Bolza
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Oskar Bolza (12 May 1857 – 5 July 1942) was a German mathematician, and student of Felix Klein. He was born in
Bad Bergzabern Bad Bergzabern () is a municipality in the Südliche Weinstraße district, on the German Wine Route in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is situated near the border with France, on the south-eastern edge of the Palatinate forest, approximately ...
, Palatinate, then a district of Bavaria, known for his research in the
calculus of variations The calculus of variations (or Variational Calculus) is a field of mathematical analysis that uses variations, which are small changes in functions and functionals, to find maxima and minima of functionals: mappings from a set of functions t ...
, particularly influenced by Karl Weierstrass' 1879 lectures on the subject.


Life

Bolza entered the University of Berlin in 1875. His first interest was in linguistics, then he studied physics with
Kirchhoff Kirchhoff, Kirchoff or Kirchhoffer is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Adolf Kirchhoff (1826–1908), German classical scholar and epigrapher * Alfred Kirchhoff (1838–1907), German geographer and naturalist * Alphonse ...
and
Helmholtz Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (31 August 1821 – 8 September 1894) was a German physicist and physician who made significant contributions in several scientific fields, particularly hydrodynamic stability. The Helmholtz Association, ...
, but experimental work did not attract him, so he decided on mathematics in 1878. The years 1878–1881 were spent studying under
Elwin Christoffel Elwin Bruno Christoffel (; 10 November 1829 – 15 March 1900) was a German mathematician and physicist. He introduced fundamental concepts of differential geometry, opening the way for the development of tensor calculus, which would later provid ...
and
Theodor Reye Karl Theodor Reye (born 20 June 1838 in Ritzebüttel, Germany and died 2 July 1919 in Würzburg, Germany) was a German mathematician. He contributed to geometry, particularly projective geometry and synthetic geometry. He is best known for his ...
at Strasbourg, Hermann Schwarz at Göttingen, and particularly Karl Weierstrass in Berlin. In the spring of 1888 he landed in
Hoboken, NJ Hoboken ( ; Unami: ') is a city in Hudson County in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the 2020 U.S. census, the city's population was 60,417. The Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program calculated that the city's population was 58,690 ...
, searching for a job in the United States: he succeeded in finding a position in 1889 at Johns Hopkins University and then at the then newly founded Clark University.According to . In 1892 Bolza joined the University of Chicago and worked there up to 1910 when, after becoming unhappy in the United States as a consequence of the death of his friend
Heinrich Maschke Heinrich Maschke (24 October 1853 in Breslau, Germany (now Wrocław, Poland) – 1 March 1908 Chicago, Illinois, USA) was a German mathematician who proved Maschke's theorem. Maschke earned his Ph.D. degree from the University of Göttingen in 1 ...
in 1908, he and his wife returned to Freiburg in Germany. The events of World War I greatly affected Bolza and, after 1914, he stopped his research in mathematics. He became interested in religious psychology, languages (particularly Sanskrit), and Indian religions. He published the book ''Glaubenlose Religion'' (religion without belief) in 1930 under the pseudonym F. H. Marneck. However, later in his life, he returned to do research in mathematics, lecturing at University of Freiburg from 1929 up to his retirement in 1933.


Academic career

He completed his doctoral studies, after eight years of study and many changes of direction, in 1886, from the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. He wrote his thesis, titled ''Über die Reduction hyperelliptischer Integrale erster Ordnung und erster Gattung auf elliptische, insbesondere über die Reduction durch eine Transformation vierten Grades'' (translated as ''On reduction of hyperelliptic integrals of first order and first kind to elliptic integrals, especially on reduction by transformation of fourth-degree'') under the supervision of Felix Klein. In 1889 Bolza worked at Johns Hopkins University, where Simon Newcomb gave him a temporary short-term appointment " reader in mathematics", then he obtained a position as an
associate professor Associate professor is an academic title with two principal meanings: in the North American system and that of the ''Commonwealth system''. Overview In the ''North American system'', used in the United States and many other countries, it is a ...
at Clark University. While at Clark, Bolza published the important paper ''On the theory of substitution groups and its application to algebraic equations'' in the American Journal of Mathematics. In 1892 Bolza joined the University of Chicago and worked there up to 1910, when he decided to return to Freiburg in Germany: he was appointed there as honorary professor, while the University Chicago awarded him the title of "''non-resident professor of mathematics''" which he retained for the rest of his life.


