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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Picard's mother, the daughter of a medical doctor, was put in an extremely difficult position when her husband died. As well as Emile, she had a second young son, and in order to support them through their education she had to find employment. Only her determination to give her sons a good start, despite the tragedy, allowed Emile to receive the education which gave him the chance to achieve the highest international stading in mathematics. Picard's secondary education was at the Lycée Napoléon, later called the Lycée Henri IV. Strangely he was a brilliant pupil at almost all his subjects, particularly in translating Greek and Latin poetry, but he disliked mathematics. He himself wrote that he hated geometry but he:
It was only during the vacation after completing his secondary studies that Picard read an algebra book and suddenly he became fascinated in mathematics. He took the entrance examinations for École Polytechnique and École Normale Supérieure; he was placed second and first respectively in the two examinations. Hadamard wrote in :
Picard received his agrégation in 1877, being placed first. He remained at the École Normale Supérieure for a year where he was employed as an assistant. He was appointed lecturer at the University of Paris in 1878 and then professor at Toulouse in 1879. In 1881 he returned to Paris when appointed maître de conférence in mechanics and astronomy at the École Normale. In 1881 Picard was nominated for membership of the mathematics section of the Académie des Sciences . It says much of the extraordinary ability that he was showing at such a young age that he was nominated. He had already proved two important theorems which are both today known under Picard's name, yet it was still a little soon to gain admission to the prestigious academy and he would have to wait a few more years. In this year of his first nomination he married Hermite 's daughter. Picard and his wife had three children, a daughter and two sons, who were all killed in World War I. His grandsons were wounded and captured in World War II. In 1885 Picard was appointed to the chair of differential calculus at the Sorbonne in Paris when the chair fell vacant on the death of Claude Bouquet . However a university regulation prevented anyone below the age of thirty holding a chair. The regulations were circumvented by making Picard his own suppléant until he reached the age of thirty which was in the following year. He requested exchanging his chair for that of analysis and higher algebra in 1897 so that he was able to train research students. Picard made his most important contributions in the fields of analysis, function theory, differential equations , and analytic geometry. He used methods of successive approximation to show the existence of solutions of ordinary differential equations solving the Cauchy problem for these differential equations. Starting in 1890, he extended properties of the Laplace equation to more general elliptic equations. Picard's solution was represented in the form of a convergent series. In 1879 he proved that an entire function which is not constant takes every value an infinite number of times, with one possible exception. Picard used the theory of Hermite 's modular functions in the proof of this important result. Building on work by Abel and Riemann , Picard's study of the integrals attached to algebraic surfaces and related topological questions developed into an important part of algebraic geometry . On this topic he published, with Georges Simart, Théorie des fonctions algébriques de deux variables indépendantes which was a two volume work, the first volume appearing in 1897 and the second in 1906. Picard also discovered a group, now called the Picard group, which acts as a group of transformations on a linear differential equation. His three volume masterpiece Traité d'analyse was published between 1891 and 1896. The treatise :
Picard also applied analysis to the study of elasticity, heat and electricity. He studied the transmission of electrical pulses along wires finding a beautiful solution to the problem. As can be seen his contributions were both wide ranging and important. Among the honours given to Picard was his election to the Académie des Sciences in 1889, eight years after he was first unsuccessfully nominated. He later served the Academy as its permanent secretary from 1917 until his death in 1941. In this role :
Picard was awarded the Poncelet Prize in 1886 and the Grand Prix des Sciences Mathématiques in 1888. In addition to honorary doctorates from five universities and honorary membership of thirty-seven learned societies he received the Grande Croix de la Légion d'Honneur in 1932 and the Mittag-Leffler Gold Medal in 1937. He became a member of the Académie Française in 1924. Another honour was given to him was making him President of the International Congress of Mathematicians at Strasbourg in September 1920. Hadamard had this to say of Picard as a teacher when he addressed him in 1937:
Hadamard wrote in :
It is a remarkable fact that between 1894 and 1937 he trained over 10000 engineers who were studying at the École Centrale des Arts et Manufactures.
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |