Leonhard Euler (/ˈɔɪlər/ OY-lər;German: [ˈleːɔnhaʁt ˈʔɔʏlɐ] , Swiss Standard German: [ˈleɔnhard ˈɔʏlər]; 15 April 1707 – 18 September 1783) was a Swiss polymath who was active as a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, logician, geographer, and engineer. He founded the studies of graph theory and topology and made influential discoveries in many other branches of mathematics, such as analytic number theory, complex analysis, and infinitesimal calculus. He also introduced much of modern mathematical terminology and notation, including the notion of a mathematical function. He is known for his work in mechanics, fluid dynamics, optics, astronomy, and music theory. Euler has been called a "universal genius" who "was fully equipped with almost unlimited powers of imagination, intellectual gifts and extraordinary memory". He spent most of his adult life in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and in Berlin, then the capital of Prussia.
Leonhard Euler | |
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Portrait by Jakob Emanuel Handmann, 1753 | |
Born | Basel, Swiss Confederacy | 15 April 1707
Died | 18 September 1783 (aged 76)[OS: 7 September 1783] Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire |
Education | University of Basel (MPhil) |
Known for |
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Spouses | Katharina Gsell (m. 1734; died 1773)Salome Abigail Gsell (m. 1776) |
Children | 13, including Johann |
Awards | FRS (1747) |
Scientific career | |
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Thesis | Dissertatio physica de sono (Physical dissertation on sound) (1726) |
Doctoral advisor | Johann Bernoulli |
Doctoral students | Johann Hennert |
Other notable students |
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Signature | |
Euler is credited for popularizing the Greek letter (lowercase pi) to denote the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, as well as first using the notation for the value of a function, the letter to express the imaginary unit , the Greek letter (capital sigma) to express summations, the Greek letter (capital delta) for finite differences, and lowercase letters to represent the sides of a triangle while representing the angles as capital letters. He gave the current definition of the constant , the base of the natural logarithm, now known as Euler's number. Euler made contributions to applied mathematics and engineering, such as his study of ships which helped navigation, his three volumes on optics contributed to the design of microscopes and telescopes, and he studied the bending of beams and the critical load of columns.
Euler is credited with being the first to develop graph theory (partly as a solution for the problem of the Seven Bridges of Königsberg, which is also considered the first practical application of topology). He also became famous for, among many other accomplishments, solving several unsolved problems in number theory and analysis, including the famous Basel problem. Euler has also been credited for discovering that the sum of the numbers of vertices and faces minus the number of edges of a polyhedron equals 2, a number now commonly known as the Euler characteristic. In physics, Euler reformulated Isaac Newton's laws of motion into new laws in his two-volume work Mechanica to better explain the motion of rigid bodies. He contributed to the study of elastic deformations of solid objects. Euler formulated the partial differential equations for the motion of inviscid fluid, and laid the mathematical foundations of potential theory.
Euler is regarded as arguably the most prolific contributor in the history of mathematics and science, and the greatest mathematician of the 18th century. His 866 publications and his correspondence are being collected in the Opera Omnia Leonhard Euler which, when completed, will consist of 81 quartos. Several great mathematicians who worked after Euler's death have recognised his importance in the field: Pierre-Simon Laplace said, "Read Euler, read Euler, he is the master of us all";Carl Friedrich Gauss wrote: "The study of Euler's works will remain the best school for the different fields of mathematics, and nothing else can replace it."
Early life
Leonhard Euler was born in Basel on 15 April 1707 to Paul III Euler, a pastor of the Reformed Church, and Marguerite (née Brucker), whose ancestors include a number of well-known scholars in the classics. He was the oldest of four children, with two younger sisters, Anna Maria and Maria Magdalena, and a younger brother, Johann Heinrich. Soon after Leonhard's birth, the Eulers moved from Basel to Riehen, Switzerland, where his father became pastor in the local church and Leonhard spent most of his childhood.
From a young age, Euler received schooling in mathematics from his father, who had taken courses from Jacob Bernoulli some years earlier at the University of Basel. Around the age of eight, Euler was sent to live at his maternal grandmother's house and enrolled in the Latin school in Basel. In addition, he received private tutoring from Johannes Burckhardt, a young theologian with a keen interest in mathematics.
In 1720, at age 13, Euler enrolled at the University of Basel. Attending university at such a young age was not unusual at the time. The course on elementary mathematics was given by Johann Bernoulli, the younger brother of the deceased Jacob Bernoulli, who had taught Euler's father. Johann Bernoulli and Euler soon got to know each other better. Euler described Bernoulli in his autobiography:
- "the famous professor Johann Bernoulli [...] made it a special pleasure for himself to help me along in the mathematical sciences. Private lessons, however, he refused because of his busy schedule. However, he gave me a far more salutary advice, which consisted in myself getting a hold of some of the more difficult mathematical books and working through them with great diligence, and should I encounter some objections or difficulties, he offered me free access to him every Saturday afternoon, and he was gracious enough to comment on the collected difficulties, which was done with such a desired advantage that, when he resolved one of my objections, ten others at once disappeared, which certainly is the best method of making happy progress in the mathematical sciences."
During this time, Euler, backed by Bernoulli, obtained his father's consent to become a mathematician instead of a pastor.
In 1723, Euler received a Master of Philosophy with a dissertation that compared the philosophies of René Descartes and Isaac Newton. Afterwards, he enrolled in the theological faculty of the University of Basel.
In 1726, Euler completed a dissertation on the propagation of sound titled De Sono, with which he unsuccessfully attempted to obtain a position at the University of Basel. In 1727, he entered the Paris Academy prize competition (offered annually and later biennially by the academy beginning in 1720) for the first time. The problem posed that year was to find the best way to place the masts on a ship. Pierre Bouguer, who became known as "the father of naval architecture", won and Euler took second place. Over the years, Euler entered this competition 15 times, winning 12 of them.
Career
Saint Petersburg
Johann Bernoulli's two sons, Daniel and Nicolaus, entered into service at the Imperial Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg in 1725, leaving Euler with the assurance they would recommend him to a post when one was available. On 31 July 1726, Nicolaus died of appendicitis after spending less than a year in Russia. When Daniel assumed his brother's position in the mathematics/physics division, he recommended that the post in physiology that he had vacated be filled by his friend Euler. In November 1726, Euler eagerly accepted the offer, but delayed making the trip to Saint Petersburg while he unsuccessfully applied for a physics professorship at the University of Basel.
Euler arrived in Saint Petersburg in May 1727. He was promoted from his junior post in the medical department of the academy to a position in the mathematics department. He lodged with Daniel Bernoulli with whom he worked in close collaboration. Euler mastered Russian, settled into life in Saint Petersburg and took on an additional job as a medic in the Russian Navy.
The academy at Saint Petersburg, established by Peter the Great, was intended to improve education in Russia and to close the scientific gap with Western Europe. As a result, it was made especially attractive to foreign scholars like Euler. The academy's benefactress, Catherine I, who had continued the progressive policies of her late husband, died before Euler's arrival to Saint Petersburg. The Russian conservative nobility then gained power upon the ascension of the twelve-year-old Peter II. The nobility, suspicious of the academy's foreign scientists, cut funding for Euler and his colleagues and prevented the entrance of foreign and non-aristocratic students into the Gymnasium and universities.
Conditions improved slightly after the death of Peter II in 1730 and the German-influenced Anna of Russia assumed power. Euler swiftly rose through the ranks in the academy and was made a professor of physics in 1731. He also left the Russian Navy, refusing a promotion to lieutenant. Two years later, Daniel Bernoulli, fed up with the censorship and hostility he faced at Saint Petersburg, left for Basel. Euler succeeded him as the head of the mathematics department. In January 1734, he married Katharina Gsell (1707–1773), a daughter of Georg Gsell.Frederick II had made an attempt to recruit the services of Euler for his newly established Berlin Academy in 1740, but Euler initially preferred to stay in St Petersburg. But after Empress Anna died and Frederick II agreed to pay 1600 ecus (the same as Euler earned in Russia) he agreed to move to Berlin. In 1741, he requested permission to leave to Berlin, arguing he was in need of a milder climate for his eyesight. The Russian academy gave its consent and would pay him 200 rubles per year as one of its active members.
Berlin
Concerned about the continuing turmoil in Russia, Euler left St. Petersburg in June 1741 to take up a post at the Berlin Academy, which he had been offered by Frederick the Great of Prussia. He lived for 25 years in Berlin, where he wrote several hundred articles. In 1748 his text on functions called the Introductio in analysin infinitorum was published and in 1755 a text on differential calculus called the Institutiones calculi differentialis was published. In 1755, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and of the French Academy of Sciences. Notable students of Euler in Berlin included Stepan Rumovsky, later considered as the first Russian astronomer. In 1748 he declined an offer from the University of Basel to succeed the recently deceased Johann Bernoulli. In 1753 he bought a house in Charlottenburg, in which he lived with his family and widowed mother.
Euler became the tutor for Friederike Charlotte of Brandenburg-Schwedt, the Princess of Anhalt-Dessau and Frederick's niece. He wrote over 200 letters to her in the early 1760s, which were later compiled into a volume entitled Letters of Euler on different Subjects in Natural Philosophy Addressed to a German Princess.[47] This work contained Euler's exposition on various subjects pertaining to physics and mathematics and offered valuable insights into Euler's personality and religious beliefs. It was translated into multiple languages, published across Europe and in the United States, and became more widely read than any of his mathematical works. The popularity of the Letters testifies to Euler's ability to communicate scientific matters effectively to a lay audience, a rare ability for a dedicated research scientist.
Despite Euler's immense contribution to the academy's prestige and having been put forward as a candidate for its presidency by Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Frederick II named himself as its president. The Prussian king had a large circle of intellectuals in his court, and he found the mathematician unsophisticated and ill-informed on matters beyond numbers and figures. Euler was a simple, devoutly religious man who never questioned the existing social order or conventional beliefs. He was, in many ways, the polar opposite of Voltaire, who enjoyed a high place of prestige at Frederick's court. Euler was not a skilled debater and often made it a point to argue subjects that he knew little about, making him the frequent target of Voltaire's wit. Frederick also expressed disappointment with Euler's practical engineering abilities, stating:
I wanted to have a water jet in my garden: Euler calculated the force of the wheels necessary to raise the water to a reservoir, from where it should fall back through channels, finally spurting out in Sanssouci. My mill was carried out geometrically and could not raise a mouthful of water closer than fifty paces to the reservoir. Vanity of vanities! Vanity of geometry!
However, the disappointment was almost surely unwarranted from a technical perspective. Euler's calculations look likely to be correct, even if Euler's interactions with Frederick and those constructing his fountain may have been dysfunctional.
