The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course

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92 4. WOMEN MATHEMATICIANS


(1804 1851). All she had to do was reduce the equations of motion to integrals;

evaluating them was within her power, she knew. Unfortunately, it turns out that

the completely general set of such equations cannot be reduced to integrals. But

Kovalevskaya found a new case, much more general than the cases already known,

in which this reduction was possible. The algebraic changes of variable by which

she made this reduction are quite impressive, spread over some 16 pages of one of

the papers she eventually published on this subject. Still more impressive is the

80-page argument that follows to evaluate these integrals, which turn out to be

hyperelliptic, involving the square root of a fifth-degree polynomial. This work so

impressed the leading mathematicians of Paris that they decided the time had come

to propose a contest for work in this area. When the contest was held in 1888, Ko-

valevskaya submitted a paper and was awarded the prize. She had finally reached

the top of her profession and was rewarded with a tenured position in Stockholm.

Sadly, she was not to be in that lofty position for long. In January 1891 she con-

tracted pneumonia while returning to Stockholm from a winter vacation in Italy

and died on February 10.

Bronze bust of Sof'ya Kovalevskaya, placed outside the Institut

Mittag-Leffler in Djursholm, Sweden on January 15, 2000, the

150th anniversary of her birth.
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