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         Ramanujan Srinivasa:     more books (55)
  1. Ramanujan's notebooks by K. G Ramanathan, 1987
  2. Resonance of Ramanujan's mathematics by R. P Agarwal, 1996
  3. Lectures by Godfrey H. Hardy on the mathematical work of Ramanujan: Fall term 1936 by G. H Hardy, 1937
  4. Development of elliptic functions according to Ramanujan (Technical report / Madurai Kamaraj University. Dept. of Mathematics) by K Venkatachaliengar, 1987
  5. Mr. S. Ramanujan's mathematical work in England;: A report ... to the University of Madras by G. H Hardy, 1916
  6. Notebooks by Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar, 1957
  7. A-Z of Barbados Heritage (Macmillan Caribbean a-Z Series) by Sean Carrington, Henry Fraser, et all 2004-05
  8. Advances in Number Theory between 1900 and 1949: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by P. Andrew Karam, 2000
  9. Alternative sciences: Creativity and authenticity in two Indian scientists (Man, state, and society series) by Ashis Nandy, 1980
  10. Self Directed Learning by Kaushik Shandilya, 2010-02-03
  11. The Indian Clerk: A Novel by David Leavitt, 2007-09-04
  12. Return from Exile: Alternative Sciences, Illegitimacy of Nationalism, The Savage Freud by Ashis Nandy, 1999-04-08
  13. Lectures by Godfrey H. Hardy by G. H Hardy, 1937

61. Webindia123-Indian Personalities-Scientists-SRINIVASA RAMANUJAN
indian personalities, Scientists, srinivasa ramanujan.
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SRINIVASA RAMANUJAN
Born : 1887
Died : 1920 Srinivasa Ramanujan was a great Mathematician, who became world famous at the age of twenty six. He was born at Erode in Tamil Nadu on 22 December 1887. Ramanujan could not complete his college education because of illness. He was so interested in mathematics that he learned on his own. He found out new formulas for solving mathematical problems and wrote articles about them. Professor Hardy a scientist in the Cambridge University saw one his article and impressed by his knowledge, took Ramanujan to England. Ramanujan was considered as the master of theory of numbers. The most outstanding of his contributions was his formula for p (n), the number of 'partitions' of 'n'. It was in 1914, while he was working in Trinity College he developed the 'Number Theory' and for his valuable contribution, was elected fellow of Trinity College on 18th October 1917. He returned to India in 1919 and began Research. He passed away on 26 April 1920. Government of India issued a commemorative stamp in his honour. Indian National Science academy and many other scientific institutions in India are giving various awards in memory of this brilliant mathematician. Advertisements
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62. Srinivasa Ramanujam
srinivasa ramanujan was born in a poor Tamil Brahmin family that resided in thetown of Kumbakonam. He attended school there and did averagely well.
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setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next S rinivasa Ramanujan was born in a poor Tamil Brahmin family that resided in the town of Kumbakonam. He attended school there and did averagely well. While in school he came across a book entitled A synopsis of elementary results in Pure and Applied Mathematics by George Carr. This book is just a compendium of results on integrals, infinite series and other mathematical entities found in analysis. Yet it left a lasting impression on Ramanujan; in fact it virtually determined his mathematical style. He would later write mathematics as a string of results without proof or with the barest outline of a proof. After school Ramanujan was hooked on mathematics. He spent all his time with his head over a slate working with problems in number theory that interested him and neglected everything else. The result was that he could never get through another examination. An early marriage as was usual at those times led to a frantic search for a job to earn an income. He became a clerk in the Madras Port Trust with the help of some well wishers. In the meantime Ramanujan kept showing his results to various people who he thought would be interested or would help him get a job that would give him a lot of time to do mathematics. He wrote to a couple of well known British mathematicians giving a list of some of the results he had obtained. They ignored him - thought he was a crank! Finally he wrote to one of the most distinguished English mathematicians of the time - a person who had done a lot of work on number theory - G H Hardy. Hardy arranged for Ramanujan to come to Trinity College, Cambridge where he and Ramanujan met almost daily discussing mathematics for about three years. Ramanujan died shortly after at the age of 33.

