Emmy Noether

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Amalie Emmy Noether
Image:Noether.jpg
Born23 March 1882(1882-03-23)
Erlangen, Germany
Died14 April 1935 (aged 53)
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Other namesEmmy Noether

Amalie Emmy Noether[1] (March 23 1882April 14 1935) was a German-born Jewish mathematician, said by Einstein in eulogy to be "[i]n the judgment of the most competent living mathematicians, [...] the most significant creative mathematical genius thus far produced since the higher education of women began."[2] Almost universally known as Emmy Noether, she had penetrating insights that she used to develop elegant abstractions.

Contents

[edit] Biography

She was born in Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany. Her father, Max Noether, was a distinguished mathematician and a professor at Erlangen. Fritz Noether was her younger brother, and the statistician Gottfried E. Noether was her nephew.[3]

Noether did not show any early precocity at mathematics — as a teenager she was more interested in music and dancing.

Although Erlangen did not allow women to enroll, Emmy was able to sit in various classes. When Erlangen finally permitted women to enroll in 1904, Emmy immediately enrolled as a mathematics student. She received her doctorate in 1907 under Paul Gordan, and she quickly built a reputation from her publications. She moved to Göttingen, Germany in 1915, but the University of Göttingen refused to let her teach. Her sympathetic colleague, David Hilbert, advertised her courses in the university's schedule under his own name. A controversy ensued, with her opponents asking what the country's soldiers would think when they returned home and were expected to learn at the feet of a woman. Allowing her on the faculty would also mean letting her have a vote in the academic senate. Said Prof. Hilbert, "I do not see that the sex of the candidate is an argument against her admission as a Privatdozent. After all, the university senate is not a bathhouse."[4] She was finally admitted to the faculty in the year 1919. Edmund Landau declined to describe her as the daughter of Max Noether; but rather stated, "Max Noether was the father of Emmy Noether. Emmy is the origin of coordinates in the Noether family."

Emmy fled Germany in 1933; she had been forbidden from teaching undergraduate classes by the Nazi racial laws. She joined the faculty at Bryn Mawr College in the United States. She died at Bryn Mawr on 14 April 1935 in mysterious circumstances. Her doctor told her that she needed an operation, and she scheduled it during a college break at Bryn Mawr, without telling anyone. She perished during or shortly after the surgery. Emmy never married, and she had no relatives in the USA. Emmy was buried in the Cloisters of Thomas Great Hall on the Bryn Mawr Campus.

Her younger brother, the German mathematician Fritz Noether, fled Germany during the Nazi rule into the Soviet Union in 1934 and he was shot there for anti-Soviet propaganda at Orel on Sept. 10th, 1941.

[edit] Mathematical work

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Emmy is her middle name and not a nickname.
    Her nephew Gottfried E. Noether writes: "Amalie Emmy Noether, known to mathematicians throughout the world as Emmy Noether, ...", Noether (1987), p. 165.
    Emmy Noether (1882-1935) - Lebensläufe (German).
  2. ^ Einstein(1935).
  3. ^ Noether (1987), p. 165 and, in the same volume, p. 290.
  4. ^ Reid, p.143

[edit] Important publications

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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