Srinivasa Ramanujan who got the nickname of 'Indian magician' by discovering many mathematical formulas by genius inspiration Developed by a university research team. Ramanujan discovered nearly 4000 ...
Written and directed by Matthew Brown. Edward R. Pressman Films/Animus Films: 2016. The story of the Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887–1920) is improbable. Self-taught, he made many ...
Prof. G.H. Hardy of the Cambridge University went to Putney by a taxi to see his student who fell ill. While they were chatting, Hardy mentioned the number of the taxi he came in – 1729 – which seemed ...
The number 1729 is one of my favorites. To mathematicians it is known as the “taxicab of 2.” The story of how it got that name is one of the great legends in modern mathematics. It is told again in ...
One hundred years ago on Decem ber 22, a most extraordinary mathematician was born in the town of Erode, 160 miles from Madras in Southern India. Srinivasa Ramanujan Aiyangar was the son of a petty ...
His favourite photograph of himself is one in which he grins happily, holding an ancient scribbling slate in front of his chest. The slate is no ordinary one; it happens to be the one on which India's ...
Srinivasa Ramanujan was born on 22 December 1887. He died on 26 April 1920 at the age of 32 years. He had no formal training in mathematics yet made an exceptional contribution in the field of ...
The number 1729 is one of my favorites. To mathematicians it is known as the “taxicab of 2.” The story of how it got that name is one of the great legends in modern mathematics. It is told again in ...
Srinivasa Ramanujan: The Man Who Knew Infinity. Greatest Indian Mathematician. Age 0: Born to a poor family in Madras, India. Age 2: Encounters smallpox and recovers unlike thousands in same ...
Kumbakonam isn’t the little village it was when India’s most famous math genius Ramanujan walked its streets, lost in thoughts of complicated theorems. KUMBAKONAM: Kumbakonam isn’t the little village ...