Thomas Joannes Stieltjes
Thomas Joannes Stieltjes was a Dutch mathematician. He was a pioneer in the field of moment problems and contributed to the study of continued fractions. The Thomas Stieltjes Institute for Mathematics at Leiden University, dissolved in 2011, was named after him, as is the Riemann–Stieltjes integral.
Biography
Stieltjes was born in Zwolle on 29 December 1856. His father was a civil engineer and politician. Stieltjes Sr. was responsible for the construction of various harbours around Rotterdam, and also seated in the Dutch parliament. Stieltjes Jr. went to university at the Polytechnical School in Delft in 1873. Instead of attending lectures, he spent his student years reading the works of Gauss and Jacobi — the consequence of this being he failed his examinations. There were two further failures, and his father despaired. His father was friends with H. G. [van de Sande Bakhuyzen], and Stieltjes Jr. was able to get a job as an assistant at Leiden Observatory.Soon afterwards, Stieltjes began a correspondence with Charles Hermite which lasted for the rest of his life. He originally wrote to Hermite concerning celestial mechanics, but the subject quickly turned to mathematics and he began to devote his spare time to mathematical research.
The director of Leiden Observatory, van de Sande-Bakhuyzen, responded quickly to Stieltjes' request on 1 January 1883 to stop his observational work to allow him to work more on mathematical topics. In 1883, he also married Elizabeth Intveld in May. She also encouraged him to move from astronomy to mathematics. And in September, Stieltjes was asked to substitute at University of Delft for F.J. van den Berg. From then until December of that year, he lectured on analytical geometry and on descriptive geometry. He resigned his post at the observatory at the end of that year.
In 1884, Stieltjes applied for a chair in Groningen. He was initially accepted, but in the end turned down by the Department of Education, since he lacked the required diplomas. In 1884, Hermite and professor David Bierens de Haan arranged for an honorary doctorate to be granted to Stieltjes by Leiden University, enabling him to become a professor. In 1885, he was appointed as member of the Royal Netherlands [Academy of Arts and Sciences|Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences], and the next year he became a foreign member. In 1889, he was appointed professor of differential and integral calculus at Toulouse University.
Stieltjes died on 31 December 1894 in Toulouse, France. He was buried in on 2 January 1895.
Research
Stieltjes worked on almost all branches of analysis, continued fractions and number theory. For his work, he is sometimes referred to as "the father of the analytic theory of continued fractions".His work is also seen as important as a first step towards the theory of Hilbert spaces. Other important contributions to mathematics that he made involved discontinuous functions and divergent series, differential equations, interpolation, the gamma function and elliptic functions. He became known internationally because of the Riemann–Stieltjes integral.
In 1886, Henri Poincaré and Stieltjes, simultaneously and independently, provided a definition of an asymptotic approximation and illustrated its use and practicality. Their papers were published in Acta Math and Annales scientifiques de l'Ecole normale supérieure, respectively.
Awards and honours
Stieltjes' work on continued fractions earned him the Ormoy Prize of the Académie des Sciences in 1893. In 1884 the University of Leiden awarded him an honorary doctorate, and in 1885 he was elected to membership in the Royal Academy of Sciences of Amsterdam.In honour of Stieltjes, since 1996, the Stieltjes Prize has been awarded annually for the best PhD thesis in mathematics to a student of any Dutch university. All mathematics institutes and departments of Dutch universities are asked for an overview of the PhDs that have taken place in the academic year. The list thus obtained forms the list of candidates for the prize. The award consists of a certificate and an amount of 1200 Euros.