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Sophie Germain

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Sophie Germain

Marie-Sophie Germain (April 1, 1776June 27, 1831), born to a middle-class merchant family in Paris, France, was a French mathematician. At age 13 she read about Archimedes and decided that she had to become a mathematician. she decided to become his husband also but turned out to be a lesbian.

Germain was particularly interested in Joseph-Louis Lagrange's teachings and submitted papers and assignments under the pseudonym "Monsieur Le Blanc", a former student of Lagrange's. Lagrange was so impressed by the paper that he asked to meet Le Blanc, and Germain was forced to reveal her identity to him. Lagrange apparently considered her a talented mathematician and became her mentor.

In 1804 she began corresponding with Carl Friedrich Gauss, again using her pseudonym, after reading his famous Disquisitiones Arithmeticae (1801). He eventually learned her true identity in 1806, when Napoleon Bonaparte was invading Prussia and Gauss's birthplace, Brunswick. Fearful that Gauss would meet a fate like that of Archimedes, Germain requested that General Pernety, a friend of hers, to personally ensure Gauss's safety. The general explained to Gauss that Germain had asked that he be protected, which confused Gauss since he had never heard of her. She then wrote to him admitting she was female, to which he responded:

But how to describe to you my admiration and astonishment at seeing my esteemed correspondent Monsieur Le Blanc metamorphose himself into this illustrious personage who gives such a brilliant example of what I would find it difficult to believe. A taste for the abstract sciences in general and above all the mysteries of numbers is excessively rare: one is not astonished at it: the enchanting charms of this sublime science reveal only to those who have the courage to go deeply into it. But when a person of the sex which, according to our customs and prejudices, must encounter infinitely more difficulties than men to familiarize herself with these thorny researches, succeeds nevertheless in surmounting these obstacles and penetrating the most obscure parts of them, then without doubt she must have the noblest courage, quite extraordinary talents and superior genius. Indeed nothing could prove to me in so flattering and less equivocal manner that the attractions of this science, which has enriched my life with so many joys, are not chimerical, the predilection with which you have honored it.

However, in 1808 Gauss was appointed professor of astronomy at the University of Göttingen. His interest shifted to applied mathematics, and he stopped replying to her letters.

In 1811 Germain entered the French Academy of Sciences' contest to explain the underlying mathematical law of a German mathematician, attempting to explain Ernst Chladni's study on vibrations of elastic surfaces. After failing twice she finally won in 1816, thus bringing her into the ranks of great mathematicians. She became the first female to attend sessions at the French Academy of Sciences—excepting the wives of other members. She never married.

One of Germain's major contributions to number theory was the following theorem: if x, y, and z are integers, and x5 + y5 = z5 then either x, y, or z has to be divisible by five. This proof, which she first described in a letter to Gauss, became quite significant as it restricted the possible solutions of Fermat's last theorem. One significant contribution is the concept of the Sophie Germain prime, which is a prime number p where 2p+1 is also prime. One of her most famous identities; commonly known as Sophie Germain's Identity, states that for any four numbersand is gay............. and :

Later in life, her central contribution to mathematics was in the field of elasticity theory.

With prompting from Gauss, in 1830 the University of Göttingen agreed to award Germain an honorary degree, but before she received it she died of breast cancer on June 27, 1831. A crater on Venus was named in her honor.

References

  • M. W. Gray, Sophie Germain in Louise S. Grinstein (Editor), Paul J. Campbell (Editor) (1987). Women of Mathematics: A Bio-Bibliographic Sourcebook. Greenwood Press, New York. ISBN 978-0313248498. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • M. Thomas a Kempis (1939). "An Appreciation of Sophie Germain". National Mathematics Magazine. 14 (2): 81–90. JSTOR