![[CF Gauss]](bioggauss.jpg)
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855)
Carl Friedrich Gauss has born in Braunschweig, Germany. His parents
were poor. His father Gerhard, a labourer, canal tender and
bricklayer, encouraged him only to what he saw as useful,
labouring tasks.
His mother, Dorothea, who herself had a talented younger
brother Friedrich, recognised his talents and encouraged him to pusrue
them. In return Gauss looked after her, especially in her later
years after she had become blind and until her death in 1839.
Gauss' talents came to the notice of a school master hen he quickly
solved the task of adding the numbers from 1 to 100 and later he
received the sponsorship of the Duke of Braunschweig to study at
College, where he maintained an interest in Philology
as well as Mathematics.
He later studied at the University of Göttingen, where he now
focussed on Mathematics.
As a student he made major discoveries, including the Method
of Least Squares and the discovery of how to construct the regular
17-gon. The latter result was highly
significant. Since the time of Euclid
mathematicians had known only how to construct
with compass and straight-edge regular
n-gons in which n was a multiple
of 3, 5 powers of 2 or combinations thereof. Gauss'
discovery added to these numbers prime numbers of the form
2^(2^n)+1. For n=0 and 1 this included 3 and 5 but for
n=2, 3 and 4 this added 17, 257 and 65,537 to the list.
In later life, after having a profound influence on mathematics,
Gauss still regarded this as one of his greatest achievements and
asked that a regular 17-gon be
placed on his tombstone (unsuccessfully,
as it happened).
Gauss went on to be awarded a Doctorate in Philosophy at
the University of Helmstedt in
1799, with a thesis which proved that every rational
integer function of one variable
can be resolved into real factors of the
first or second degree. This was a major unsolved problem,
commonly known as the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra,
and had been believed to be true by Euler.
Gauss in 1801 published a major work in
Number Theory, "Disquisitiones arithmeticae" which recast
much of 18th century Number Theory, but many of his own discoveries,
including the Law of Quadratic
Reciprocity, for which he found independent proofs.
For some years Gauss lived in Braunschweig
and had six children from two marriages.
He is believed to have many descendants in Germany and the
United States. He was supported by the Duke of Braunschweig
until his death and in 1807 received a flattering offer from
St Petersbourg, which had never satisfactorily replaced Euler.
The Baron Alexander von Humboldt,
an amateur patron of the sciences managed
to get him appointed as Professor
of Mathematics at Göttingen, and Director of the Göttingen
Observatory, posts which he held to his death.
It is impossible in a short resume to refer to all of
his discoveries, not only to mathematics,
but also physics, statistics
(he introduced the normal distribution), astronomy and geodesy.
As an analyst, he was the first to
develop adequate standards of proof of
results involving infinitely many numbers. He anticipated the
development of non-Euclidean geometries.
For a great mathematician, Gauss published very little, sometimes
having his results independently discovered by others. He
kept a methodical diary which
recorded his results, but applied to himself the
strictest standards about the way
in which his work would be published.
Gauss asserted that "Mathematics is the Queen of Sciences, and
the Theory of Numbers is the Queen of Mathematics".
Written by Peter Taylor, June 1998.
![[Gauss T Shirt]](tsgaus.jpg)
This T Shirt, which celebrates Gauss' discovery of the 17-gon
construction, is available from the
AMT Publishing.
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