~History of Carl F. Gauss~
Carl Friedrich Gauss(1777-1855)
was born on April 30, 1777, in Brunswick, Germany.
Gauss is considered to be one
of the last mathematicians to know everything in his subject.
Gauss's genius was revealed
at a very early age. He was able to do long calculations in his
head. He rediscovered the law
of quadratic reciprocity, related the arithmetic-geometric mean
to infinite series expansion,
and conjectured the prime number theorem. Before the age of
twenty, he showed that a regular
polygon of seventeen sides was constructible with ruler and
compass - an unsolved problem
since Greek times. At the age of twenty, he published the first
proof of the fundamental theorem
of algebra. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of
Helmstedt, under the supervision
of Pfaff, when he was twenty-two.
In 1801, Gauss published his
monumental book on number theory, Disquisitiones Arithmeticae. In his Disquisitiones,
Gauss
summarized previous work in
a systematic way and solved some of the most difficult outstanding questions.
He introduced the
notion of congruence of integers
modulo an integer and extensively studied Z and obtained
many of its important properties.
He is credited for coining
the term complex number and the notation i for
(-1).
He showed that Z[i] is a unique factorization
domain. In his honor, Z[i]
is called the ring of Gaussian integers. Disquisitiones laid the foundations
of algebraic number
theory. Leopold Kronecker said,
"It is really astonishing to think a single man of such young years was
able to bring to light
such a wealth of results, and
above all, to present such a profound and well-organized treatment of an
entirely new discipline."
Besides being a mathematician
he was also a physicist and an astronomer. In January 1801, a new planet
was briefly
observed, which the astronomers
were unable to locate later. Gauss calculated the position of the planet
by using a more
accurate orbit theory than
the usual circular approximation. Gauss used a theory based on the ellipse.
At the end of the year
the planet was discovered at
the precise location he predicted. The methods he developed are still in
use. They include the
theory of least squares.