Jacques Hadamard
{{Short description|French mathematician (1865–1963)}}
{{Redirect|Hadamard|other uses|Hadamard (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2018}}
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Jacques Hadamard
| honorific_suffix = {{postnom|country=GBR|ForMemRS|size=100%}}
| image = Hadamard2 cropped.jpg
| signature = Jacques Hadamard signature.png
| image_size = 225px
| caption = Jacques Salomon Hadamard
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1865|12|8}}
| birth_place = Versailles, France
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1963|10|17|1865|12|8}}
| death_place = Paris, France
| nationality = French
| alma_mater = École Normale Supérieure
| thesis_title = Essai sur l'étude des fonctions données par leur développement de Taylor
| thesis_url = http://sites.mathdoc.fr/JMPA/PDF/JMPA_1892_4_8_A4_0.pdf
| thesis_year = 1892
| doctoral_advisor = C. Émile Picard{{Cite journal | last1 = Hadamard | first1 = J. | author-link = Jacques Hadamard| title = Emile Picard. 1856–1941 | doi = 10.1098/rsbm.1942.0012 | journal = Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society | volume = 4 | issue = 11 | pages = 129–150| year = 1942 | title-link = Émile Picard | s2cid = 162244074 }}
Jules Tannery
| doctoral_students = Maurice René Fréchet
Marc Krasner
Paul Lévy
Szolem Mandelbrojt
André Weil
| known_for = Hadamard product
Proof of prime number theorem
Hadamard matrices
Hadamard's maximal determinant problem
| footnotes =
| field = Mathematics
| work_institution = University of Bordeaux
Sorbonne
Collège de France
École Polytechnique
École Centrale Paris
| prizes = Grand Prix des Sciences Mathématiques (1892)
Prix Poncelet (1898)
CNRS Gold medal (1956)
}}
Jacques Salomon Hadamard {{postnom|country=GBR|ForMemRS}}{{Cite journal | last1 = Cartwright | first1 = M. L. | author-link = Mary Cartwright| doi = 10.1098/rsbm.1965.0005 | title = Jacques Hadamard. 1865-1963 | journal = Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society | volume = 11 | pages = 75–99| year = 1965 | doi-access = free }} ({{IPA|fr|adamaʁ|lang}}; 8 December 1865 – 17 October 1963) was a French mathematician who made major contributions in number theory, complex analysis, differential geometry, and partial differential equations.{{MacTutor Biography|id=Hadamard|mode=cs1}}{{MathGenealogy |id=24555}}{{cite journal|last1=Mandelbrojt|first1= Szolem|author-link1=Szolem Mandelbrojt|last2=Schwartz|first2=Laurent|author-link2=Laurent Schwartz|title=Jacques Hadamard (1865–1963)|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1965|volume=71|issue=1|pages=107–129|mr=0179049|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1965-11243-5|doi-access=free}}
Biography
The son of a teacher, Amédée Hadamard, of Jewish descent, and Claire Marie Jeanne Picard, Hadamard was born in Versailles, France and attended the Lycée Charlemagne and Lycée Louis-le-Grand, where his father taught. In 1884 Hadamard entered the École Normale Supérieure, having placed first in the entrance examinations both there and at the École Polytechnique. His teachers included Tannery, Hermite, Darboux, Appell, Goursat, and Picard. He obtained his doctorate in 1892 and in the same year was awarded the {{lang|fr|Grand Prix des Sciences Mathématiques}} for his essay on the Riemann zeta function.
In 1892 Hadamard married Louise-Anna Trénel, also of Jewish descent, with whom he had three sons and two daughters. The following year he took up a lectureship in the University of Bordeaux, where he proved his celebrated inequality on determinants, which led to the discovery of Hadamard matrices when equality holds. In 1896 he made two important contributions: he proved the prime number theorem, using complex function theory (also proved independently by Charles Jean de la Vallée-Poussin); and he was awarded the Bordin Prize of the French Academy of Sciences for his work on geodesics in the differential geometry of surfaces and dynamical systems. In the same year he was appointed Professor of Astronomy and Rational Mechanics in Bordeaux. His foundational work on geometry and symbolic dynamics continued in 1898 with the study of geodesics on surfaces of negative curvature. For his cumulative work, he was awarded the Prix Poncelet in 1898.
