Carl Neumann

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Carl Neumann
Friedrich Richelot and Otto Hesse
Doctoral studentsWilliam Edward Story
Emil Weyr

Carl Gottfried Neumann (also Karl; 7 May 1832 – 27 March 1925) was a German mathematician.

Biography

Neumann was born in

Leipzig
.

While in Königsberg, he studied physics with his father, and later as a working mathematician, dealt almost exclusively with problems arising from physics. Stimulated by Bernhard Riemann's work on electrodynamics, Neumann developed a theory founded on the finite propagation of electrodynamic actions, which interested Wilhelm Eduard Weber and Rudolf Clausius into striking up a correspondence with him. Weber described Neumann's professorship at Leipzig as for "higher mechanics, which essentially encompasses mathematical physics," and his lectures did so.[2] Maxwell makes reference to the electrodynamic theory developed by Weber and Neumann in the Introduction to A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field (1864).

Neumann worked on the Dirichlet principle, and can be considered one of the initiators of the theory of integral equations. The Neumann series, which is analogous to the geometric series

but for infinite matrices or for bounded operators, is named after him.

Together with Alfred Clebsch, Neumann founded the mathematical research journal Mathematische Annalen. He died in Leipzig.

The Neumann boundary condition for certain types of ordinary and partial differential equations is named after him (Cheng and Cheng, 2005).

See also

Works by Carl Neumann

Carl Gottfried Neumann, 1912
Hydrodynamische Untersuchungen, 1883

Notes

  1. ^ Carl Neumann at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. Intellectual Mastery of Nature: Theoretical Physics from Ohm to Einstein
    (1990) Vol. 1. p. 181.

References