Some people say that the end of science is theology. Einstein and Newton finally believed in God, and this Srinivasa? Lamanukin never received any higher education, but because he dreamed of 3900 formulas, he became the top mathematician in the world. He said this was said by the goddess Namaka.
Srinivasa? Lamanukin was born in Geraud, Tamil Nadu, southeast India. 1887. Although his family conditions are limited, Lamanukin is a Brahmin surname and can receive low-level education for free. At the age of ten, he entered a middle school in Gombogonan, where he first came into contact with mathematics.
/kloc-When he was 0/2 years old, he once asked his classmates: What is the highest truth of mathematics? What did the students say to him? Pythagoras Theorem (Pythagorean Theorem)? This made Ramanujin interested in mathematics and he began to delve into mathematics. /kloc-When he was 0/5 years old, he borrowed an Outline of Pure Mathematics and Applied Mathematics.
Ramanukin studied every equation and every research topic. Because there is no master of mathematics in India, and he doesn't get good grades in mathematics, and Ramanukin doesn't have a tutor to teach him, so he has been studying mathematics. Although he was admitted to Gombo Gonan College, he was expelled because of serious eccentricity.
1905, 18-year-old Lamanukin returned to his hometown. According to local custom, his parents married him a 9-year-old girl. After marriage, Lamanukin had to find a job to support his family. He set up a local school to teach people basic mathematics.
At the same time, Lamanukin continued to borrow some notes related to mathematics from the library. His talent for mathematics is well-known in the local area. Rao, a local official, appreciates him very much. He is willing to give Lamanukin some money every month so that he can study math without going to work every day.
Ramanukin studies mathematics every day. When he sleeps at night, he sometimes dreams of the goddess Namaka. Besides the goddess, he can also see some vague formulas. When he woke up, Lamanukin wrote down these formulas. In just a few years, Lamanukin has written 3,900 formulas.
But he doesn't know what these formulas are. He sent them to some Indian mathematicians, and even they couldn't understand them. They didn't give Lamanukin any reply. 19 13, Lamanukin wrote to Hardy, a professor at Cambridge University, hoping that he could give some answers.
The letter began: I am an employee of the Madras Port Trust Company. I didn't finish college as usual, but opened my own way. If you think these things are valuable, please publish them. Ramanujin also sent this letter with anxiety.
After receiving the letter, Hardy began to feel a little funny, but he still read several formulas. Unexpectedly, the more he read, the more strange he felt. He can't even understand some formulas. Hardy consulted a mathematician friend of the Royal Society. After some research, they think this Ramanujin is a mathematical genius.
Although some formulas have not been proved, some formulas are very difficult to understand and have surpassed the research results in the past 70 years. Lamanukin was invited to Britain to become a foreign member of the Royal Society and an academician of Trinity College, Cambridge University (the first person in India).
It's a pity that Lamanukin died young. He died in 1920, leaving only a mysterious formula, which was repeatedly turned out by later mathematicians to prove. 1973, Belgian mathematician Deligne won the Fields Prize for proving Ramanukin's formula.
But up to now, these 3900 formulas have not been completed and proved, but each formula is of great significance, so I'm afraid no one knows if there is a god.