After the Dreyfus affair, which involved him personally because his second cousin Lucie was the wife of Dreyfus, Hadamard became politically active and a staunch supporter of Jewish causes{{harvtxt|Cartwright|1965}}, p. 731: "Hadamard recognised the danger of Hitlerism very early and, although a free thinker and anti-zionist, he was against all racial discrimination and worked to help the Jews in Germany in a more enlightened way than the Israelite Consistory and Zionist circles. With Paul Langevin he schemed to get a chair created for Einstein in France." though he professed to be an atheist in his religion.{{cite journal |last1=Hadamard |first1=Jacques |editor1-last=Mandelbrot |editor1-first=Benoit B. |editor1-link=Benoit Mandelbrot |translator=I. H. Rose |title=How I did not discover relativity |journal=The Mathematical Intelligencer |date=March 1988 |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=65–67 |doi=10.1007/BF03028360 |publisher=Springer |s2cid=122781052 |quote=Hermite loved to direct to me remarks such as: 'He who strays from the paths traced by Providence crashes.' These were the words of a profoundly religious man, but an atheist like me understood them very well[.] |quote-page=66}}
- {{cite web |date=March 2006 |title=Hadamard on Hermite |website=MacTutor |url=https://mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk/Extras/Hadamard_Hermite/}}{{cite book|last=Shaposhnikova|first=T. O.|title=Jacques Hadamard: A Universal Mathematician|year=1999|publisher=American Mathematical Soc.|isbn=978-0-8218-1923-4|pages=33–34}}
In 1897 he moved back to Paris, holding positions in the Sorbonne and the Collège de France, where he was appointed Professor of Mechanics in 1909. In addition to this post, he was appointed to chairs of analysis at the École Polytechnique in 1912 and at the École Centrale in 1920, succeeding Jordan and Appell. In Paris Hadamard concentrated his interests on the problems of mathematical physics, in particular partial differential equations, the calculus of variations and the foundations of functional analysis. He introduced the idea of well-posed problem and the method of descent in the theory of partial differential equations, culminating in his seminal book on the subject, based on lectures given at Yale University in 1922. Later in his life he wrote on probability theory and mathematical education.
Hadamard was elected to the French Academy of Sciences in 1916, in succession to Poincaré, whose complete works he helped edit. He became foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1920.{{cite web|url=http://www.dwc.knaw.nl/biografie/pmknaw/?pagetype=authorDetail&aId=PE00000612 |title=Jacques S. Hadamard (1865–1963) |publisher=Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences |access-date=19 July 2015}} He was elected a foreign member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR in 1929. He visited the Soviet Union in 1930 and 1934 and China in 1936 at the invitation of Soviet and Chinese mathematicians.
Hadamard stayed in France at the beginning of the Second World War and escaped to southern France in 1940. The Vichy government permitted him to leave for the United States in 1941 and he obtained a visiting position at Columbia University in New York. He moved to London in 1944 and returned to France when the war ended in 1945.
Hadamard was awarded an honorary doctorate (LL.D.) by Yale University in October 1901, during celebrations for the bicentenary of the university.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=United States|date=24 October 1901 |page=3 |issue=36594}} He was awarded the CNRS Gold medal for his lifetime achievements in 1956. He died in Paris in 1963, aged ninety-seven.
Hadamard's students included Maurice Fréchet, Paul Lévy, Szolem Mandelbrojt, and André Weil.
On creativity
In his book Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field,{{cite book |author=Hadamard, Jacques |title=An essay on the psychology of invention in the mathematical field |publisher=Dover Publications |location=New York |year=1954 |isbn=0-486-20107-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/essayonpsycholog00hada }} Hadamard uses the results of introspection to study mathematical thought processes,{{r|psy-math-54|p=2}} and tries to report and interpret observations, personal or gathered from other scholars engaged in the work of invention.{{r|psy-math-54|p=133}} In sharp contrast to authors who identify language and cognition, he describes his own mathematical thinking as largely wordless, often accompanied by mental images that represent the entire solution to a problem. He surveyed 100 of the leading physicists of the day (approximately 1900), asking them how they did their work.
