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  • 4/24/2004

Jules Henri Poincaré

Born: 29 April 1854 in Nancy,Lorraine, France
Died:17 July 1912 in Paris,France

French mathematician who did important work in many different branches of mathematics. However, he did not stay in any one field long enough to round out his work. He had an amazing memory and could state the page and line of any item in a text he had read. He retained this memory all his life. He also remembered verbatim by ear. His normal work habit was to solve a problem completely in his head, then commit the completed problem to paper. Despite his keen mathematical ability, he was physically clumsy and artistically inept. In fact, he received a score of 0 on his Polytechnique entrance exam. He was always in a rush and disliked going back for changes or corrections. He was also a popularizer of mathematics. Poincaré's brother Raymond was president of the French Republic during World War I.

Poincaré is quoted as saying, "It is the simple hypotheses of which one must be most wary; because these are the ones that have the most chances of passing unnoticed" (Boyer and Merzbach 1991, p. 599). In 1880, he created generalizedelliptic functions calledautomorphic functions. He discovered that automorphic functions invariant under the same group are connected by an algebraic equation. Conversely, he found that the coordinates of a point on anyalgebraic curve can be expressed in terms ofautomorphic functions. He showed they could be used to solve second order lineardifferential equation with algebraic coefficients.

Poincaré did fundamental work in celestial mechanics in his treatises Les Méthodes Nouvelles de la Mécanique Céleste (1892, 1893, 1899), in which he used variational equations and integral invariants, and Leçons de Mécanique Céleste (3 volumes, 1905-1910). In these works, he attacked thethree-body problem. In Sur les Figures d'équilibre d'une Masse Fluide, he treated tides and rotating fluid spheres. The latter was extended byGeorge Darwin. Poincaré found that a rotating fluid having a pear shape (piriform) would be stable.Bell (1986) states that this conclusion is incorrect, but Boyer (1991) does not contradict it.

Poincaré also did work in partial differential equations and complex analysis. Poincaré also introduced modern methods oftopology in Analysis Situs (1895), set forth the fundamentals ofhomology, used asymptotic series to solve differential equations, and extended thepolyhedral formula forspaces of higherdimensionality usingBetti numbers.

Taken from:

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Poincare.html

Also see:

http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Poincare.html

http://www-chaos.umd.edu/misc/poincare.html

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