Thirukannapuram Vijayaraghavan | |
---|---|
Born | 30 November 1902 |
Died | 20 April 1955 52) | (aged
Occupation | mathematician |
Tirukkannapuram Vijayaraghavan (Tamil: திருக்கண்ணபுரம் விஜயராகவன்; 30 November 1902 – 20 April 1955) was an Indian mathematician from the Madras region. He worked with G. H. Hardy when he went to Oxford in mid-1920s on Pisot–Vijayaraghavan numbers. He was a fellow of Indian Academy of Sciences elected in the year 1934. His father was a pandit.
Vijayaraghavan was well versed in Sanskrit and Tamil. He was a close friend of André Weil. Weil hired him in 1930 despite his lack of diploma, and they served together in Aligarh Muslim University.[1] While Weil was away in Europe, Ross Masood planned to replace Weil's professorship with Vijayaraghavan, but Vijayaraghavan quit in protest and moved to the University of Dhaka.[2]
Vijayaraghavan proved a special case of Herschfeld's theorem on nested radicals:[3] For
converges if and only if
where denotes the limit superior.
References
- ↑ Weil, André; Weil, André (1992). The apprenticeship of a mathematician. Basel Boston Berlin: Birkhäuser. ISBN 978-3-7643-2650-0.
- ↑ M.S. Raghunathan, Artless innocents and ivory-tower sophisticates: Some personalities on the Indian mathematical scene.
- ↑ Ramanujan, S. Collected Papers of Srinivasa Ramanujan (Ed. G. H. Hardy, P. V. S. Aiyar, and B. M. Wilson). Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society (2000), p. 348.
External links