Work


Research activity

Bolza published ''The elliptic s-functions considered as a special case of the hyperelliptic s-functions'' in 1900 which related to work he had been studying for his doctorate under Klein. However, he worked on the calculus of variations from 1901. Papers which appeared in the Transactions of the American Mathematical Society over the next few years were: ''New proof of a theorem of Osgood's in the calculus of variations'' (1901); ''Proof of the sufficiency of Jacobi's condition for a permanent sign of the second variation in the so-called isoperimetric problems'' (1902); ''Weierstrass' theorem and Kneser's theorem on transversals for the most general case of an extremum of a simple definite integral'' (1906); and ''Existence proof for a field of extremals tangent to a given curve'' (1907). His text ''Lectures on the Calculus of Variations'' published by the University of Chicago Press in 1904, became a classic in its field and was republished several times: the augmented German edition of the same work was considered by his former student Gilbert Ames Bliss "''a classic, indispensable to every scholar in the field, and much wider in its scope than his earlier book''". Immediately after his return to Germany Bolza continued teaching and research, in particular on function theory, integral equations and the calculus of variations. Two papers of 1913 and 1914 are particularly important. The first ''Problem mit gemischten Bedingungen und variablen Endpunkten'' formulated a new type of variational problem now called "''the Bolza problem of Bolza''" after him and the second studied variations for an integral problem involving inequalities. This latter work was to become important in control theory. Bolza returned to Chicago for part of 1913 giving lecturers during the summer on function theory and integral equations.


Teaching activity

Bolza joined the University of Chicago in 1892. Working eighteen years between 1892 and 1910. During this time the mathematics department was outstandingly successful with thirty-nine students graduating with doctorates (nine of them students of Bolza). These included Leonard Dickson, who was the first to be awarded a Ph.D. in mathematics by the University of Chicago,
Gilbert Bliss Gilbert Ames Bliss, (9 May 1876 – 8 May 1951), was an American mathematician, known for his work on the calculus of variations. Life Bliss grew up in a Chicago family that eventually became affluent; in 1907, his father became president of the ...
, Oswald Veblen, Robert Lee Moore,
George D. Birkhoff George David Birkhoff (March 21, 1884 – November 12, 1944) was an American mathematician best known for what is now called the ergodic theorem. Birkhoff was one of the most important leaders in American mathematics in his generation, and durin ...
, and
T. H. Hildebrandt T is the twentieth letter of the Latin alphabet. (For the same letterform in the Cyrillic and Greek alphabets, see Te and Tau respectively). T may also refer to: Codes and units * T, Tera- as in one trillion * T, the symbol for "True" in ...
. In 1908 Bolza moved into Freiburg and managed to become a professor at the University of Freiburg and lectured there for years. However, his teachings were interrupted by World War I afterword he continued lecturing at Freiburg until 1926. After three years he returned to the University of Freiburg to continue lecturing he kept up his classes until 1933.


Selected publications

*. *: a corrected and improved edition was published in 1960 as , while unabridged unaltered reprints of the first edition appeared in 1961 as , and in 2005 as , available from University of Michigan Digital Mathematics Library. *. The "revised and notably augmented German edition""''...umgearbeitete und stark vermehrte deutsche Ausgabe''" as the title page reads. of the classical work .


See also

*
Bolza surface In mathematics, the Bolza surface, alternatively, complex algebraic Bolza curve (introduced by ), is a compact Riemann surface of genus 2 with the highest possible order of the conformal automorphism group in this genus, namely GL_2(3) of order 48 ...


Notes


Biographical references

*. *, available from Project Euclid. *, available from GDZ or from the DigiZeitschriften Document Server. *.


References

* *


External links


Bolza's geometry.net profile
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Bolza, Oskar Clark University faculty 1857 births 1942 deaths People from Bad Bergzabern 19th-century German mathematicians 20th-century German mathematicians Geometers University of Chicago faculty People from the Palatinate (region) Variational analysts