Charles Hermite (nonfiction)
Prof Charles Hermite FRS FRSE MIAS (December 24, 1822 – January 14, 1901) was a French mathematician who did research on number theory, quadratic forms, invariant theory, orthogonal polynomials, elliptic functions, and algebra.
Hermite polynomials, Hermite interpolation, Hermite normal form, Hermitian operators, and cubic Hermite splines are named in his honor.
One of his students was Henri Poincaré.
He was the first to prove that e, the base of natural logarithms, is a transcendental number. His methods were later used by Ferdinand von Lindemann to prove that π is transcendental.
In a letter to Thomas Joannes Stieltjes in 1893, Hermite remarked:
I turn with terror and horror from this lamentable scourge of continuous functions with no derivatives.
On 14 July of 1856, Hermite was elected to fill the vacancy created by the death of Jacques Binet in the Académie des Sciences.
In the News
Thomas Joannes Stieltjes writes to Hermite concerning celestial mechanics, but the subject quickly turned to mathematics.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Niels Abel
- Joseph Bertrand (nonfiction)
- Eugène Charles Catalan (nonfiction) - Doctoral advisor
- Augustin-Louis Cauchy (nonfiction)
- Jean-Marie Duhamel (nonfiction)
- Carl Friedrich Gauss (nonfiction)
- Carl Jacobi (nonfiction)
- Joseph Louis Lagrange (nonfiction)
- Ferdinand von Lindemann (nonfiction)
- Mathematician (nonfiction)
- Number theory (nonfiction)
- Henri Padé (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Mihailo Petrović (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Henri Poincaré (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Thomas Joannes Stieltjes (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
- Jules Tannery (nonfiction) - Doctoral student
External links:
- Charles Hermite @ Wikipedia