Throughout his stay in Berlin, Euler maintained a strong connection to the academy in St. Petersburg and also published 109 papers in Russia. He also assisted students from the St. Petersburg academy and at times accommodated Russian students in his house in Berlin. In 1760, with the Seven Years' War raging, Euler's farm in Charlottenburg was sacked by advancing Russian troops. Upon learning of this event, General Ivan Petrovich Saltykov paid compensation for the damage caused to Euler's estate, with Empress Elizabeth of Russia later adding a further payment of 4000 rubles—an exorbitant amount at the time. Euler decided to leave Berlin in 1766 and return to Russia.
During his Berlin years (1741–1766), Euler was at the peak of his productivity. He wrote 380 works, 275 of which were published. This included 125 memoirs in the Berlin Academy and over 100 memoirs sent to the St. Petersburg Academy, which had retained him as a member and paid him an annual stipend. Euler's Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum was published in two parts in 1748. In addition to his own research, Euler supervised the library, the observatory, the botanical garden, and the publication of calendars and maps from which the academy derived income. He was even involved in the design of the water fountains at Sanssouci, the King's summer palace.
Return to Russia
The political situation in Russia stabilized after Catherine the Great's accession to the throne, so in 1766 Euler accepted an invitation to return to the St. Petersburg Academy. His conditions were quite exorbitant—a 3000 ruble annual salary, a pension for his wife, and the promise of high-ranking appointments for his sons. At the university he was assisted by his student Anders Johan Lexell. While living in St. Petersburg, a fire in 1771 destroyed his home.
Personal life
On 7 January 1734, Euler married Katharina Gsell, daughter of Georg Gsell, a painter at the Academy Gymnasium in Saint Petersburg. The couple bought a house by the Neva River.
Of their 13 children, five survived childhood, three sons and two daughters. Their first son was Johann Albrecht Euler, whose godfather was Christian Goldbach.
Three years after his wife's death in 1773, Euler married her half-sister, Salome Abigail Gsell. This marriage lasted until his death in 1783.
His brother Johann Heinrich settled in St. Petersburg in 1735 and was employed as a painter at the academy.
Early in his life, Euler memorized Virgil's Aeneid, and by old age, he could recite the poem and give the first and last sentence on each page of the edition from which he had learnt it. Euler knew the first hundred prime numbers and could give each of their powers up to the sixth degree.
Euler was known as a generous and kind person, not neurotic as seen in some geniuses, keeping his good-natured disposition even after becoming entirely blind.
Eyesight deterioration
Euler's eyesight worsened throughout his mathematical career. In 1738, three years after nearly dying of fever, he became almost blind in his right eye. Euler blamed the cartography he performed for the St. Petersburg Academy for his condition, but the cause of his blindness remains the subject of speculation. Euler's vision in that eye worsened throughout his stay in Germany, to the extent that Frederick called him "Cyclops". Euler said of his loss of vision, "Now I will have fewer distractions." In 1766 a cataract in his left eye was discovered. Though couching of the cataract temporarily improved his vision, complications rendered him almost totally blind in the left eye as well. His condition appeared to have little effect on his productivity. With the aid of his scribes, Euler's productivity in many areas of study increased; in 1775, he produced, on average, one mathematical paper per week.
Death
In St. Petersburg on 18 September 1783, after a lunch with his family, Euler was discussing the newly discovered planet Uranus and its orbit with Anders Johan Lexell when he collapsed and died of a brain hemorrhage.
wrote a short obituary for the Russian Academy of Sciences and Russian mathematician Nicolas Fuss, one of Euler's disciples, wrote a more detailed eulogy, which he delivered at a memorial meeting. In his eulogy for the French Academy, French mathematician and philosopher Marquis de Condorcet wrote:il cessa de calculer et de vivre— ... he ceased to calculate and to live.
Euler was buried next to Katharina at the Smolensk Lutheran Cemetery on Vasilievsky Island. In 1837, the Russian Academy of Sciences installed a new monument, replacing his overgrown grave plaque. To commemorate the 250th anniversary of Euler's birth in 1957, his tomb was moved to the Lazarevskoe Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery.
Contributions to mathematics and physics
Euler worked in almost all areas of mathematics, including geometry, infinitesimal calculus, trigonometry, algebra, and number theory, as well as continuum physics, lunar theory, and other areas of physics. He is a seminal figure in the history of mathematics; if printed, his works, many of which are of fundamental interest, would occupy between 60 and 80 quarto volumes. Euler's name is associated with a large number of topics. Euler's work averages 800 pages a year from 1725 to 1783. He also wrote over 4500 letters and hundreds of manuscripts. It has been estimated that Leonhard Euler was the author of a quarter of the combined output in mathematics, physics, mechanics, astronomy, and navigation in the 18th century, while other researchers credit Euler for a third of the output in mathematics in that century.
Mathematical notation
Euler introduced and popularized several notational conventions through his numerous and widely circulated textbooks. Most notably, he introduced the concept of a function and was the first to write f(x) to denote the function f applied to the argument x. He also introduced the modern notation for the trigonometric functions, the letter e for the base of the natural logarithm (now also known as Euler's number), the Greek letter Σ for summations and the letter i to denote the imaginary unit. The use of the Greek letter π to denote the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter was also popularized by Euler, although it originated with Welsh mathematician William Jones.
Analysis
The development of infinitesimal calculus was at the forefront of 18th-century mathematical research, and the Bernoullis—family friends of Euler—were responsible for much of the early progress in the field. Thanks to their influence, studying calculus became the major focus of Euler's work. While some of Euler's proofs are not acceptable by modern standards of mathematical rigour (in particular his reliance on the principle of the generality of algebra), his ideas led to many great advances. Euler is well known in analysis for his frequent use and development of power series, the expression of functions as sums of infinitely many terms, such as
Euler's use of power series enabled him to solve the Basel problem, finding the sum of the reciprocals of squares of every natural number, in 1735 (he provided a more elaborate argument in 1741). The Basel problem was originally posed by Pietro Mengoli in 1644, and by the 1730s was a famous open problem, popularized by Jacob Bernoulli and unsuccessfully attacked by many of the leading mathematicians of the time. Euler found that:
Euler introduced the constant now known as Euler's constant or the Euler–Mascheroni constant, and studied its relationship with the harmonic series, the gamma function, and values of the Riemann zeta function.
Euler introduced the use of the exponential function and logarithms in analytic proofs. He discovered ways to express various logarithmic functions using power series, and he successfully defined logarithms for negative and complex numbers, thus greatly expanding the scope of mathematical applications of logarithms. He also defined the exponential function for complex numbers and discovered its relation to the trigonometric functions. For any real number φ (taken to be radians), Euler's formula states that the complex exponential function satisfies
which was called "the most remarkable formula in mathematics" by Richard Feynman.
A special case of the above formula is known as Euler's identity,
Euler elaborated the theory of higher transcendental functions by introducing the gamma function and introduced a new method for solving quartic equations. He found a way to calculate integrals with complex limits, foreshadowing the development of modern complex analysis. He invented the calculus of variations and formulated the Euler–Lagrange equation for reducing optimization problems in this area to the solution of differential equations.
Euler pioneered the use of analytic methods to solve number theory problems. In doing so, he united two disparate branches of mathematics and introduced a new field of study, analytic number theory. In breaking ground for this new field, Euler created the theory of hypergeometric series, q-series, hyperbolic trigonometric functions, and the analytic theory of continued fractions. For example, he proved the infinitude of primes using the divergence of the harmonic series, and he used analytic methods to gain some understanding of the way prime numbers are distributed. Euler's work in this area led to the development of the prime number theorem.
Number theory
Euler's interest in number theory can be traced to the influence of Christian Goldbach, his friend in the St. Petersburg Academy. Much of Euler's early work on number theory was based on the work of Pierre de Fermat. Euler developed some of Fermat's ideas and disproved some of his conjectures, such as his conjecture that all numbers of the form (Fermat numbers) are prime.
Euler linked the nature of prime distribution with ideas in analysis. He proved that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes diverges. In doing so, he discovered the connection between the Riemann zeta function and prime numbers; this is known as the Euler product formula for the Riemann zeta function.
Euler invented the totient function φ(n), the number of positive integers less than or equal to the integer n that are coprime to n. Using properties of this function, he generalized Fermat's little theorem to what is now known as Euler's theorem. He contributed significantly to the theory of perfect numbers, which had fascinated mathematicians since Euclid. He proved that the relationship shown between even perfect numbers and Mersenne primes (which he had earlier proved) was one-to-one, a result otherwise known as the Euclid–Euler theorem. Euler also conjectured the law of quadratic reciprocity. The concept is regarded as a fundamental theorem within number theory, and his ideas paved the way for the work of Carl Friedrich Gauss, particularly Disquisitiones Arithmeticae. By 1772 Euler had proved that 231 − 1 = 2,147,483,647 is a Mersenne prime. It may have remained the largest known prime until 1867.
Euler also contributed major developments to the theory of partitions of an integer.
Graph theory
In 1735, Euler presented a solution to the problem known as the Seven Bridges of Königsberg. The city of Königsberg, Prussia was set on the Pregel River, and included two large islands that were connected to each other and the mainland by seven bridges. The problem is to decide whether it is possible to follow a path that crosses each bridge exactly once and returns to the starting point. It is not possible: there is no Eulerian circuit. This solution is considered to be the first theorem of graph theory.
Euler also discovered the formula relating the number of vertices, edges, and faces of a convex polyhedron, and hence of a planar graph. The constant in this formula is now known as the Euler characteristic for the graph (or other mathematical object), and is related to the genus of the object. The study and generalization of this formula, specifically by Cauchy and L'Huilier, is at the origin of topology.
Physics, astronomy, and engineering
Some of Euler's greatest successes were in solving real-world problems analytically, and in describing numerous applications of the Bernoulli numbers, Fourier series, Euler numbers, the constants e and π, continued fractions, and integrals. He integrated Leibniz's differential calculus with Newton's Method of Fluxions, and developed tools that made it easier to apply calculus to physical problems. He made great strides in improving the numerical approximation of integrals, inventing what are now known as the Euler approximations. The most notable of these approximations are Euler's method and the Euler–Maclaurin formula.
Euler helped develop the Euler–Bernoulli beam equation, which became a cornerstone of engineering. Besides successfully applying his analytic tools to problems in classical mechanics, Euler applied these techniques to celestial problems. His work in astronomy was recognized by multiple Paris Academy Prizes over the course of his career. His accomplishments include determining with great accuracy the orbits of comets and other celestial bodies, understanding the nature of comets, and calculating the parallax of the Sun. His calculations contributed to the development of accurate longitude tables.
Euler made important contributions in optics. He disagreed with Newton's corpuscular theory of light, which was the prevailing theory of the time. His 1740s papers on optics helped ensure that the wave theory of light proposed by Christiaan Huygens would become the dominant mode of thought, at least until the development of the quantum theory of light.
In fluid dynamics, Euler was the first to predict the phenomenon of cavitation, in 1754, long before its first observation in the late 19th century, and the Euler number used in fluid flow calculations comes from his related work on the efficiency of turbines. In 1757 he published an important set of equations for inviscid flow in fluid dynamics, that are now known as the Euler equations.
