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A theorem stating that if a mapping

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Prizes - life goose, bottle of wine, flask of brandy. 1972 life goose was presented to Swedish mathematician Per Enflo. THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A theorem stating that if a mapping


1
?
2
STEFAN BANACH
3
STEFAN BANACH
  •   Founded the important modern mathematical
    field of functional analysis and made major
    contributions to the theory of topological vector
    spaces. 
  • In addition, he contributed to measure theory,
    integration, the theory of sets and orthogonal
    series.

4
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • Early years born March 30, 1892
  • Gymnasium - tutoring
  • mathematics is too sharp a tool to put into
  • the hands of children for training in logical
    thinking, there is nothing better than
    accusativus cum infinitivo and ablativus
    absolutus.

5
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • Lvov Polytechnic
  • since mathematics was so highly developed, it
    would be impossible to do anything new in this
    discipline
  • 1914 half-diploma examinations (freshman and
    sophomore years)

6
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • Word War I- excused from military services
  • Alfred Whitehead and Bernard Russells
  • Principia Mathematica and Einsteins special
    and general theories of relativity
  • Lectures at Jagiellonian University
  • Hugo Steinhaus discovery
  • Marriage - Lucja Braus in 1920

7
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8
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • 1920 doctoral dissertation On operations on
    abstract sets and their applications to integral
    equations
  • Introduces an abstract object that later came to
    be called a Banach space
  • To some degree, this dissertation brought
    functional analysis to independent life.
  • Obstacles in formal process of obtaining Ph.D

9
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • 1922 Banach received his habilitation, became a
    Professor Extraordinarius at Jan Kazimierz
    University
  • Need for writing textbooks

10
The Scottish Café
11
The Scottish Café
  • What the Cafés of Montmartre did for the arts of
    Fin-de-Siècle Paris, the Scottish Café did for
    mathematics in Lvov.
  • Incredibly fruitful collaboration of a group of
    unusually gifted and original minds.
  • tiny tables with marble tops were extremely
    useful as tablets to be covered with mathematical
    formulas. At first the owner was not overly
    enthusiastic

12
The Scottish Café
  • We have to regretfully state that many valuable
    results of Banach and of his school were lost ()
    as a result of lack of pedantry among members of
    the school and, first of all, Banach himself.
  • Scottish Café a phenomenon of teamwork in
    unorthodox places that led to joint solution of
    research problems

13
The Scottish Book
  • One of the most revered relics of the
    mathematical world
  • A regular, ruled school notebook
  • An unofficial communal scientific publication
    anyone interested could write down problems to be
    solved and anyone could write his solutions.

14
The Scottish Book
  • Many problems from Scottish Book played a
    significant role the development of functional
    analysis and other branches of mathematics.
  • Prizes - life goose, bottle of wine, flask of
    brandy
  • 1972 life goose was presented to Swedish
    mathematician Per Enflo.

15
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16
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • Banachs unconventional behavior
  • Superb teacher
  • Author of elementary textbooks
  • Soviet occupation Dean of the
    Physical-Mathematical Faculty and Head of the
    Department of Mathematical Analysis

17
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • German invasion 1941
  • Himmlers Extraordinary Pacification Action 40
    Polish scholars professors, writers, and other
    distinguished representatives of Lvov
    intelligentsia perished at the hands of the
    Nazis.
  • Banachs pitiful physical condition feeder of
    lice in the Rudolf Weigl Bacteriological
    Institute until July 1944

18
THE LIFE OF STEFAN BANACH
  • An offer of a chair at the Jagiellonian
    University
  • Minister of Education
  • Banach died on August 31 1945 in Lvov.

19
Banachs Fixed Point Theorem
20
A theorem stating that if a mapping ƒ of a metric
space E into itself is a contraction, then there
exists a unique element x of E such that ƒ(x)
x. Also known as contraction mapping principle.
21
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • Did you know that it is possible to cut a solid
    ball into 5 pieces, and by re-assembling them,
    using rigid motions only, form TWO solid balls,
    EACH THE SAME SIZE AND SHAPE as the original?
  • So why can't you do this in real life, say, with
    a block of gold?

22
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • If matter were infinitely divisible (which it is
    not) then it might be possible. But the pieces
    involved are so "jagged" and exotic that they do
    not have a well-defined notion of volume, or
    measure, associated to them. In fact, what the
    Banach-Tarski paradox shows is that no matter how
    you try to define "volume" so that it corresponds
    with our usual definition for nice sets, there
    will always be "bad" sets for which it is
    impossible to define a "volume"! (Or else the
    above example would show that 2 1.)

23
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • It is interesting to note that one corollary
    to
  • This paradox is that you can take a sphere,
    cut it into n pieces, remove some of the pieces,
    and reassemble the remaining pieces back into the
    original sphere without missing anything.
    Obviously it is not possible with a physical
    sphere but it is possible with mathematical
    spheres (which are infinitely divisible), if the
    Axiom of Choice is assumed.

24
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • An alternate version of this theorem says it is
    possible to take a solid ball the size of a pea,
    and by cutting it into a FINITE number of pieces,
    reassemble it to form A SOLID BALL THE SIZE OF
    THE SUN.
  • You might want to say that mathematics in this
    case reveals to us that we must be very careful
    about how we define things (like volumes) that
    seem very intuitive to us.

25
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • First of all, if we didn't restrict ourselves to
    rigid motions, it would be more believable. For
    instance, you can take the interval 0,1,
    stretch it to twice its length and cut it into 2
    pieces each the same as the original interval.
    Secondly, if we didn't restrict ourselves to a
    finite number of pieces, it would be more
    believable, too the cardinality of the number of
    points in one ball is the same as that of two
    balls!

26
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • Let A be a unit circle, and let B be a unit
    circle with one point X missing (called a
    "deleted circle"). Are sets A and B
    equidecomposable? Consider set B and let U be the
    subset consisting of all points that are a
    positive integer number of radians clockwise from
    X along the circle. This is a countable infinite
    set (the irrationality of Pi prevents two such
    points from coinciding). Let set V be everything
    else.
  • If you pick set U up and rotate it
    counterclockwise by one radian, something very
    interesting happens. The deleted hole at X gets
    filled by the point 1 radian away, and the point
    at the (n-1)-th radian gets filled by the point
    at the n-th radian. Every point vacated gets
    filled, and in addition, the empty point at X
    gets filled too!

27
Banach-Tarski Paradox
  • Thus, B may be decomposed into sets U and V,
    which after this reassembling, form set A, a
    complete circle!
  • This elementary example forms the beginnings of
    the idea of how to accomplish the Banach-Tarski
    paradox

28
High School Connections
  • Banachs biography
  • Math Fun Facts
  • Norm and vectors absolute value
  • Banachs Contraction Principle
  • Scottish Book- form of working with
    mathematically gifted students (classrooms blogs
    or websites)

29
REFERENCES
  • Roman Kaluza, Through a reporters eyes. The Life
    of Stefan Banach
  • Su, Francis E., et al. "Banach-Tarski Paradox."
    Mudd Math Fun Facts. lthttp//www.math.hmc.edu/funf
    actsgt.
  • Su, Francis E., et al. "Equidecomposability."
    Mudd Math Fun Facts. lthttp//www.math.hmc.edu/funf
    actsgt.
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