Hadamard described the experiences of the mathematicians/theoretical physicists Carl Friedrich Gauss, Hermann von Helmholtz, Henri Poincaré and others as viewing entire solutions with "sudden spontaneousness".{{r|psy-math-54|pp=13–16}}
Hadamard described the process as having four steps of the five-step Graham Wallas creative process model, with the first three also having been put forth by Helmholtz:{{r|psy-math-54|p=56}} Preparation, Incubation, Illumination, and Verification (Wallas' five stages added "Intimation" prior to Illumination, a sudden feeling of being about to find the solution to a problem).{{cite web |url=https://creativeagni.com/ezine/2012/01/creativity-techniques-creative-process-the-graham-wallas-5-stage-model-illustration-of-instructional-designer-elearning-course-developer-in-delhi-india/ |title=The Wallas Stage Model of Creativity |last=Anand |first=Shafali R. |date=3 January 2012 | access-date=2024-01-24 |quote=The Wallas Stage Model of Creativity divides the process of creative thinking into 5 stages. These stages are Preparation, Incubation, Intimation, Illumination, and Verification.}}
Publications
{{refbegin}}
- An Essay on the Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field. Princeton University Press, 1945;{{cite journal|author=Barzun, Jacques|author-link=Jacques Barzun|title=Review: An essay on the psychology of invention in the mathemathical field by J. Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1946|volume=52|issue=3|pages=222–224|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1946-52-03/S0002-9904-1946-08528-6/S0002-9904-1946-08528-6.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1946-08528-6|doi-access=free}} new edition under the title The Mathematician's Mind: The Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field, 1996; {{isbn|0-691-02931-8}}, [https://archive.org/details/eassayonthepsych006281mbp Online]
- Le problème de Cauchy et les équations aux dérivées partielles linéaires hyperboliques, Hermann 1932{{cite journal|author=Tamarkin, J. D.|author-link=Jacob Tamarkin|title=Review: Le Problème de Cauchy et les Équations aux Dérivées Partielles Linéaires Hyperboliques by J. Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1934|volume=40|issue=3|pages=203–204|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1934-40-03/S0002-9904-1934-05815-4/S0002-9904-1934-05815-4.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1934-05815-4|doi-access=free}} (Lectures given at Yale, Eng. trans. Lectures on Cauchy's problem in linear partial differential equations, Yale University Press, Oxford University Press 1923, Reprint Dover 2003)
- La série de Taylor et son prolongement analytique, 2nd edn., Gauthier-Villars 1926
- La théorie des équations aux dérivées partielles, Peking, Editions Scientifiques, 1964
- Leçons sur le calcul des variations, Vol. 1, Paris, Hermann 1910,{{cite journal|author=Hedrick, E. R.|author-link=Earle Raymond Hedrick|title=Review: Leçons sur le Calcul des Variations, par J. Hadamard; recueillies par M. Fréchet. Tome Premier.|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1914|volume=21|issue=1|pages=30–32|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1914-21-01/S0002-9904-1914-02567-4/S0002-9904-1914-02567-4.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1914-02567-4|doi-access=free}} [https://archive.org/details/leonssurlecalc00hadauoft Online]
- Leçons sur la propagation des ondes et les équations de l'hydrodynamique, Paris, Hermann 1903,{{cite journal|author=Wilson, Edwin Bidwell|author-link=Edwin Bidwell Wilson|title=Review: Leçons sur la Propagation des Ondes et les Equations de l'Hydrodynamique by Jacques Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1904|volume=10|issue=6|pages=305–317|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1904-10-06/S0002-9904-1904-01115-5/S0002-9904-1904-01115-5.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1904-01115-5|doi-access=free}} [https://archive.org/details/leconssurlaprop00hadagoog Online]
- [http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009789898 Four lectures on Mathematics, delivered at Columbia University 1911], Columbia University Press 1915{{cite journal|author=Moore, C. N.|author-link=Charles Napoleon Moore|title=Review: Four Lectures on Mathematics (Delivered at Columbia University in 1911) by J. Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1917|volume=23|issue=7|pages=317–319|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1917-23-07/S0002-9904-1917-02949-7/S0002-9904-1917-02949-7.pdf|doi=10.1090/S0002-9904-1917-02949-7|doi-access=free}} (1. The definition of solutions of linear partial differential equations by boundary conditions, 2. Contemporary researches in differential equations, integral equations and integro-differential equations, 3. Analysis Situs in connection with correspondences and differential equations, 4. Elementary solutions of partial differential equations and Greens functions), [https://archive.org/details/fourlecturesonma29788gut Online]
- Leçons de géométrie élémentaire, 2 vols., Paris, Colin, 1898,{{cite journal|author=Morley, Frank|author-link=Frank Morley|title=Review: Leçons de Géométrie élémentaire (vol. 1), par Jacques Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1898|volume=4|issue=10|pages=550–551|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1898-04-10/S0002-9904-1898-00547-5/S0002-9904-1898-00547-5.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1898-00547-5|doi-access=free}} 1906 (Eng. trans: Lessons in Geometry, American Mathematical Society 2008), Vol. 1, [https://archive.org/details/leonsdegomtriel04hadagoog Vol. 2]