Euler is well known in structural engineering for his formula giving Euler's critical load, the critical buckling load of an ideal strut, which depends only on its length and flexural stiffness.
Logic
Euler is credited with using closed curves to illustrate syllogistic reasoning (1768). These diagrams have become known as Euler diagrams.
An Euler diagram is a diagrammatic means of representing sets and their relationships. Euler diagrams consist of simple closed curves (usually circles) in the plane that depict sets. Each Euler curve divides the plane into two regions or "zones": the interior, which symbolically represents the elements of the set, and the exterior, which represents all elements that are not members of the set. The sizes or shapes of the curves are not important; the significance of the diagram is in how they overlap. The spatial relationships between the regions bounded by each curve (overlap, containment or neither) corresponds to set-theoretic relationships (intersection, subset, and disjointness). Curves whose interior zones do not intersect represent disjoint sets. Two curves whose interior zones intersect represent sets that have common elements; the zone inside both curves represents the set of elements common to both sets (the intersection of the sets). A curve that is contained completely within the interior zone of another represents a subset of it.
Euler diagrams (and their refinement to Venn diagrams) were incorporated as part of instruction in set theory as part of the new math movement in the 1960s. Since then, they have come into wide use as a way of visualizing combinations of characteristics.
Music
One of Euler's more unusual interests was the application of mathematical ideas in music. In 1739 he wrote the Tentamen novae theoriae musicae (Attempt at a New Theory of Music), hoping to eventually incorporate musical theory as part of mathematics. This part of his work, however, did not receive wide attention and was once described as too mathematical for musicians and too musical for mathematicians. Even when dealing with music, Euler's approach is mainly mathematical, for instance, his introduction of binary logarithms as a way of numerically describing the subdivision of octaves into fractional parts. His writings on music are not particularly numerous (a few hundred pages, in his total production of about thirty thousand pages), but they reflect an early preoccupation and one that remained with him throughout his life.
A first point of Euler's musical theory is the definition of "genres", i.e. of possible divisions of the octave using the prime numbers 3 and 5. Euler describes 18 such genres, with the general definition 2mA, where A is the "exponent" of the genre (i.e. the sum of the exponents of 3 and 5) and 2m (where "m is an indefinite number, small or large, so long as the sounds are perceptible"), expresses that the relation holds independently of the number of octaves concerned. The first genre, with A = 1, is the octave itself (or its duplicates); the second genre, 2m.3, is the octave divided by the fifth (fifth + fourth, C–G–C); the third genre is 2m.5, major third + minor sixth (C–E–C); the fourth is 2m.32, two-fourths and a tone (C–F–B♭–C); the fifth is 2m.3.5 (C–E–G–B–C); etc. Genres 12 (2m.33.5), 13 (2m.32.52) and 14 (2m.3.53) are corrected versions of the diatonic, chromatic and enharmonic, respectively, of the Ancients. Genre 18 (2m.33.52) is the "diatonico-chromatic", "used generally in all compositions", and which turns out to be identical with the system described by Johann Mattheson. Euler later envisaged the possibility of describing genres including the prime number 7.
Euler devised a specific graph, the Speculum musicum, to illustrate the diatonico-chromatic genre, and discussed paths in this graph for specific intervals, recalling his interest in the Seven Bridges of Königsberg (see above). The device drew renewed interest as the Tonnetz in Neo-Riemannian theory (see also Lattice (music)).
Euler further used the principle of the "exponent" to propose a derivation of the gradus suavitatis (degree of suavity, of agreeableness) of intervals and chords from their prime factors – one must keep in mind that he considered just intonation, i.e. 1 and the prime numbers 3 and 5 only. Formulas have been proposed extending this system to any number of prime numbers, e.g. in the form where pi are prime numbers and ki their exponents.
Personal philosophy and religious beliefs
Euler was religious throughout his life. Much of what is known of his religious beliefs can be deduced from his Letters to a German Princess and an earlier work, Rettung der Göttlichen Offenbahrung gegen die Einwürfe der Freygeister (Defense of the Divine Revelation against the Objections of the Freethinkers). These show that Euler was a devout Christian who believed the Bible to be inspired; the Rettung was primarily an argument for the divine inspiration of scripture.
Euler opposed the concepts of Leibniz's monadism and the philosophy of Christian Wolff. He insisted that knowledge is founded in part on the basis of precise quantitative laws, something that monadism and Wolffian science were unable to provide. Euler called Wolff's ideas "heathen and atheistic".
There is a legend inspired by Euler's arguments with secular philosophers over religion, which is set during Euler's second stint at the St. Petersburg Academy. The French philosopher Denis Diderot was visiting Russia on Catherine the Great's invitation. The Empress was alarmed that Diderot's arguments for atheism were influencing members of her court, and so Euler was asked to confront him. Diderot was informed that a learned mathematician had produced a proof of the existence of God: he agreed to view the proof as it was presented in court. Euler appeared, advanced toward Diderot, and in a tone of perfect conviction announced this non sequitur:
"Sir, , hence God exists –reply!"
Diderot, to whom (says the story) all mathematics was gibberish, stood dumbstruck as peals of laughter erupted from the court. Embarrassed, he asked to leave Russia, a request Catherine granted. However amusing the anecdote may be, it is apocryphal, given that Diderot himself did research in mathematics. The legend was apparently first told by Dieudonné Thiébault with embellishment by Augustus De Morgan.
Legacy
Recognition
Euler is widely recognized as one of the greatest mathematicians of all time, and more likely than not the most prolific contributor to mathematics and science. Mathematician and physicist John von Neumann called Euler "the greatest virtuoso of the period". Mathematician François Arago said, "Euler calculated without any apparent effort, just as men breathe and as eagles sustain themselves in air". He is generally ranked right below Carl Friedrich Gauss, Isaac Newton, and Archimedes among the greatest mathematicians of all time, while some rank him as equal with them. Physicist and mathematician Henri Poincaré called Euler the "god of mathematics".
French mathematician André Weil noted that Euler stood above his contemporaries and more than anyone else was able to cement himself as the leading force of his era's mathematics:
No mathematician ever attained such a position of undisputed leadership in all branches of mathematics, pure and applied, as Euler did for the best part of the eighteenth century.
Swiss mathematician Nicolas Fuss noted Euler's extraordinary memory and breadth of knowledge, saying:
Knowledge that we call erudition was not inimical to him. He had read all the best Roman writers, knew perfectly the ancient history of mathematics, held in his memory the historical events of all times and peoples, and could without hesitation adduce by way of examples the most trifling of historical events. He knew more about medicine, botany, and chemistry than might be expected of someone who had not worked especially in those sciences.
Commemorations
Euler was featured on both the sixth and seventh series of the Swiss 10-franc banknote and on numerous Swiss, German, and Russian postage stamps. In 1782 he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The asteroid 2002 Euler was named in his honour.
Selected bibliography
Euler has an extensive bibliography. His books include:
- Mechanica (1736)
- Methodus inveniendi lineas curvas maximi minimive proprietate gaudentes, sive solutio problematis isoperimetrici latissimo sensu accepti (1744) (A method for finding curved lines enjoying properties of maximum or minimum, or solution of isoperimetric problems in the broadest accepted sense)
- Introductio in analysin infinitorum (1748) (Introduction to Analysis of the Infinite)
- Institutiones calculi differentialis (1755) (Foundations of differential calculus)
- Vollständige Anleitung zur Algebra (1765) (Elements of Algebra)
- Institutiones calculi integralis (1768–1770) (Foundations of integral calculus)
- Letters to a German Princess (1768–1772)
- Dioptrica, published in three volumes beginning in 1769
It took until 1830 for the bulk of Euler's posthumous works to be individually published, with an additional batch of 61 unpublished works discovered by (Euler's great-grandson and Nicolas Fuss's son) and published as a collection in 1862. A chronological catalog of Euler's works was compiled by Swedish mathematician Gustaf Eneström and published from 1910 to 1913. The catalog, known as the Eneström index, numbers Euler's works from E1 to E866. The Euler Archive was started at Dartmouth College before moving to the Mathematical Association of America and, most recently, to University of the Pacific in 2017.
In 1907, the Swiss Academy of Sciences created the Euler Commission and charged it with the publication of Euler's complete works. After several delays in the 19th century, the first volume of the Opera Omnia, was published in 1911. However, the discovery of new manuscripts continued to increase the magnitude of this project. Fortunately, the publication of Euler's Opera Omnia has made steady progress, with over 70 volumes (averaging 426 pages each) published by 2006 and 80 volumes published by 2022. These volumes are organized into four series. The first series compiles the works on analysis, algebra, and number theory; it consists of 29 volumes and numbers over 14,000 pages. The 31 volumes of Series II, amounting to 10,660 pages, contain the works on mechanics, astronomy, and engineering. Series III contains 12 volumes on physics. Series IV, which contains the massive amount of Euler's correspondence, unpublished manuscripts, and notes only began compilation in 1967. After publishing 8 print volumes in Series IV, the project decided in 2022 to publish its remaining projected volumes in Series IV in online format only.
- Illustration from Solutio problematis... a. 1743 propositi published in Acta Eruditorum, 1744
- The title page of Euler's Methodus inveniendi lineas curvas
- Euler's 1760 world map
- Euler's 1753 map of Africa
Notes
- Euler is listed by an academic genealogy as the equivalent to the doctoral advisor of Lagrange.
- The pronunciation /ˈjuːlər/ YOO-lər is considered incorrect.
- The quote appeared in Gugliemo Libri's review of a recently published collection of correspondence among eighteenth-century mathematicians: "... nous rappellerions que Laplace lui même, ... ne cessait de répéter aux jeunes mathématiciens ces paroles mémorables que nous avons entendues de sa propre bouche : 'Lisez Euler, lisez Euler, c'est notre maître à tous.'" [... we would recall that Laplace himself, ... never ceased to repeat to young mathematicians these memorable words that we heard from his own mouth: 'Read Euler, read Euler, he is our master in everything.']
- Gauss wrote this in a letter to Paul Fuss dated September 11, 1849: "Die besondere Herausgabe der kleinern Eulerschen Abhandlungen ist gewiß etwas höchst verdienstliches, [...] und das Studium aller Eulerschen Arbeiten doch stets die beste durch nichts anderes zu ersetzende Schule für die verschiedenen mathematischen Gebiete bleiben wird." [The special publication of the smaller Euler treatises is certainly something highly deserving, [...] and the study of all Euler's works will always remain the best school for the various mathematical fields, which cannot be replaced by anything else.]
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- Demidov, S. S. (2005). Treatise on the differential calculus. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0080457444. Archived from the original on 18 June 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2015. In Grattan-Guinness 2005, pp. 191–198.