63. Escolar.com - Biografia De Ramanujan, Srinivasa Aayiangar
Translate this page ramanujan, srinivasa Aayiangar. (Erode, India, 1887-Chetput, id., 1920) Matemáticoindio. De formación autodidacta, descubrió y redefinió centenares de
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64. INDEX OF NAMES
ramanujan, srinivasa A. (India/England, 18871920) and almost integers, 915 anddivisor sequences, 910, 911 and experimental math, 899
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65. Ramanujan, Srinivasa Ayengar
ramanujan, srinivasa Ayengar. . People ramanujan Tamil Nadu ?Madras ?Kumbakonam?«?
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Ramanujan, Srinivasa Ayengar
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66. AllRefer.com - Srinivasa Ramanujan (Mathematics, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon srinivasa ramanujan, Mathematics, Biographies.
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67. MSN Encarta - Ramanujan, Srinivasa Aiyangar
ramanujan, srinivasa Aiyangar, Microsoft® Encarta® Enciclopedia Online 2005
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    Ramanujan, Srinivasa Aiyangar
    Articolo Ramanujan, Srinivasa Aiyangar (Erode, Tamil 1887 – Kumbakonam 1920), matematico indiano. Nel 1906 tent² di entrare all’Universit  di Madras, ma fu respinto all’esame di ammissione; si dedic² allora agli studi di matematica da autodidatta. L’unica sua fonte – un testo del 1856 – gli diede un quadro delle conoscenze piuttosto datato; fu per questo che molte delle scoperte a cui sarebbe giunto in seguito non lo resero celebre perch© gi  note: riscopr¬, ad esempio, alcuni risultati attribuiti a Carl Friedrich Gauss Nel 1912 inizi² una felice collaborazione con il matematico inglese Godfrey Hardy , a cui Ramanujan aveva scritto sottoponendogli i propri risultati; Hardy ne aveva compreso il genio e lo aveva invitato al Trinity College di Cambridge . Qui, nel 1916, Ramanujan consegu¬ il Bachelor of Science (il diploma che dal 1920 avrebbe preso il nome di Ph.D.) e nel 1918 giunse all’apice della sua fama con l’elezione a membro della Cambridge Philosophical Society e la candidatura a membro della Royal Society di Londra. Dopo cinque anni di permanenza in Inghilterra fece ritorno in India, molto provato dal clima ostile e dalla diversit  di cultura; mor¬ l’anno seguente.

68. About "Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar"
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Visit this site: http://home.att.net/~s-prasad/math.htm Author: S.Prasad Description: A short biography of Ramanujan, with links to related Web pages. Levels: Middle School (6-8) High School (9-12) Languages: English Math Topics: History and Biography
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69. Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar Biography / Biography Of Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyang
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Name: Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar Birth Date: December 22, 1887 Death Date: April 26, 1920 Place of Birth: Erode, India Nationality: Indian Gender: Male Occupations: mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar Main Biography The Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar (1887-1920) is best known for his work on hypergeometric series and continued fractions. Srinivasa Ramanujan, born into a poor Brahmin family at Erode on Dec. 22, 1887, attended school in nearby Kumbakonam. By the time he was 13, he could solve unaided every problem in Loney's Trigonometry , and at 14 he obtained the theorems for the sine and the cosine that had been anticipated by L. Euler. In 1903 he came upon George Shoobridge Carr's Synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure and Applied Mathematics . The book, its coverage reaching 1860, opened a whole new world to him, and he set out to establish the 6,165 theorems in it for himself. Having no contact with good books, he had to do original research for each solution. Trying to devise his own methods, he made some astounding discoveries, among them several new algebraic series.

