (1898)
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