- Kleinert, Andreas (2015). "Leonhardi Euleri Opera omnia: Editing the works and correspondence of Leonhard Euler". Prace Komisji Historii Nauki PAU. 14. Jagiellonian University: 13–35. doi:10.4467/23921749pkhn_pau.16.002.5258.
- Euler, Leonhard; Fuss, Nikola Ivanovich; Fuss, Paul (1862). Opera postuma mathematica et physica anno 1844 detecta quae Academiae scientiarum petropolitanae obtulerunt ejusque auspicus ediderunt auctoris pronepotes Paulus Henricus Fuss et Nicolaus Fuss. Imperatorskaia akademīia nauk (Russia). OCLC 9094558695.
- Calinger 2016, pp. ix–x.
- "The Eneström Index". Euler Archive. Archived from the original on 9 August 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- Knapp, Susan (19 February 2007). "Dartmouth students build online archive of historic mathematician". Vox of Dartmouth. Dartmouth College. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010.
- Klyve, Dominic (June–July 2011). "Euler Archive Moves To MAA Website". MAA FOCUS. Mathematical Association of America. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
- "The Euler Archive". University of the Pacific. Archived from the original on 7 June 2021.
- Plüss, Matthias. "Der Goethe der Mathematik". Swiss National Science Foundation. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
- Varadarajan, V. S. (2006). Euler through time : a new look at old themes. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-3580-7. OCLC 803144928.
- Libri, Gugliemo (January 1846). "Correspondance mathématique et physique de quelques célèbres géomètres du XVIIIe siècle, ..." [Mathematical and physical correspondence of some famous geometers of the eighteenth century, ...]. Journal des Savants (in French): 51. Archived from the original on 9 August 2018. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
Sources
- Calinger, Ronald (1996). "Leonhard Euler: The First St. Petersburg Years (1727–1741)". Historia Mathematica. 23 (2): 121–166. doi:10.1006/hmat.1996.0015.
- Calinger, Ronald (2016). Leonhard Euler: Mathematical Genius in the Enlightenment. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11927-4. Archived from the original on 13 July 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
- Dunham, William (1999). Euler: The Master of Us All. Dolciani Mathematical Expositions. Vol. 22. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-328-3. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
- Euler, Leonhard (1739). Tentamen novae theoriae musicae [An attempt at a new theory of music, exposed in all clearness, according to the most well-founded principles of harmony] (in Latin). St. Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 12 June 2021. Retrieved 12 June 2021 – via Euler archive.
- Ferraro, Giovanni (2008). The Rise and Development of the Theory of Series up to the Early 1820s. Springer Science+Business Media. ISBN 978-0-387-73467-5. Archived from the original on 29 May 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
- Gekker, I. R.; Euler, A. A. (2007). "Leonhard Euler's family and descendants". In Bogolyubov, Nikolaĭ Nikolaevich; Mikhaĭlov, G. K.; Yushkevich, Adolph Pavlovich (eds.). Euler and Modern Science. Translated by Robert Burns. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-564-5. Archived from the original on 18 May 2016. Retrieved 12 November 2015.
- Gautschi, Walter (2008). "Leonhard Euler: His Life, the Man, and His Works". SIAM Review. 50 (1): 3–33. Bibcode:2008SIAMR..50....3G. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.177.8766. doi:10.1137/070702710. ISSN 0036-1445. JSTOR 20454060.
- Grattan-Guinness, Ivor, ed. (2005). Landmark Writings in Western Mathematics 1640–1940. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-045744-4.
- Richeson, David S. (2012). Euler's Gem: The Polyhedron Formula and the Birth of Topology. Princeton University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4008-3856-1.
Further reading
- Bradley, Robert E.; D'Antonio, Lawrence A.; Sandifer, Charles Edward (2007). Euler at 300: An Appreciation. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-565-2.
- Bradley, Robert E.; Sandifer, Charles Edward, eds. (2007). Leonhard Euler: Life, Work and Legacy. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Mathematics. Vol. 5. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-444-52728-8. Archived from the original on 19 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- Dunham, William (2007). The Genius of Euler: Reflections on his Life and Work. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-558-4.
- Hascher, Xavier; Papadopoulos, Athanase, eds. (2015). Leonhard Euler : Mathématicien, physicien et théoricien de la musique (in French). Paris: CNRS Editions. ISBN 978-2-271-08331-9. Archived from the original on 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- Sandifer, C. Edward (2007). The Early Mathematics of Leonhard Euler. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-559-1.
- Sandifer, C. Edward (2007). How Euler Did It. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-563-8.
- Sandifer, C. Edward (2015). How Euler Did Even More. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 978-0-88385-584-3. Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
- Schattschneider, Doris, ed. (November 1983). "A Tribute to Leonhard Euler 1707–1783 (special issue)". Mathematics Magazine. 56 (5). JSTOR i326726.
External links
- Leonhard Euler at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- The Euler Archive: Composition of Euler works with translations into English
- Opera-Bernoulli-Euler (compiled works of Euler, Bernoulli family, and contemporary peers)
- Euler Tercentenary 2007
- The Euler Society
- Euleriana at the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities
- Euler Family Tree
- Euler's Correspondence with Frederick the Great, King of Prussia
- Works by Leonhard Euler at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F. "Leonhard Euler". MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive. University of St Andrews.
- Dunham, William (24 September 2009). "An Evening with Leonhard Euler". YouTube. Muhlenberg College: philoctetesctr (published 9 November 2009). (talk given by William Dunham at )
- Dunham, William (14 October 2008). "A Tribute to Euler – William Dunham". YouTube. Muhlenberg College: PoincareDuality (published 23 November 2011).
Leonhard Euler ˈ ɔɪ l er OY ler German ˈleːɔnhaʁt ˈʔɔʏlɐ Swiss Standard German ˈleɔnhard ˈɔʏler 15 April 1707 18 September 1783 was a Swiss polymath who was active as a mathematician physicist astronomer logician geographer and engineer He founded the studies of graph theory and topology and made influential discoveries in many other branches of mathematics such as analytic number theory complex analysis and infinitesimal calculus He also introduced much of modern mathematical terminology and notation including the notion of a mathematical function He is known for his work in mechanics fluid dynamics optics astronomy and music theory Euler has been called a universal genius who was fully equipped with almost unlimited powers of imagination intellectual gifts and extraordinary memory He spent most of his adult life in Saint Petersburg Russia and in Berlin then the capital of Prussia Leonhard EulerPortrait by Jakob Emanuel Handmann 1753Born 1707 04 15 15 April 1707 Basel Swiss ConfederacyDied18 September 1783 1783 09 18 aged 76 OS 7 September 1783 Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireEducationUniversity of Basel MPhil Known forContributionsnamesakesSpousesKatharina Gsell m 1734 died 1773 wbr Salome Abigail Gsell m 1776 wbr Children13 including JohannAwardsFRS 1747 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsPhysicsInstitutionsImperial Russian Academy of SciencesBerlin AcademyThesisDissertatio physica de sono Physical dissertation on sound 1726 Doctoral advisorJohann BernoulliDoctoral studentsJohann HennertOther notable studentsNicolas FussStepan RumovskyJoseph Louis Lagrange epistolary correspondent Anders Johan LexellSignature Euler is credited for popularizing the Greek letter p displaystyle pi lowercase pi to denote the ratio of a circle s circumference to its diameter as well as first using the notation f x displaystyle f x for the value of a function the letter i displaystyle i to express the imaginary unit 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 the Greek letter S displaystyle Sigma capital sigma to express summations the Greek letter D displaystyle Delta capital delta for finite differences and lowercase letters to represent the sides of a triangle while representing the angles as capital letters He gave the current definition of the constant e displaystyle e the base of the natural logarithm now known as Euler s number Euler made contributions to applied mathematics and engineering such as his study of ships which helped navigation his three volumes on optics contributed to the design of microscopes and telescopes and he studied the bending of beams and the critical load of columns Euler is credited with being the first to develop graph theory partly as a solution for the problem of the Seven Bridges of Konigsberg which is also considered the first practical application of topology He also became famous for among many other accomplishments solving several unsolved problems in number theory and analysis including the famous Basel problem Euler has also been credited for discovering that the sum of the numbers of vertices and faces minus the number of edges of a polyhedron equals 2 a number now commonly known as the Euler characteristic In physics Euler reformulated Isaac Newton s laws of motion into new laws in his two volume work Mechanica to better explain the motion of rigid bodies He contributed to the study of elastic deformations of solid objects Euler formulated the partial differential equations for the motion of inviscid fluid and laid the mathematical foundations of potential theory Euler is regarded as arguably the most prolific contributor in the history of mathematics and science and the greatest mathematician of the 18th century His 866 publications and his correspondence are being collected in the Opera Omnia Leonhard Euler which when completed will consist of 81 quartos Several great mathematicians who worked after Euler s death have recognised his importance in the field Pierre Simon Laplace said Read Euler read Euler he is the master of us all Carl Friedrich Gauss wrote The study of Euler s works will remain the best school for the different fields of mathematics and nothing else can replace it Early lifeLeonhard Euler was born in Basel on 15 April 1707 to Paul III Euler a pastor of the Reformed Church and Marguerite nee Brucker whose ancestors include a number of well known scholars in the classics He was the oldest of four children with two younger sisters Anna Maria and Maria Magdalena and a younger brother Johann Heinrich Soon after Leonhard s birth the Eulers moved from Basel to Riehen Switzerland where his father became pastor in the local church and Leonhard spent most of his childhood From a young age Euler received schooling in mathematics from his father who had taken courses from Jacob Bernoulli some years earlier at the University of Basel Around the age of eight Euler was sent to live at his maternal grandmother s house and enrolled in the Latin school in Basel In addition he received private tutoring from Johannes Burckhardt a young theologian with a keen interest in mathematics In 1720 at age 13 Euler enrolled at the University of Basel Attending university at such a young age was not unusual at the time The course on elementary mathematics was given by Johann Bernoulli the younger brother of the deceased Jacob Bernoulli who had taught Euler s father Johann Bernoulli and Euler soon got to know each other better Euler described Bernoulli in his autobiography the famous professor Johann Bernoulli made it a special pleasure for himself to help me along in the mathematical sciences Private lessons however he refused because of his busy schedule However he gave me a far more salutary advice which consisted in myself getting a hold of some of the more difficult mathematical books and working through them with great diligence and should I encounter some objections or difficulties he offered me free access to him every Saturday afternoon and he was gracious enough to comment on the collected difficulties which was done with such a desired advantage that when he resolved one of my objections ten others at once disappeared which certainly is the best method of making happy progress in the mathematical sciences During this time Euler backed by Bernoulli obtained his father s consent to become a mathematician instead of a pastor In 1723 Euler received a Master of Philosophy with a dissertation that compared the philosophies of Rene Descartes and Isaac Newton Afterwards he enrolled in the theological faculty