- Cours d'analyse professé à l'École polytechnique, 2 vols., Paris, Hermann 1925/27, 1930 (Vol. 1:{{cite journal|author=Hildebrandt, T. H.|author-link=Theophil Henry Hildebrandt|title=Review: Cours d'Analyse, vol. 1, by J. Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1928|volume=34|issue=6|pages=781–782|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1928-34-06/S0002-9904-1928-04650-5/S0002-9904-1928-04650-5.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1928-04650-5|doi-access=free}} Compléments de calcul différentiel, intégrales simples et multiples, applications analytiques et géométriques, équations différentielles élémentaires, Vol. 2:{{cite journal|author=Moore, C. N.|title=Review: Cours d'Analyse, vol. 2, by J. Hadamard|journal=Bull. Amer. Math. Soc.|year=1933|volume=39|issue=3|pages=185–186|url=https://www.ams.org/journals/bull/1933-39-03/S0002-9904-1933-05568-4/S0002-9904-1933-05568-4.pdf|doi=10.1090/s0002-9904-1933-05568-4|doi-access=free}} Potentiel, calcul des variations, fonctions analytiques, équations différentielles et aux dérivées partielles, calcul des probabilités)
- Essai sur l'étude des fonctions données par leur développement de Taylor. Étude sur les propriétés des fonctions entières et en particulier d'une fonction considérée par Riemann, 1893, [https://archive.org/details/essaisurltuded00hadauoft Online]
- {{cite journal|title=Étude sur les propriétés des fonctions entières et en particulier d'une fonction considérée par Riemann|journal=Journal de mathématiques pures et appliquées|year=1893|pages=171–216|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044102908969&view=1up&seq=185&q1=hadamard}}
- Sur la distribution des zéros de la fonction et ses conséquences arithmétiques, Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France, Vol. 24, 1896, pp. 199–220 [https://web.archive.org/web/20120717195014/http://www.numdam.org/numdam-bin/fitem?id=BSMF_1896__24__199_1 Online]
- {{cite book | last1=Hadamard | first1=Jacques | title=Lectures on Cauchy's problem in linear partial differential equations | orig-date=1923 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B25O-x21uqkC | publisher=Dover Publications, New York | series=Dover Phoenix editions | isbn=978-0-486-49549-1 | year=2003 | mr=0051411 | jfm=49.0725.04}}
- {{cite book | last1=Hadamard | first1=Jacques | title=Non-Euclidean geometry in the theory of automorphic functions | orig-date=1951 | url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0821820303 | publisher=American Mathematical Society | location=Providence, R.I. | series=History of Mathematics | isbn=978-0-8218-2030-8 | year=1999 | volume=17 | mr=1723250}}
- {{cite book | last1=Hadamard | first1=Jacques | title=Lessons in geometry. I | orig-date=1947 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fLwydFiM7zMC | publisher=American Mathematical Society | location=Providence, R.I. | isbn=978-0-8218-4367-3 | year=2008 | mr=2463454 | doi=10.1090/mbk/057}}
- {{cite book | last1=Hadamard | first1=Jacques | editor1-last=Fréchet | editor1-first=M. | editor2-last=Lévy | editor2-first=P. | editor3-last=Mandelbrojt | editor3-first=S. |display-editors = 3 | editor4-last=Schwartz | editor4-first=Laurent | title=Œuvres de Jacques Hadamard. Tomes I, II, III, IV | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XOTuAAAAMAAJ | publisher=Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris | year=1968 | mr=0230598}}
{{refend}}
See also
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
Further reading
- {{DSB |first=S. |last=Mandelbrojt |title=Hadamard, Jacques |volume=6 |pages=3–5}}
- {{cite book|title=Life and Work of Jacques Hadamard|first1=Vladimir|last1=Maz'ya|author1-link=Vladimir Gilelevich Maz'ya|first2=T. O.|last2=Shaposhnikova|publisher=American Mathematical Society|year=1998|isbn=0-8218-0841-9|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/jacqueshadamardu0000mazi}}.
- {{cite book|title=Jacques Hadamard: a universal mathematician|first1=V. G.|last1= Maz'ya|first2= T. O.|last2= Shaposhnikova|author-link1=Vladimir Gilelevich Maz'ya|publisher=American Mathematical Society/London Mathematical Society|series=History of Mathematics|volume=14|year=1998|isbn=0821819232}}
External links
{{wikiquote}}
- {{Commons category-inline}}
- {{wikisourcelang-inline|fr}}
- {{Gutenberg author | id=34172| name=Jacques Hadamard}}
- {{Internet Archive author |sname=Jacques Salomon Hadamard}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hadamard, Jacques}}
Category:People from Versailles
Category:19th-century French mathematicians
Category:20th-century French mathematicians
Category:Lycée Louis-le-Grand alumni
Category:École Normale Supérieure alumni
Category:Academic staff of the Collège de France
Category:Columbia University faculty
Category:19th-century French Jews
Category:Members of the French Academy of Sciences
Category:Foreign members of the Royal Society
Category:Corresponding Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences (1917–1925)
Category:Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Sciences
Category:Members of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
Category:Foreign associates of the National Academy of Sciences
Category:French number theorists
Category:Partial differential equation theorists
Category:Academic staff of the University of Paris
Category:French textbook writers
Category:Academic staff of École Polytechnique