August Ferdinand Möbius Explained

August Möbius
Birth Name:August Ferdinand Möbius
Birth Date:1790 11, df=y
Birth Place:Schulpforta, Electorate of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
Death Place:Leipzig, Kingdom of Saxony, German Confederation
Fields:Mathematician
Workplaces:University of Leipzig
Doctoral Advisor:Johann Pfaff
Doctoral Students:Otto Wilhelm Fiedler
Notable Students:Hermann Hankel

August Ferdinand Möbius (; pronounced as /de/; 17 November 1790  - 26 September 1868) was a German mathematician and theoretical astronomer.

Early life and education

Möbius was born in Schulpforta, Electorate of Saxony, and was descended on his mother's side from religious reformer Martin Luther.[1] He was home-schooled until he was 13, when he attended the college in Schulpforta in 1803, and studied there, graduating in 1809. He then enrolled at the University of Leipzig, where he studied astronomy under the mathematician and astronomer Karl Mollweide.[2] In 1813, he began to study astronomy under mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss at the University of Göttingen, while Gauss was the director of the Göttingen Observatory. From there, he went to study with Carl Gauss's instructor, Johann Pfaff, at the University of Halle, where he completed his doctoral thesis The occultation of fixed stars in 1815.[2] In 1816, he was appointed as Extraordinary Professor to the "chair of astronomy and higher mechanics" at the University of Leipzig.[2] Möbius died in Leipzig in 1868 at the age of 77. His son Theodor was a noted philologist.

Contributions

He is best known for his discovery of the Möbius strip, a non-orientable two-dimensional surface with only one side when embedded in three-dimensional Euclidean space. It was independently discovered by Johann Benedict Listing a few months earlier.[2] The Möbius configuration, formed by two mutually inscribed tetrahedra, is also named after him. Möbius was the first to introduce homogeneous coordinates into projective geometry. He is recognized for the introduction of the Barycentric coordinate system.[3] Before 1853 and Schläfli's discovery of the 4-polytopes, Möbius (with Cayley and Grassmann) was one of only three other people who had also conceived of the possibility of geometry in more than three dimensions.[4]

Many mathematical concepts are named after him, including the Möbius plane, the Möbius transformations, important in projective geometry, and the Möbius transform of number theory. His interest in number theory led to the important Möbius function μ(n) and the Möbius inversion formula. In Euclidean geometry, he systematically developed the use of signed angles and line segments as a way of simplifying and unifying results.[5]

Collected works

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: George Szpiro

    . George Szpiro . George Szpiro . Poincaré's Prize: The Hundred-Year Quest to Solve One of Math's Greatest Puzzles . 2007 . . 66 . 978-0-525-95024-0 .

  2. Book: August Ferdinand Möbius . University of St Andrews, Scotland . https://web.archive.org/web/20160330205503/http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Mobius.html . 30 March 2016.
  3. Hille, Einar. "Analytic Function Theory, Volume I", Second edition, fifth printing. Chelsea Publishing Company, New York, 1982,, page 33, footnote 1
  4. Book: Coxeter, H.S.M. . Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter . 1973 . 1948 . Regular Polytopes . Dover . New York . 3rd . Regular Polytopes (book) . 141.
  5. [Howard Eves]