of the University of Basel In 1726 Euler completed a dissertation on the propagation of sound titled De Sono with which he unsuccessfully attempted to obtain a position at the University of Basel In 1727 he entered the Paris Academy prize competition offered annually and later biennially by the academy beginning in 1720 for the first time The problem posed that year was to find the best way to place the masts on a ship Pierre Bouguer who became known as the father of naval architecture won and Euler took second place Over the years Euler entered this competition 15 times winning 12 of them CareerSaint Petersburg 1957 Soviet Union stamp commemorating the 250th birthday of Euler The text says 250 years from the birth of the great mathematician academician Leonhard Euler Johann Bernoulli s two sons Daniel and Nicolaus entered into service at the Imperial Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg in 1725 leaving Euler with the assurance they would recommend him to a post when one was available On 31 July 1726 Nicolaus died of appendicitis after spending less than a year in Russia When Daniel assumed his brother s position in the mathematics physics division he recommended that the post in physiology that he had vacated be filled by his friend Euler In November 1726 Euler eagerly accepted the offer but delayed making the trip to Saint Petersburg while he unsuccessfully applied for a physics professorship at the University of Basel Euler arrived in Saint Petersburg in May 1727 He was promoted from his junior post in the medical department of the academy to a position in the mathematics department He lodged with Daniel Bernoulli with whom he worked in close collaboration Euler mastered Russian settled into life in Saint Petersburg and took on an additional job as a medic in the Russian Navy The academy at Saint Petersburg established by Peter the Great was intended to improve education in Russia and to close the scientific gap with Western Europe As a result it was made especially attractive to foreign scholars like Euler The academy s benefactress Catherine I who had continued the progressive policies of her late husband died before Euler s arrival to Saint Petersburg The Russian conservative nobility then gained power upon the ascension of the twelve year old Peter II The nobility suspicious of the academy s foreign scientists cut funding for Euler and his colleagues and prevented the entrance of foreign and non aristocratic students into the Gymnasium and universities Conditions improved slightly after the death of Peter II in 1730 and the German influenced Anna of Russia assumed power Euler swiftly rose through the ranks in the academy and was made a professor of physics in 1731 He also left the Russian Navy refusing a promotion to lieutenant Two years later Daniel Bernoulli fed up with the censorship and hostility he faced at Saint Petersburg left for Basel Euler succeeded him as the head of the mathematics department In January 1734 he married Katharina Gsell 1707 1773 a daughter of Georg Gsell Frederick II had made an attempt to recruit the services of Euler for his newly established Berlin Academy in 1740 but Euler initially preferred to stay in St Petersburg But after Empress Anna died and Frederick II agreed to pay 1600 ecus the same as Euler earned in Russia he agreed to move to Berlin In 1741 he requested permission to leave to Berlin arguing he was in need of a milder climate for his eyesight The Russian academy gave its consent and would pay him 200 rubles per year as one of its active members Berlin Concerned about the continuing turmoil in Russia Euler left St Petersburg in June 1741 to take up a post at the Berlin Academy which he had been offered by Frederick the Great of Prussia He lived for 25 years in Berlin where he wrote several hundred articles In 1748 his text on functions called the Introductio in analysin infinitorum was published and in 1755 a text on differential calculus called the Institutiones calculi differentialis was published In 1755 he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and of the French Academy of Sciences Notable students of Euler in Berlin included Stepan Rumovsky later considered as the first Russian astronomer In 1748 he declined an offer from the University of Basel to succeed the recently deceased Johann Bernoulli In 1753 he bought a house in Charlottenburg in which he lived with his family and widowed mother Euler became the tutor for Friederike Charlotte of Brandenburg Schwedt the Princess of Anhalt Dessau and Frederick s niece He wrote over 200 letters to her in the early 1760s which were later compiled into a volume entitled Letters of Euler on different Subjects in Natural Philosophy Addressed to a German Princess 47 This work contained Euler s exposition on various subjects pertaining to physics and mathematics and offered valuable insights into Euler s personality and religious beliefs It was translated into multiple languages published across Europe and in the United States and became more widely read than any of his mathematical works The popularity of the Letters testifies to Euler s ability to communicate scientific matters effectively to a lay audience a rare ability for a dedicated research scientist Despite Euler s immense contribution to the academy s prestige and having been put forward as a candidate for its presidency by Jean le Rond d Alembert Frederick II named himself as its president The Prussian king had a large circle of intellectuals in his court and he found the mathematician unsophisticated and ill informed on matters beyond numbers and figures Euler was a simple devoutly religious man who never questioned the existing social order or conventional beliefs He was in many ways the polar opposite of Voltaire who enjoyed a high place of prestige at Frederick s court Euler was not a skilled debater and often made it a point to argue subjects that he knew little about making him the frequent target of Voltaire s wit Frederick also expressed disappointment with Euler s practical engineering abilities stating I wanted to have a water jet in my garden Euler calculated the force of the wheels necessary to raise the water to a reservoir from where it should fall back through channels finally spurting out in Sanssouci My mill was carried out geometrically and could not raise a mouthful of water closer than fifty paces to the reservoir Vanity of vanities Vanity of geometry However the disappointment was almost surely unwarranted from a technical perspective Euler s calculations look likely to be correct even if Euler s interactions with Frederick and those constructing his fountain may have been dysfunctional Throughout his stay in Berlin Euler maintained a strong connection to the academy in St Petersburg and also published 109 papers in Russia He also assisted students from the St Petersburg academy and at times accommodated Russian students in his house in Berlin In 1760 with the Seven Years War raging Euler s farm in Charlottenburg was sacked by advancing Russian troops Upon learning of this event General Ivan Petrovich Saltykov paid compensation for the damage caused to Euler s estate with Empress Elizabeth of Russia later adding a further payment of 4000 rubles an exorbitant amount at the time Euler decided to leave Berlin in 1766 and return to Russia During his Berlin years 1741 1766 Euler was at the peak of his productivity He wrote 380 works 275 of which were published This included 125 memoirs in the Berlin Academy and over 100 memoirs sent to the St Petersburg Academy which had retained him as a member and paid him an annual stipend Euler s Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum was published in two parts in 1748 In addition to his own research Euler supervised the library the observatory the botanical garden and the publication of calendars and maps from which the academy derived income He was even involved in the design of the water fountains at Sanssouci the King s summer palace Return to Russia The political situation in Russia stabilized after Catherine the Great s accession to the throne so in 1766 Euler accepted an invitation to return to the St Petersburg Academy His conditions were quite exorbitant a 3000 ruble annual salary a pension for his wife and the promise of high ranking appointments for his sons At the university he was assisted by his student Anders Johan Lexell While living in St Petersburg a fire in 1771 destroyed his home Personal lifeOn 7 January 1734 Euler married Katharina Gsell daughter of Georg Gsell a painter at the Academy Gymnasium in Saint Petersburg The couple bought a house by the Neva River Of their 13 children five survived childhood three sons and two daughters Their first son was Johann Albrecht Euler whose godfather was Christian Goldbach Three years after his wife s death in 1773 Euler married her half sister Salome Abigail Gsell This marriage lasted until his death in 1783 His brother Johann Heinrich settled in St Petersburg in 1735 and was employed as a painter at the academy Early in his life Euler memorized Virgil s Aeneid and by old age he could recite the poem and give the first and last sentence on each page of the edition from which he had learnt it Euler knew the first hundred prime numbers and could give each of their powers up to the sixth degree Euler was known as a generous and kind person not neurotic as seen in some geniuses keeping his good natured disposition even after becoming entirely blind Eyesight deterioration Euler s eyesight worsened throughout his mathematical career In 1738 three years after nearly dying of fever he became almost blind in his right eye Euler blamed the cartography he performed for the St Petersburg Academy for his condition but the cause of his blindness remains the subject of speculation Euler s vision in that eye worsened throughout his stay in Germany to the extent that Frederick called him Cyclops Euler said of his loss of vision Now I will have fewer distractions In 1766 a cataract in his left eye was discovered Though couching of the cataract temporarily improved his vision complications rendered him almost totally blind in the left eye as well His condition appeared to have little effect on his productivity With the aid of his scribes Euler s productivity in many areas of study increased in 1775 he produced on average one mathematical paper per week Death In St Petersburg on 18 September 1783 after a lunch with his family Euler was discussing the newly discovered planet Uranus and its orbit with Anders Johan Lexell when he collapsed and died of a brain hemorrhage de wrote a short obituary for the Russian Academy of Sciences and Russian mathematician Nicolas Fuss one of Euler s disciples wrote a more detailed eulogy which he delivered at a memorial meeting In his eulogy for the French Academy French mathematician and philosopher Marquis de Condorcet wrote Euler s grave at the Alexander Nevsky Monasteryil cessa de calculer et de vivre he ceased to calculate and to live Euler was buried next to Katharina at the Smolensk Lutheran Cemetery on Vasilievsky Island In 1837 the Russian Academy of Sciences installed a new monument replacing his overgrown grave plaque To commemorate the 250th anniversary of Euler s birth in 1957 his tomb was moved to the Lazarevskoe Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery Contributions to mathematics and physicsEuler worked in almost all areas of mathematics including geometry infinitesimal calculus trigonometry algebra and number theory as well as continuum physics lunar theory and other areas of physics He is a seminal figure in the history of mathematics if printed his works many of which are of fundamental interest would occupy between 60 and 80 quarto volumes Euler s name is associated with a large number of topics Euler s work averages 800 pages a year from 1725 to 1783 He also wrote over 4500 letters and hundreds of manuscripts It has been estimated that Leonhard Euler was the author of a quarter of the combined output in mathematics physics mechanics astronomy and navigation in the 18th century while other researchers credit Euler for a third of the output in mathematics in that century Mathematical notation Euler introduced and popularized several notational conventions through his numerous and widely circulated textbooks Most notably he introduced the concept of a function and was the first to write f x to denote the function f applied to the argument x He also introduced the modern notation for the trigonometric functions the letter e for the base of the natural logarithm now also known as Euler s number the Greek letter S for summations and the letter i to denote the imaginary unit The use of the Greek letter p to denote the ratio of a circle s circumference to its diameter was also popularized by Euler although it originated with Welsh mathematician William Jones Analysis The development of infinitesimal