70. Srinivasa Ramanujan - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Other Personalitieswww.chennaibest.comsrinivasa ramanujan. It may seem new ground. srinivasa ramanujan But as theypursue unsolved problems, Mathematicians the world over, have invariably found
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Srinivasa Ramanujan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Ramanujan Ramanujan Srinivasa Aiyangar Ramanujan Tamil December 22 April 26 ) was a groundbreaking Indian mathematician . A child prodigy , he was largely self-taught in mathematics. Ramanujan mainly worked in analytical number theory and is famous for many summation formulas involving constants such as prime numbers and the partition function . Often, his formulae were stated without proof and were only later proven to be true. His results inspired a large amount of later research and mathematical papers. In the Ramanujan Journal was launched to publish work "in areas of mathematics influenced by Ramanujan".
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    Childhood and early life
    Ramanujan was born in in Erode Tamil Nadu India . In at age 10, he entered the Town High School in Kumbakonam , where he appears to have first encountered formal mathematics. At 11 he had mastered the mathematical knowledge of the lodgers at his home, both students at the Government College, and was loaned books on advanced trigonometry, which he mastered by 13. His biographer reports that by 14 his genius was beginning to show. Not only did he achieve merit certificates and academic awards throughout his school years, he was assisting the school in the logistics of assigning its 1200 students (each with their own needs) to its 35-odd teachers, completing exams in half the allotted time, was already showing his familiarity with infinite series; his peers at the time later commented "We, including teachers, rarely understood him," and "stood in respectful awe" of him. However, Ramanujan could not concentrate on other subjects and failed his high school exams. At this time in his life, he was also quite poor and was often pushed to the point of starvation.

71. CD-ROM On Srinivasa Ramanujan
The srinivasa ramanujan Academy of Maths Talent released a CDROM on the lifeand work of srinivasa ramanujan, and the book, srinivasa ramanujan A
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Savithri Ramakrishnan is conducting free Sanskrit Classes at Ramana Kendra, Mylapore on Saturdays from 11.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. and Srimand Bhagavatham classes on Mondays from 11 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. For details contact Ph: 24953123, 24613257. News CD-ROM on Srinivasa Ramanujan The Srinivasa Ramanujan Academy of Maths Talent released a CD-ROM on the life and work of Srinivasa Ramanujan, and the book,'Srinivasa Ramanujan: A Mathematical Genius' on January 21 at the Triple Helix Auditorium, CLRI, Chennai. The first copy of the book and CD-ROM was received by Dr T Ramaswamy, director, CLRI, Chennai, from Dr M S Ananth, director, IIT Madras. Dr K Srinivasa Rao, the director of the Ramanujan Museum and Math Education Centre, and also a retired professor of The Institute Of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, took the audience through the contents of the CD-ROM. He felt that schools should include the study of the lives of great Indian men like Ramanujan in the syllabus.

72. Srinivasa Ramanujan -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
srinivasa Aiyangar ramanujan ( (The Dravidian language spoken since prehistorictimes by the Collected Papers of srinivasa ramanujan ISBN 0821820761
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Srinivasa Ramanujan
[Categories: Autodidacts, Tamil people, Combinatorists, Number theorists, Fellows of the Royal Society, 20th century mathematicians, Indian mathematicians, 1920 deaths, 1887 births]
Srinivasa Aiyangar Ramanujan (The Dravidian language spoken since prehistoric times by the Tamil people in southern India and Sri Lanka) Tamil (A member of the race of people living in North America when Europeans arrived) Indian (A person skilled in mathematics) mathematician . A (A prodigy whose talents are recognized at an early age) child prodigy , he was largely (Click link for more info and facts about self-taught) self-taught in mathematics.
Ramanujan mainly worked in analytical (Click link for more info and facts about number theory) number theory and is famous for many summation formulas involving (A number representing a quantity assumed to have a fixed value in a specified mathematical context) constants such as (An integer that has no integral factors but itself and 1) prime number s and the (Click link for more info and facts about partition function) partition function . Often, his formulae were stated without

