Url: http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Lebesgue.html
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This is one of the achievements of modern analysis which greatly expands the scope of Fourier analysis. This outstanding piece of work appears in Lebesque's dissertation, Intégrale, longueur, aire, presented to the University of Nancy in 1902.
In addition to about 50 papers he wrote two major books Leçons sur l'intégration et la recherché des fonctions primitives (1904) and Leçons sur les séries trigonométriques (1906). He also made major contributions in other areas of mathematics, including topology, potential theory, and Fourier analysis. In 1905 he gave a deep discussion of the various conditions Lipschitz and Jordan had used in order to ensure that f(x) is the sum of its Fourier series.
He was appointed to the Sorbonne in 1910 but he did not concentrate on the field he had himself started. This was because his work was a striking generalisation, yet Lebesgue himself was fearful of generalisations. He wrote
Reduced to general theories, mathematics would be a beautiful form without content. It would quickly die.
Although future developments showed his fears to be groundless, they do allow
us to understand the course his own work followed.
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
| List of References (16 books/articles) | A Quotation
|
| A Poster of Henri Lebesgue | Mathematicians born in the same country
|
| Cross-references to History Topics | The
beginnings of set theory |
| Other references in MacTutor | Chronology: 1900 to 1910 |
| Honours awarded to Henri
Lebesgue (Click a link below for the full list of mathematicians honoured in this way) | |
| Fellow of the Royal Society | Elected 1934 |
| Lunar features | Crater Lebesgue |
| Other Web sites | |
| JOC/EFR February 1997
The URL of this page is: | School_of_Mathematics_and_Statistics University_of_St_Andrews,_Scotland | |
| http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Lebesgue.html | ||