calculus was at the forefront of 18th century mathematical research and the Bernoullis family friends of Euler were responsible for much of the early progress in the field Thanks to their influence studying calculus became the major focus of Euler s work While some of Euler s proofs are not acceptable by modern standards of mathematical rigour in particular his reliance on the principle of the generality of algebra his ideas led to many great advances Euler is well known in analysis for his frequent use and development of power series the expression of functions as sums of infinitely many terms such as ex n 0 xnn limn 10 x1 x22 xnn displaystyle e x sum n 0 infty x n over n lim n to infty left frac 1 0 frac x 1 frac x 2 2 cdots frac x n n right Euler s use of power series enabled him to solve the Basel problem finding the sum of the reciprocals of squares of every natural number in 1735 he provided a more elaborate argument in 1741 The Basel problem was originally posed by Pietro Mengoli in 1644 and by the 1730s was a famous open problem popularized by Jacob Bernoulli and unsuccessfully attacked by many of the leading mathematicians of the time Euler found that n 1 1n2 limn 112 122 132 1n2 p26 displaystyle sum n 1 infty 1 over n 2 lim n to infty left frac 1 1 2 frac 1 2 2 frac 1 3 2 cdots frac 1 n 2 right frac pi 2 6 Euler introduced the constant g limn 1 12 13 14 1n ln n 0 5772 displaystyle gamma lim n rightarrow infty left 1 frac 1 2 frac 1 3 frac 1 4 cdots frac 1 n ln n right approx 0 5772 now known as Euler s constant or the Euler Mascheroni constant and studied its relationship with the harmonic series the gamma function and values of the Riemann zeta function A geometric interpretation of Euler s formula Euler introduced the use of the exponential function and logarithms in analytic proofs He discovered ways to express various logarithmic functions using power series and he successfully defined logarithms for negative and complex numbers thus greatly expanding the scope of mathematical applications of logarithms He also defined the exponential function for complex numbers and discovered its relation to the trigonometric functions For any real number f taken to be radians Euler s formula states that the complex exponential function satisfies eif cos f isin f displaystyle e i varphi cos varphi i sin varphi which was called the most remarkable formula in mathematics by Richard Feynman A special case of the above formula is known as Euler s identity eip 1 0 displaystyle e i pi 1 0 Euler elaborated the theory of higher transcendental functions by introducing the gamma function and introduced a new method for solving quartic equations He found a way to calculate integrals with complex limits foreshadowing the development of modern complex analysis He invented the calculus of variations and formulated the Euler Lagrange equation for reducing optimization problems in this area to the solution of differential equations Euler pioneered the use of analytic methods to solve number theory problems In doing so he united two disparate branches of mathematics and introduced a new field of study analytic number theory In breaking ground for this new field Euler created the theory of hypergeometric series q series hyperbolic trigonometric functions and the analytic theory of continued fractions For example he proved the infinitude of primes using the divergence of the harmonic series and he used analytic methods to gain some understanding of the way prime numbers are distributed Euler s work in this area led to the development of the prime number theorem Number theory Euler s interest in number theory can be traced to the influence of Christian Goldbach his friend in the St Petersburg Academy Much of Euler s early work on number theory was based on the work of Pierre de Fermat Euler developed some of Fermat s ideas and disproved some of his conjectures such as his conjecture that all numbers of the form 22n 1 textstyle 2 2 n 1 Fermat numbers are prime Euler linked the nature of prime distribution with ideas in analysis He proved that the sum of the reciprocals of the primes diverges In doing so he discovered the connection between the Riemann zeta function and prime numbers this is known as the Euler product formula for the Riemann zeta function Euler invented the totient function f n the number of positive integers less than or equal to the integer n that are coprime to n Using properties of this function he generalized Fermat s little theorem to what is now known as Euler s theorem He contributed significantly to the theory of perfect numbers which had fascinated mathematicians since Euclid He proved that the relationship shown between even perfect numbers and Mersenne primes which he had earlier proved was one to one a result otherwise known as the Euclid Euler theorem Euler also conjectured the law of quadratic reciprocity The concept is regarded as a fundamental theorem within number theory and his ideas paved the way for the work of Carl Friedrich Gauss particularly Disquisitiones Arithmeticae By 1772 Euler had proved that 231 1 2 147 483 647 is a Mersenne prime It may have remained the largest known prime until 1867 Euler also contributed major developments to the theory of partitions of an integer Graph theory Map of Konigsberg in Euler s time showing the actual layout of the seven bridges highlighting the river Pregel and the bridges In 1735 Euler presented a solution to the problem known as the Seven Bridges of Konigsberg The city of Konigsberg Prussia was set on the Pregel River and included two large islands that were connected to each other and the mainland by seven bridges The problem is to decide whether it is possible to follow a path that crosses each bridge exactly once and returns to the starting point It is not possible there is no Eulerian circuit This solution is considered to be the first theorem of graph theory Euler also discovered the formula V E F 2 displaystyle V E F 2 relating the number of vertices edges and faces of a convex polyhedron and hence of a planar graph The constant in this formula is now known as the Euler characteristic for the graph or other mathematical object and is related to the genus of the object The study and generalization of this formula specifically by Cauchy and L Huilier is at the origin of topology Physics astronomy and engineering Some of Euler s greatest successes were in solving real world problems analytically and in describing numerous applications of the Bernoulli numbers Fourier series Euler numbers the constants e and p continued fractions and integrals He integrated Leibniz s differential calculus with Newton s Method of Fluxions and developed tools that made it easier to apply calculus to physical problems He made great strides in improving the numerical approximation of integrals inventing what are now known as the Euler approximations The most notable of these approximations are Euler s method and the Euler Maclaurin formula Euler helped develop the Euler Bernoulli beam equation which became a cornerstone of engineering Besides successfully applying his analytic tools to problems in classical mechanics Euler applied these techniques to celestial problems His work in astronomy was recognized by multiple Paris Academy Prizes over the course of his career His accomplishments include determining with great accuracy the orbits of comets and other celestial bodies understanding the nature of comets and calculating the parallax of the Sun His calculations contributed to the development of accurate longitude tables Euler made important contributions in optics He disagreed with Newton s corpuscular theory of light which was the prevailing theory of the time His 1740s papers on optics helped ensure that the wave theory of light proposed by Christiaan Huygens would become the dominant mode of thought at least until the development of the quantum theory of light In fluid dynamics Euler was the first to predict the phenomenon of cavitation in 1754 long before its first observation in the late 19th century and the Euler number used in fluid flow calculations comes from his related work on the efficiency of turbines In 1757 he published an important set of equations for inviscid flow in fluid dynamics that are now known as the Euler equations Euler is well known in structural engineering for his formula giving Euler s critical load the critical buckling load of an ideal strut which depends only on its length and flexural stiffness Logic Euler is credited with using closed curves to illustrate syllogistic reasoning 1768 These diagrams have become known as Euler diagrams An Euler diagram An Euler diagram is a diagrammatic means of representing sets and their relationships Euler diagrams consist of simple closed curves usually circles in the plane that depict sets Each Euler curve divides the plane into two regions or zones the interior which symbolically represents the elements of the set and the exterior which represents all elements that are not members of the set The sizes or shapes of the curves are not important the significance of the diagram is in how they overlap The spatial relationships between the regions bounded by each curve overlap containment or neither corresponds to set theoretic relationships intersection subset and disjointness Curves whose interior zones do not intersect represent disjoint sets Two curves whose interior zones intersect represent sets that have common elements the zone inside both curves represents the set of elements common to both sets the intersection of the sets A curve that is contained completely within the interior zone of another represents a subset of it Euler diagrams and their refinement to Venn diagrams were incorporated as part of instruction in set theory as part of the new math movement in the 1960s Since then they have come into wide use as a way of visualizing combinations of characteristics Music One of Euler s more unusual interests was the application of mathematical ideas in music In 1739 he wrote the Tentamen novae theoriae musicae Attempt at a New Theory of Music hoping to eventually incorporate musical theory as part of mathematics This part of his work however did not receive wide attention and was once described as too mathematical for musicians and too musical for mathematicians Even when dealing with music Euler s approach is mainly mathematical for instance his introduction of binary logarithms as a way of numerically describing the subdivision of octaves into fractional parts His writings on music are not particularly numerous a few hundred pages in his total production of about thirty thousand pages but they reflect an early preoccupation and one that remained with him throughout his life A first point of Euler s musical theory is the definition of genres i e of possible divisions of the octave using the prime numbers 3 and 5 Euler describes 18 such genres with the general definition 2mA where A is the exponent of the genre i e the sum of the exponents of 3 and 5 and 2m where m is an indefinite number small or large so long as the sounds are perceptible expresses that the relation holds independently of the number of octaves concerned The first genre with A 1 is the octave itself or its duplicates the second genre 2m 3 is the octave divided by the fifth fifth fourth C G C the third genre is 2m 5 major third minor sixth C E C the fourth is 2m 32 two fourths and a tone C F B C the fifth is 2m 3 5 C E G B C etc Genres 12 2m 33 5 13 2m 32 52 and 14 2m 3 53 are corrected versions of the diatonic chromatic and enharmonic respectively of the Ancients Genre 18 2m 33 52 is the diatonico chromatic used generally in all compositions and which turns out to be identical with the system described by Johann Mattheson Euler later envisaged the possibility of describing genres including the prime number 7 Euler devised a specific graph the Speculum musicum to illustrate the diatonico chromatic genre and discussed paths in this graph for specific intervals recalling his interest in the Seven Bridges of Konigsberg see above The device drew renewed interest as the Tonnetz in Neo Riemannian theory see also Lattice music Euler further used the principle of the exponent to propose a derivation of the gradus suavitatis degree of suavity of agreeableness of intervals and chords from their prime factors one must keep in mind that he considered just intonation i e 1 and the prime numbers 3 and 5 only Formulas have been proposed extending this system to any number of prime numbers e g in the form ds i kipi ki 1 displaystyle ds sum i k i p i k i 1 where pi are prime numbers and ki their exponents Personal philosophy and religious beliefsEuler was religious throughout his life Much of what is known of his religious beliefs can be deduced from his Letters to a German Princess and an earlier work Rettung der Gottlichen Offenbahrung gegen die Einwurfe der Freygeister Defense of