73. Read This: The Universal Book Of Mathematics
ramanujan s name is rendered twice as ramanujan, srinivasa Aaiyangar. The firstthree words of the obituary by PV Seshu Aiyar and R. Ramachandra Rao are
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The Universal Book of Mathematics:
From Abracadabra to Zeno's Paradoxes
by David Darling
Reviewed by Warren Johnson
This is a curious book. The introduction says "If you want a comprehensive, academic dictionary of mathematics, look elsewhere. If you want rigor and proof, try the next shelf. Herein you will find only the unusual and the outrageous, the fanciful and the fantastic: a compendium of the mathematics they [those villains!] didn't teach you in school." The second sentence is spot on, and the author is to be commended for putting in the first sentence, but since the word "only" in the third sentence is not accurate, I fear that some people will still buy this book (for $40) thinking that it is a dictionary of mathematics. It is certainly a dictionary of something, with alphabetical entries from abacus to zonohedron. The subtitle, From Abracadabra to Zeno's Paradoxes , enhances the effect. Quite a few of the entries have no obvious connection with mathematics, for example those on Jorge Luis Borges, John Cage, Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni, John Dee and Lord Edward Plunkett Dunsany, all of whom get more space than Cauchy. I got tired of looking for these pretty quickly, but catch-22 is here too, and so is swastika, apparently because it is a 20-sided polygon. The author is clearly very fond of puzzles and recreational mathematics, especially recreational number theory; thus Frederick Schuh gets an entry, but Issai Schur does not. He also likes exotic plane curves, games (backgammon gets half a page, with no attempt to justify its inclusion in what is ostensibly a mathematics book), optical illusions and extremely large numbers. (Ron Graham, who could be the subject of a very good book, gets 1/3 the space of his eponymous number.) If you share these predilections, and if you are not too pedantic, then you would probably enjoy this book. I didn't care for it much myself.

74. Anecdotario Matemático
Translate this page srinivasa ramanujan (1887-1920), matemático hindú muy enigmático. De familiahumilde, a los siete años asistió a una escuela pública gracias a una beca.
http://www-etsi2.ugr.es/profesores/jmaroza/anecdotario/anecdotario-r.htm
Ramanujan pi (v.) . A los 12 años dominaba la trigonometría, y a los 15 le prestaron un libro con 6000 teoremas conocidos, sin demostraciones. Ésa fue su formación matemática básica. En 1903 y 1907 suspendió los exámenes universitarios porque solo se dedicaba a sus "diversiones" matemáticas. En 1912 fue animado a comunicar sus resultados a tres distinguidos matemáticos. Dos de ellos no le respondieron, pero sí lo hizo G.H. Hardy, de Cambridge, tenido por el más eminente matemático británico de la época. Hardy estuvo a punto de tirar la carta, pero la misma noche que la recibió se sentó con su amigo John E. Littlewood (v.) a descifrar la lista de 120 fórmulas y teoremas de Ramanujan. Horas más tarde creían estar ante la obra de un genio. Hardy tenía su propia escala de valores para el genio matemático: 100 para Ramanujan, 80 para David Hilbert, 30 para Littlewood y 25 para sí mismo. Algunas de las fórmulas de Ramanujan le desbordaron, pero escribió "...forzoso es que fueran verdaderas, porque de no serlo, nadie habría tenido la imaginación necesaria para inventarlas". Invitado por Hardy, Ramanujan partió para Inglaterra en 1914 y comenzaron a trabajar juntos. En 1917 Ramanujan fue admitido en la Royal Society de Londres y en el Trinity College, siendo el primer indio que lograba tal honor. De salud muy débil, moría tres años después.

75. Kamat's Potpourri: Indian Postal Stamps - Indian Math Genius Ramanujan
Indian Math Genius ramanujan. © KL Kamat/Kamat s Potpourri Indian Math Geniusramanujan Mathematician srinivasa ramanujan Detail from a Indian postal stamp
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76. Ramanujan
Translate this page B. Berndt, srinivasa ramanujan, The American Scholar 58 (1989). RA Rankin,srinivasa ramanujan (1887- 1920), International journal of mathematical
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Srinivasa Ramanujan
Erode (India), 22 de diciembre de 1887 Kumbakonam, 26 de abril de 1920
Trabajo
En Cambridge Su obra
    S. Ramanujan."
Synopsis of Pure Mathematics James R. Newmao "Junior Subrahmanyan Scholarship"
Trabajo
En 1911, se publica su primer trabajo en el Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society,
Cambridge Hardy cada entero positivo era uno de sus amigos personales
me hubiera llevado toda mi vida
  • Dictionary of Scientific Biography Biography in Encyclopaedia Britannica G. H. Hardy, Ramanujan (Cambridge, 1940). R. A. Rankin, Ramanujan's manuscripts and notebooks, Bull. London Math. Soc. R. A. Rankin, Ramanujan's manuscripts and notebooks II, Bull. London Math. Soc. R. Kanigel, The man who knew infinity : A life of the genius Ramanujan (New York, 1991). B. Berndt, Srinivasa Ramanujan, The American Scholar B. Berndt y S. Bhargava, Ramanujan - For lowbrows, Amer. Math. Monthly J. M. Borwein y P. B. Borwein, Ramanujan and pi, Scientific American S. R. Ranganathan, Ramanujan : the man and the mathematician (London, 1967). S. Ram

