DEPARTMENT OF Mathematics Activities/Events
SRINIVASA RAMANUJAN DEATH ANNIVERSARY: ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MATH GENIUS
Srinivasa Iyengar Ramanujan continues to be an inspiration for mathematicians across the world. The self-taught genius lived a short but very productive life and his work has inspired a lot of research over the years. His birth anniversary on December 22 is celebrated as National Mathematics Day to honor his achievements.
Ramanujan was born in Erode town in Tamil Nadu on December 22, 1887, and grew up in a small house at Kumbakonam that is now a museum in his honor. His father worked as a clerk and his mother was a homemaker. He showed advanced mathematical cognition as a child and at the age of 13, he had started working on his own sophisticated theorems. Reports say Ramanujan used to jot down his ideas in green ink. One of his notebooks, known as the ‘lost notebook’, was found in the Trinity College library and was later published as a book.
In January 1913, he sent the writer of Orders of Infinity, G H Hardy, some of his work. Hardy reviewed Ramanujan’s work and labeled them as “fraud" but a month later, he invited the young Indian to Cambridge University. After initially refusing to go, Ramanujan joined Cambridge and was soon hailed there as a hero of mathematics. The program conducted by Department of Mathematics chief gust is Sri N J K Narendra Kumar Vice-principal, Dr. D. Devanandam and staff members are attend the program.