Srinivas ramanuja

  1. Srinivasa Ramanujan: The Eminent Mathematician
  2. Srinivas Ramanujan: Biography, Age, Wife, contribution to mathematics, quotes, achievements, awards, movies, death
  3. Ramanujan's lost notebook
  4. SriniVasan Ramanuja – Mankato Clinic
  5. One of Srinivasa Ramanujan’s Neglected Manuscripts Has Helped Solve Long


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Srinivasa Ramanujan: The Eminent Mathematician

• ClearIAS • What we offer: • Free Resources • Premium Resources • Courses • All Courses • Prelims Programs • Mains Programs • Interview Programs • PCM • Prelims cum Mains: Target 2024 • Prelims cum Mains: Target 2025 • Prelims cum Mains: Target 2026 • Prelims cum Mains: Target 2027 • PTS • UPSC Prelims Test Series 2024 • UPSC PYQ GS • UPSC PYQ CSAT • Study Materials • ClearIAS Blog • FREE Study Materials • Guidance Articles • UPSC Books • UPSC PDFs • ClearIAS Courses • ClearIAS Mobile Apps • UPSC • UPSC • UPSC Syllabus • UPSC Exams • UPSC Results • UPSC FAQs • Toppers • Reviews • UPSC Toppers • What’s New? • Latest Updates • New Courses • Login Every year, Srinivasa Ramanujan’s birth anniversary on December 22 is commemorated as National Mathematics Day. Ramanujan made substantial contributions to the analytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series. Read here to know more about his life. National Mathematics Day is observed annually on December 22nd to mark the anniversary of the eminent mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan’s birth. Srinivasa Ramanujan was a self-taught mathematician and one of the most Ramanujan spent most of his brief but significant life working on theorems that seemed difficult to answer. His contributions to the fields of elliptic integrals, hypergeometric series, continuous fractions, Riemann series, and functional equations about the zeta function are well known. When Ramanujan was a year old his...

Srinivas Ramanujan: Biography, Age, Wife, contribution to mathematics, quotes, achievements, awards, movies, death

Srinivas Ramanujan Srinivasa Ramanujan was a great Indian mathematician. He is counted among the greatest mathematicians of modern times. He was the second Indian to become a member of the Royal Society and the first to become a member of Trinity College in Cambridge. He died at a very young age, but he left behind many great achievements. Based on his talent and passion, he made wonderful inventions in mathematics and simultaneously illuminated the name of India in the whole world. About Srinivas Ramanujan Ramanujan was born on December 22, 1887, in the village of Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu, to a Brahmin family. His father worked as a sari store clerk, while his mother was a homemaker who sang at a neighboring temple. Ramanujan's intellectual growth as a youngster differed from that of other children. Ramanujan did not learn to talk until he was three years old. As a result, his parents wondered if he was mentally ill. However, as soon as he was enrolled in the school, everyone was astounded by his brilliance. He topped the entire district in the primary exams at 10 and went to Town High School for additional education. He succeeded in all subjects, especially mathematics. After that, he enrolled in Town High School and spent six years there. In nature, he was peaceful, kind, and emotional. He would take a close look at everything and begin to consider it. Ramanujan was an insatiable questioner. His professors found his queries to be a little odd at times. For example, who wa...

Ramanujan's lost notebook

Collection of Srinivas Ramanujan's discoveries in mathematics Ramanujan's lost notebook is the manuscript in which the Indian mathematician GeorgeAndrewsand History [ ] After Ramanujan died on April 26, 1920, at the age of 32, his wife gave his notebooks to the ... Almost surely, this manuscript, or at least most of it, was written during the last year of Ramanujan's life, after his return to India from England. ... The manuscript contains no introduction or covering letter. In fact, there are hardly any words in the manuscript. There are a few marks evidently made by a cataloguer, and there are a few remarks in the handwriting of Some time between 1934 and 1947, Hardy probably passed the notebook on to Andrews' account of the discovery [ ] George Andrews, an American mathematician, wrote in 2012 an account of the discovery for the 125th celebration of Ramanujan's birth. Although unable to travel to Europe in 1970, Andrews became able to do so in 1976, when he was due to attend a European conference in et al. Noble agreed, adding that if he could attempt to find a lost paper by "A 139 page manuscript by S. Ramanujan on q-series", containing the work from Ramanujan's final year. Although not labelled as such, the identity of the papers was settled because Ramanujan's final letters to Hardy had referred to the discovery of what Ramanujan called mock theta functions, although without great detail, and the manuscript included what appeared to be his full notes on these. Conten...

SriniVasan Ramanuja – Mankato Clinic

“I can empathize with my patients because I had allergies growing up and a lot of my friends had asthma. My approach to caring for patients is developing a relationship, providing compassion and empathy, obtaining a thorough clinical history for diagnosis, as well as educating them so they have a greater understanding of their condition.” SriniVasan Ramanuja About Dr. Vasan Ramanuja Dr. Srinivasan Ramanuja joined the Mankato Clinic in 2007. Expertise & Clinical Interests He received his bachelor’s degree summa cum laude from Illinois Wesleyan University. During his medical training he also worked as an assistant professor of clinical medicine for Indiana University Medical Group. Education Medical Degree University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine, Chicago, IL Advanced Degree Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN Fellowship Allergy and Clinical Immunology, University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA Board Certification(s) Internal Medicine, Allergy and Immunology Interpreter services available. Meet Dr. Vasan Ramanuja Request an Appointment Additional Details Genuinely he was one of the best care providers I've ever had. He really listed my options for treatment in a way that I could understand and gave me paperwork that listed recommended treatment, explained my condition, and even gave me samples of allergy medicine and a coupon for the medicine! Patient Rating

One of Srinivasa Ramanujan’s Neglected Manuscripts Has Helped Solve Long

• A self-educated prodigy, Srinivasa Ramanujan filled notebooks with often mysterious theorems about numbers, many of which turned out to be correct and eventually launched entire new fields of math. • Now Emory University mathematician Ken Ono and his colleagues have made surprising discoveries using previously unrecognized insights in some of Ramanujan's unpublished papers. • As well as helping solve some big mysteries about mathematical machines called functions, these discoveries could advance more secure ways to encrypt computer data and new approaches to studying black holes. On a Saturday morning in 1984, when Ken Ono was in high school, he opened his family's mailbox in Baltimore and found an envelope as thin as rice paper covered in brilliantly colored stamps. It was addressed to his father, a reserved Japanese mathematician. When Ono handed over the mail, the elder Ono looked up from the yellow legal pad on which he was always scribbling equations and set down his ballpoint pen. Gently, he pried open the seal and unfolded the letter inside. “Dear Sir,” it began. “I understand … that you have contributed for the sculpture in memory of my late husband…. I am happy over this event.” It was signed “S. Janaki Ammal,” whom the red-inked letterhead identified as the widow of the “(Late) Srinivasa Ramanujan (Mathematical Genius).” That was the first time the younger Ono had heard of the legendary Ramanujan. A self-taught mathematical prodigy from India, he made cryptic c...