the Divine Revelation against the Objections of the Freethinkers These show that Euler was a devout Christian who believed the Bible to be inspired the Rettung was primarily an argument for the divine inspiration of scripture Euler opposed the concepts of Leibniz s monadism and the philosophy of Christian Wolff He insisted that knowledge is founded in part on the basis of precise quantitative laws something that monadism and Wolffian science were unable to provide Euler called Wolff s ideas heathen and atheistic There is a legend inspired by Euler s arguments with secular philosophers over religion which is set during Euler s second stint at the St Petersburg Academy The French philosopher Denis Diderot was visiting Russia on Catherine the Great s invitation The Empress was alarmed that Diderot s arguments for atheism were influencing members of her court and so Euler was asked to confront him Diderot was informed that a learned mathematician had produced a proof of the existence of God he agreed to view the proof as it was presented in court Euler appeared advanced toward Diderot and in a tone of perfect conviction announced this non sequitur Sir a bnn x displaystyle frac a b n n x hence God exists reply Diderot to whom says the story all mathematics was gibberish stood dumbstruck as peals of laughter erupted from the court Embarrassed he asked to leave Russia a request Catherine granted However amusing the anecdote may be it is apocryphal given that Diderot himself did research in mathematics The legend was apparently first told by Dieudonne Thiebault with embellishment by Augustus De Morgan LegacyRecognition Euler is widely recognized as one of the greatest mathematicians of all time and more likely than not the most prolific contributor to mathematics and science Mathematician and physicist John von Neumann called Euler the greatest virtuoso of the period Mathematician Francois Arago said Euler calculated without any apparent effort just as men breathe and as eagles sustain themselves in air He is generally ranked right below Carl Friedrich Gauss Isaac Newton and Archimedes among the greatest mathematicians of all time while some rank him as equal with them Physicist and mathematician Henri Poincare called Euler the god of mathematics French mathematician Andre Weil noted that Euler stood above his contemporaries and more than anyone else was able to cement himself as the leading force of his era s mathematics No mathematician ever attained such a position of undisputed leadership in all branches of mathematics pure and applied as Euler did for the best part of the eighteenth century Swiss mathematician Nicolas Fuss noted Euler s extraordinary memory and breadth of knowledge saying Knowledge that we call erudition was not inimical to him He had read all the best Roman writers knew perfectly the ancient history of mathematics held in his memory the historical events of all times and peoples and could without hesitation adduce by way of examples the most trifling of historical events He knew more about medicine botany and chemistry than might be expected of someone who had not worked especially in those sciences Commemorations Euler portrait on the sixth series of the 10 Franc banknoteEuler portrait on the seventh series of the 10 Franc banknote Euler was featured on both the sixth and seventh series of the Swiss 10 franc banknote and on numerous Swiss German and Russian postage stamps In 1782 he was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences The asteroid 2002 Euler was named in his honour Selected bibliographyEuler has an extensive bibliography His books include Mechanica 1736 Methodus inveniendi lineas curvas maximi minimive proprietate gaudentes sive solutio problematis isoperimetrici latissimo sensu accepti 1744 A method for finding curved lines enjoying properties of maximum or minimum or solution of isoperimetric problems in the broadest accepted sense Introductio in analysin infinitorum 1748 Introduction to Analysis of the Infinite Institutiones calculi differentialis 1755 Foundations of differential calculus Vollstandige Anleitung zur Algebra 1765 Elements of Algebra Institutiones calculi integralis 1768 1770 Foundations of integral calculus Letters to a German Princess 1768 1772 Dioptrica published in three volumes beginning in 1769 It took until 1830 for the bulk of Euler s posthumous works to be individually published with an additional batch of 61 unpublished works discovered by Euler s great grandson and Nicolas Fuss s son and published as a collection in 1862 A chronological catalog of Euler s works was compiled by Swedish mathematician Gustaf Enestrom and published from 1910 to 1913 The catalog known as the Enestrom index numbers Euler s works from E1 to E866 The Euler Archive was started at Dartmouth College before moving to the Mathematical Association of America and most recently to University of the Pacific in 2017 In 1907 the Swiss Academy of Sciences created the Euler Commission and charged it with the publication of Euler s complete works After several delays in the 19th century the first volume of the Opera Omnia was published in 1911 However the discovery of new manuscripts continued to increase the magnitude of this project Fortunately the publication of Euler s Opera Omnia has made steady progress with over 70 volumes averaging 426 pages each published by 2006 and 80 volumes published by 2022 These volumes are organized into four series The first series compiles the works on analysis algebra and number theory it consists of 29 volumes and numbers over 14 000 pages The 31 volumes of Series II amounting to 10 660 pages contain the works on mechanics astronomy and engineering Series III contains 12 volumes on physics Series IV which contains the massive amount of Euler s correspondence unpublished manuscripts and notes only began compilation in 1967 After publishing 8 print volumes in Series IV the project decided in 2022 to publish its remaining projected volumes in Series IV in online format only Illustration from Solutio problematis a 1743 propositi published in Acta Eruditorum 1744 The title page of Euler s Methodus inveniendi lineas curvas Euler s 1760 world map Euler s 1753 map of AfricaNotesEuler is listed by an academic genealogy as the equivalent to the doctoral advisor of Lagrange The pronunciation ˈ juː l er YOO ler is considered incorrect The quote appeared in Gugliemo Libri s review of a recently published collection of correspondence among eighteenth century mathematicians nous rappellerions que Laplace lui meme ne cessait de repeter aux jeunes mathematiciens ces paroles memorables que nous avons entendues de sa propre bouche Lisez Euler lisez Euler c est notre maitre a tous we would recall that Laplace himself never ceased to repeat to young mathematicians these memorable words that we heard from his own mouth Read Euler read Euler he is our master in everything Gauss wrote this in a letter to Paul Fuss dated September 11 1849 Die besondere Herausgabe der kleinern Eulerschen Abhandlungen ist gewiss etwas hochst verdienstliches und das Studium aller Eulerschen Arbeiten doch stets die beste durch nichts anderes zu ersetzende Schule fur die verschiedenen mathematischen Gebiete bleiben wird The special publication of the smaller Euler treatises is certainly something highly deserving and the study of all Euler s works will always remain the best school for the various mathematical fields which cannot be replaced by anything else ReferencesLeonhard Euler at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Retrieved 2 July 2021 Archived Euler Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed Oxford University Press 1989 Euler Merriam Webster s Online Dictionary 2009 Archived from the original on 25 April 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2009 Euler Leonhard The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 2011 Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2013 Higgins Peter M 2007 Nets Puzzles and Postmen An Exploration of Mathematical Connections Oxford University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 19 921842 4 Dunham 1999 p 17 Debnath Lokenath 2010 The Legacy of Leonhard Euler A Tricentennial Tribute London Imperial College Press pp vii ISBN 978 1 84816 525 0 Debnath Lokenath 2010 The Legacy of Leonhard Euler A Tricentennial Tribute London Imperial College Press p 370 ISBN 978 1 84816 525 0 Assad Arjang A 2007 Leonhard Euler A brief appreciation Networks 49 3 190 198 doi 10 1002 net 20158 S2CID 11298706 Boyer Carl B 1 June 2021 Leonhard Euler Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 3 May 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Debnath Lokenath 15 April 2009 The legacy of Leonhard Euler a tricentennial tribute International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology 40 3 353 388 doi 10 1080 00207390802642237 ISSN 0020 739X Goldman Jay R 1998 The Queen of Mathematics A Historically Motivated Guide to Number Theory A K Peters p 24 ISBN 978 1 56881 006 5 Leonhardi Euleri Opera Omnia LEOO Bernoulli Euler Center Archived from the original on 11 September 2022 Retrieved 11 September 2022 The works Bernoulli Euler Society Archived from the original on 11 September 2022 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Gautschi 2008 p 3 Dunham 1999 p xiii Lisez Euler lisez Euler c est notre maitre a tous Grinstein Louise Lipsey Sally I 2001 Euler Leonhard 1707 1783 Encyclopedia 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Mathematica Vol 17 Birkhauser pp 119 135 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 00618 5 7 ISBN 978 3 319 00617 8 See in particular footnote 37 p 131 Finkel B F 1897 Biography Leonhard Euler The American Mathematical Monthly 4 12 297 302 doi 10 2307 2968971 JSTOR 2968971 MR 1514436 Trimble Virginia Williams Thomas Bracher Katherine Jarrell Richard Marche Jordan D Ragep F Jamil eds 2007 Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers Springer Science Business Media p 992 ISBN 978 0 387 30400 7 Available at Archive org Clark William Golinski Jan Schaffer Simon 1999 The Sciences in Enlightened Europe University of Chicago Press p 395 ISBN 978 0 226 10940 4 Archived from the original on 22 April 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Knobloch Eberhard 2007 Leonhard Euler 1707 1783 Zum 300 Geburtstag eines langjahrigen Wahlberliners Mitteilungen der Deutschen Mathematiker Vereinigung 15 4 276 288 doi 10 1515 dmvm 2007 0092 S2CID 122271644 Gautschi 2008 pp 8 9 Euler Leonhard 1802 Letters of Euler on Different Subjects of 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Glen eds Mathematics and the Historian s Craft The Kenneth O May Lectures Springer Publishing pp 81 140 ISBN 978 0 387 25284 1 Fuss Nicolas 1783 Eloge de M Leonhard Euler Eulogy for Leonhard Euler Nova Acta Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae in French 1 159 212 Archived from the original on 20 August 2021 Retrieved 19 May 2018 via Bioheritage Diversity Library Translated into English as Eulogy of Leonhard Euler by Nicolas Fuss MacTutor History of Mathematics archive Translated by Glaus John S D University of St Andrews Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 30 August 2006 Calinger 1996 p 129 Gekker amp Euler 2007 p 405 Meade Phil 27 November 1999 Letter Uncommon talent www newscientist com Retrieved 22 September 2024 Nahin Paul J 2017 Dr Euler s Fabulous Formula Cures Many Mathematical Ills Princeton Science Library Princeton Oxford Princeton University Press p 326 ISBN 978 0 691 17591 1 Lynch Peter 21 January 2021 Euler a mathematician without equal and 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122853454 Calinger 1996 pp 152 153 Home R W 1988 Leonhard Euler s anti Newtonian theory of light Annals of Science 45 5 521 533 doi 10 1080 00033798800200371 MR 0962700 Li Shengcai October 2015 Tiny bubbles challenge giant turbines Three Gorges puzzle Interface Focus 5 5 Royal Society 20150020 doi 10 1098 rsfs 2015 0020 PMC 4549846 PMID 26442144 Euler Leonhard 1757 Principes generaux de l etat d equilibre d un fluide General principles of the state of equilibrium of a fluid Academie Royale des Sciences et des Belles Lettres de Berlin Memoires in French 11 217 273 Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 Translated into English as Frisch Uriel 2008 Translation of Leonhard Euler s General Principles of the Motion of Fluids arXiv 0802 2383 nlin CD Gautschi 2008 p 22 Baron Margaret E May 1969 A note on the historical development of logic diagrams The Mathematical Gazette 53 383 113 125 doi 10 2307 3614533 JSTOR 3614533 S2CID 125364002 Lemanski Jens 2016 Means or end On the valuation of logic diagrams Logic Philosophical Studies 14 98 122 Rodgers Peter June 2014 A survey of Euler diagrams PDF Journal of Visual Languages amp Computing 25 3 134 155 doi 10 1016 j jvlc 2013 08 006 S2CID 2571971 Archived PDF from the original on 20 August 