77. The Edgar Cayce Of Physics Decodes The Universe
srinivasa ramanujan was the strangest man in all of mathematics, probably inthe entire history of science. He has been compared to a bursting supernova,
http://ascension2000.com/Convergence/9911.html
The Edgar Cayce of Physics Decodes the Universe [NOTE: This book has been totally revised, rewritten and upgraded with new information. It is now called The Shift of the Ages and was posted 12/06/00. Click here to read it.] In Hyperspace, Dr. Kaku describes the life of an enterprising young mathematician from India known as Srinivasa Ramanujan, whose equations eventually produced a mathematical / dimensional function based on the number 8, which is exactly what we are searching for. Remember, now, that India is the country of origin for all the Vedic texts, which already provided us with the geometric forms that solved our octave "consciousness unit" puzzle. It might be of interest to state right away that "Ramanujan used to say that the goddess of Namakkal inspired him with the formulae in dreams." Dr. Kaku states the following about this exceptional man: "Srinivasa Ramanujan was the strangest man in all of mathematics, probably in the entire history of science. He has been compared to a bursting supernova, illuminating the darkest, most profound corners of mathematics, before being tragically struck down by tuberculosis at the age of 33, like Riemann before him. Working in total isolation from the main currents of his field, he was able to rederive 100 years’ worth of Western mathematics on his own.

78. Prasad's Srinivasa Ramanujan Web Page
srinivasa ramanujan Aiyangar (Dec. 22, 1887 April 26, 1920) srinivasa Aiyangarramanujan was a great mathematics genius born in Erode, a small-town in
http://home.att.net/~s-prasad/math.htm
S rinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar
(Dec. 22, 1887 - April 26, 1920)
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S rinivasa Aiyangar Ramanujan was a great mathematics genius born in Erode, a small-town in Tamil Nadu on December 22, 1887. All through his life, Ramanujan was fascinated with numbers. Stories abound of his ability to astound his teachers with mathematical feats such as multiplying large numbers in his head. He would sometimes stay up all night tackling difficult mathematical problems, refusing to sleep until he had solved them. However, his love of mathematics was so intense that his other subjects suffered. In fact, although he graduated from high school early, his progress at university was hindered by his weakness in English. This eventually led to the loss of a scholarship upon which he depended. Ramanujan came from a poor Brahmin family and he wanted to continue his pursuit of mathematics. He had already begun to make important discoveries, and they flowed out of him at a prolific rate. He ended up running away to Madras in order to look for opportunities to continue his studies. In Madras, through the intervention of some contacts he had made, he managed to get a job as a clerk at the Madras Port Trust. There he proceeded to fill notebooks with his ideas. These notebooks have since been published, and it is obvious that Ramanujan got over his weakness in English, as the notebooks show impeccable English as well as some unusual mathematics. Eventually, Ramanujan moved on to the University of Madras with a research studentship. It was here that he began a correspondence with G.H. Hardy at the University of Cambridge that would eventually lead to his leaving India for Cambridge.

79. Robert Kanigel Der Das Unendliche Kannte
Translate this page Das Leben des genialen Mathematikers srinivasa ramanujan 352816509X VerlagstextDer Bericht über das Leben ramanujans, des vielleicht größten mathematischen
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Robert Kanigel Der das Unendliche kannte
Der das Unendliche kannte
Kanigel Robert
Robert Kanigel
Das Leben des genialen Mathematikers Srinivasa Ramanujan
Verlagstext
Ramanujan, Srinivasa / Mathematiker (Einz.) / Wissenschaftler (Biographien/Erinnerungen); Ramanujan, Srinivasa /
[Mathematik / Naturwissenschaften / Technik / Medizin] [Mathematik] Allgemeines / Lexika / Geschichte / Berufe
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80. Imago Mundi - Srinivasa Ramanujan.
Translate this page ramanujan, srinivasa, mathématicien né en 1887 en Inde, mort en1920. On lui doitde nombreux travaux sur les intégrales elliptiques et sur la théorie des
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