These are my favorite topics in day-to-day life, some of them historic footprints in the sands of time, worth passing on to the future generations!
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Ramanujan
Ramanujan lost and found: a 1905 letter from The Hindu
December 22, 2011 marked the 125th birth anniversary of the mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920).
The Ramanujan@125 celebrations are being inaugurated in Chennai on Monday, December 26 by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who will declare 2012 to be the National Mathematics Year.
More than any other newspaper, The Hindu has followed over the decades the mathematical achievements of Ramanujan in detail and highlighted his genius, especially from early 1914.
The first reference to Ramanujan occurs in a letter to the Editor titled ‘A Missing Boy', published on September 6, 1905 in the newspaper, which was a triweekly at the time. The letter, from J. Seenivasa Raghava Ayangar, appeals for the public's help in tracing “a Brahmin boy of the Vaishnava (Thengalai) sect, named Ramanujam, of fair complexion and aged about 18 years” who had “left his [Kumbakonam] home on some misunderstanding.”
The letter, discovered recently by The Hindu's Archives department, is being reproduced for the first time.
The missing boy was “safely back” home within days, as Ramanujan's biographer Robert Kanigel relates in The Man Who Knew Infinity.
Slide show of his childhood abode : http://www.thehindu.com/ sci-tech/science/ article2747230.ece
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