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Calinger 1996 pp 144 145 Pesic Peter 2014 Euler the mathematics of musical sadness Euler from sound to light Music and the Making of Modern Science MIT Press pp 133 160 ISBN 978 0 262 02727 4 Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 10 June 2021 Tegg Thomas 1829 Binary logarithms London encyclopaedia or Universal dictionary of science art literature and practical mechanics comprising a popular view of the present state of knowledge Volume 4 pp 142 143 Archived from the original on 23 May 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Euler 1739 p 115 Emery Eric 2000 Temps et musique Lausanne L Age d homme pp 344 345 Mattheson Johannes 1731 Grosse General Bass Schule Vol I Hamburg pp 104 106 OCLC 30006387 Mentioned by Euler Also Mattheson Johannes 1719 Exemplarische Organisten Probe Hamburg pp 57 59 See Perret Wilfrid 1926 Some Questions of Musical Theory Cambridge W Heffer amp Sons pp 60 62 OCLC 3212114 What is an Euler Fokker genus Microtonality Huygens Fokker Foundation Archived from the original on 21 May 2015 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Euler 1739 p 147 Euler Leonhard 1774 De harmoniae veris principiis per speculum musicum repraesentatis Novi Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Petropolitanae 18 Enestrom index 457 330 353 Retrieved 12 September 2022 Gollin Edward 2009 Combinatorial and transformational aspects of Euler s Speculum Musicum In Klouche T Noll Th eds Mathematics and Computation in Music First International Conference MCM 2007 Berlin Germany May 18 20 2007 Revised Selected Papers Communications in Computer and Information Science Vol 37 Springer pp 406 411 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 04579 0 40 ISBN 978 3 642 04578 3 Lindley Mark Turner Smith Ronald 1993 Mathematical Models of Musical Scales A New Approach Bonn Verlag fur Systematische Musikwissenschaft pp 234 239 ISBN 9783922626664 OCLC 27789639 See also Nolan Catherine 2002 Music Theory and Mathematics In Christensen Th ed The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory New York Cambridge University Press pp 278 279 ISBN 9781139053471 OCLC 828741887 Bailhache Patrice 17 January 1997 La Musique traduite en Mathematiques Leonhard Euler Communication au colloque du Centre Francois Viete Problemes de traduction au XVIIIe siecle Nantes in French Archived from the original on 28 November 2015 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Euler Leonhard 1747 Rettung der Gottlichen Offenbahrung gegen die Einwurfe der Freygeister Defense of divine revelation against the objections of the freethinkers in German Enestrom index 92 Berlin Ambrosius Haude and Johann Carl Spener Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 via Euler Archive Marquis de Condorcet 1805 Comparison to the Last Edition of Euler s Letters Published by de Condorcet with the Original Edition A Defense of the Revelation Against the Objections of Freethinkers by Mr Euler Followed by Thoughts by the Author on Religion Omitted From the Last Edition of his Letters to a Princess of Germany PDF Translated by Ho Andie Archived PDF from the original on 28 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2021 Calinger 1996 p 123 Calinger 1996 pp 153 154 See Brown B H May 1942 The Euler Diderot anecdote The American Mathematical Monthly 49 5 302 303 doi 10 2307 2303096 JSTOR 2303096 Gillings R J February 1954 The so called Euler Diderot incident The American Mathematical Monthly 61 2 77 80 doi 10 2307 2307789 JSTOR 2307789 Struik Dirk J 1967 A Concise History of Mathematics 3rd revised ed Dover Books p 129 ISBN 978 0 486 60255 4 Marty Jacques 1988 Quelques aspects des travaux de Diderot en mathematiques mixtes Some aspects of Diderot s work in general mathematics Recherches sur Diderot et sur l Encyclopedie in French 4 1 145 147 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 20 April 2012 Debnath Lokenath 2010 The Legacy of Leonhard Euler A Tricentennial Tribute London Imperial College Press p 56 ISBN 978 1 84816 525 0 Davis Donald M 2004 The Nature and Power of Mathematics Mineola N Y Dover Publications p 48 ISBN 978 0 486 43896 2 OCLC 56214613 Calinger 2016 p ix Calinger 2016 p 241 Schweizerische Nationalbank SNB Sechste Banknotenserie 1976 Swiss National Bank Archived from the original on 3 May 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Schweizerische Nationalbank SNB Siebte Banknotenserie 1984 Swiss National Bank Archived from the original on 23 April 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 E PDF Members of the American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 1780 2017 American Academy of Arts and Sciences pp 164 179 Archived PDF from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 17 February 2019 Entry for Euler is on p 177 Schmadel Lutz D ed 2007 2002 Euler Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Berlin Heidelberg Springer Publishing p 162 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 2003 ISBN 978 3 540 29925 7 Fraser Craig G 11 February 2005 Leonhard Euler s 1744 book on the calculus of variations Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 045744 4 In Grattan Guinness 2005 pp 168 180 Euler Leonhard 1744 Methodus inveniendi lineas curvas maximi minimive proprietate gaudentes sive solutio problematis isoperimetrici lattissimo sensu accepti A method for finding curved lines enjoying properties of maximum or minimum or solution of isoperimetric problems in the broadest accepted sense in Latin Bosquet Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 via Euler archive Reich Karin 11 February 2005 Introduction to analysis Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 045744 4 In Grattan Guinness 2005 pp 181 190 Ferraro Giovanni 2007 Euler s treatises on infinitesimal analysis Introductio in analysin infinitorum institutiones calculi differentialis institutionum calculi integralis In Baker Roger ed Euler Reconsidered Tercentenary Essays PDF Heber City UT Kendrick Press pp 39 101 MR 2384378 Archived from the original PDF on 12 September 2022 Reviews of Introduction to Analysis of the Infinite Aiton E J Introduction to analysis of the infinite Book I Transl by John D Blanton English zbMATH Zbl 0657 01013 Shiu P December 1990 Introduction to analysis of the infinite Book II by Leonard Euler translated by John D Blanton The Mathematical Gazette 74 470 392 393 doi 10 2307 3618156 JSTOR 3618156 Stefănescu Doru Euler Leonhard Introduction to analysis of the infinite Book I Translated from the Latin and with an introduction by John D Blanton Mathematical Reviews MR 1025504 Demidov S S 2005 Treatise on the differential calculus Elsevier ISBN 978 0080457444 Archived from the original on 18 June 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2015 In Grattan Guinness 2005 pp 191 198 Kleinert Andreas 2015 Leonhardi Euleri Opera omnia Editing the works and correspondence of Leonhard Euler Prace Komisji Historii Nauki PAU 14 Jagiellonian University 13 35 doi 10 4467 23921749pkhn pau 16 002 5258 Euler Leonhard Fuss Nikola Ivanovich Fuss Paul 1862 Opera postuma mathematica et physica anno 1844 detecta quae Academiae scientiarum petropolitanae obtulerunt ejusque auspicus ediderunt auctoris pronepotes Paulus Henricus Fuss et Nicolaus Fuss Imperatorskaia akademiia nauk Russia OCLC 9094558695 Calinger 2016 pp ix x The Enestrom Index Euler Archive Archived from the original on 9 August 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Knapp Susan 19 February 2007 Dartmouth students build online archive of historic mathematician Vox of Dartmouth Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 28 May 2010 Klyve Dominic June July 2011 Euler Archive Moves To MAA Website MAA FOCUS Mathematical Association of America Retrieved 9 January 2020 The Euler Archive University of the Pacific Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Pluss Matthias Der Goethe der Mathematik Swiss National Science Foundation Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 Varadarajan V S 2006 Euler through time a new look at old themes American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3580 7 OCLC 803144928 Libri Gugliemo January 1846 Correspondance mathematique et physique de quelques celebres geometres du XVIIIe siecle Mathematical and physical correspondence of some famous geometers of the eighteenth century Journal des Savants in French 51 Archived from the original on 9 August 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2014 Sources Calinger Ronald 1996 Leonhard Euler The First St Petersburg Years 1727 1741 Historia Mathematica 23 2 121 166 doi 10 1006 hmat 1996 0015 Calinger Ronald 2016 Leonhard Euler Mathematical Genius in the Enlightenment Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11927 4 Archived from the original on 13 July 2017 Retrieved 4 January 2017 Dunham William 1999 Euler The Master of Us All Dolciani Mathematical Expositions Vol 22 Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 328 3 Archived from the original on 13 June 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2015 Euler Leonhard 1739 Tentamen novae theoriae musicae An attempt at a new theory of music exposed in all clearness according to the most well founded principles of harmony in Latin St Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 12 June 2021 Retrieved 12 June 2021 via Euler archive Ferraro Giovanni 2008 The Rise and Development of the Theory of Series up to the Early 1820s Springer Science Business Media ISBN 978 0 387 73467 5 Archived from the original on 29 May 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Gekker I R Euler A A 2007 Leonhard Euler s family and descendants In Bogolyubov Nikolaĭ Nikolaevich Mikhaĭlov G K Yushkevich Adolph Pavlovich eds Euler and Modern Science Translated by Robert Burns Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 564 5 Archived from the original on 18 May 2016 Retrieved 12 November 2015 Gautschi Walter 2008 Leonhard Euler His Life the Man and His Works SIAM Review 50 1 3 33 Bibcode 2008SIAMR 50 3G CiteSeerX 10 1 1 177 8766 doi 10 1137 070702710 ISSN 0036 1445 JSTOR 20454060 Grattan Guinness Ivor ed 2005 Landmark Writings in Western Mathematics 1640 1940 Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 045744 4 Richeson David S 2012 Euler s Gem The Polyhedron Formula and the Birth of Topology Princeton University Press p 17 ISBN 978 1 4008 3856 1 Further readingBradley Robert E D Antonio Lawrence A Sandifer Charles Edward 2007 Euler at 300 An Appreciation Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 565 2 Bradley Robert E Sandifer Charles Edward eds 2007 Leonhard Euler Life Work and Legacy Studies in the History and Philosophy of Mathematics Vol 5 Elsevier ISBN 978 0 444 52728 8 Archived from the original on 19 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Dunham William 2007 The Genius of Euler Reflections on his Life and Work Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 558 4 Hascher Xavier Papadopoulos Athanase eds 2015 Leonhard Euler Mathematicien physicien et theoricien de la musique in French Paris CNRS Editions ISBN 978 2 271 08331 9 Archived from the original on 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Sandifer C Edward 2007 The Early Mathematics of Leonhard Euler Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 559 1 Sandifer C Edward 2007 How Euler Did It Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 563 8 Sandifer C Edward 2015 How Euler Did Even More Mathematical Association of America ISBN 978 0 88385 584 3 Archived from the original on 16 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Schattschneider Doris ed November 1983 A Tribute to Leonhard Euler 1707 1783 special issue Mathematics Magazine 56 5 JSTOR i326726 External linksLeonhard Euler at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from CommonsQuotations from WikiquoteTexts from WikisourceData from Wikidata Leonhard Euler at the Mathematics Genealogy Project The Euler Archive Composition of Euler works with translations into English Opera Bernoulli Euler compiled works of Euler Bernoulli family and contemporary peers Euler Tercentenary 2007 The Euler Society Euleriana at the Berlin Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities Euler Family Tree Euler s Correspondence with Frederick the Great King of Prussia Works by Leonhard Euler at LibriVox public domain audiobooks O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Leonhard Euler MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Dunham William 24 September 2009 An Evening with Leonhard Euler YouTube Muhlenberg College philoctetesctr published 9 November 2009 talk given by William Dunham at Dunham William 14 October 2008 A Tribute to Euler William Dunham YouTube Muhlenberg College PoincareDuality published 23 November 2011 Portals BiographyChessMathematicsArithmeticPhysicsEngineeringMusicScienceHistory of ScienceSwitzerlandRussia