WOMEN IN SCIENCE#1.- SOPHIE GERMAIN

in #womeninscience7 years ago (edited)
According to the recommendations made by the sponsor of this contest @jasonbu, I decided to deepen the reading of the most successful women in the world of science, and what an interesting topic!. It is really a pleasure walking through the biographies of battling women that even being difficult times to be recognized as intelligent women, achieved their recognition through their perseverance and effort.

Remember that before the nineteenth century, many women did not have the opportunity to study, much less study at a university. However, despite many obstacles they managed to overcome them, they are a source of inspiration for the current generation of women: That these women be our banner to achieve our goals and continue to conquer worthy spaces in the area of science and in the area that we long for develop and contribute to our society that needs it so much.

MARIE-SOPHIE GERMAIN (1776 – 1831)

Germain was born in France into a distinguished family of the bourgeoisie, daughter of Ambroise-François Germain, master goldsmith.

She began studying mathematics at the age of thirteen, interested in works on the subject of her home library. His interest in mathematics came after reading the History of Mathematics by Jean-Baptiste Montucla. He continued with the treatise on arithmetic by Étienne Bezout and the differential calculus of A.J. Cousin, to continue, after learning Latin without any help, with the works of Isaac Newton and Leonhard Euler. He was self-taught, disguising himself as a man to be able to study in mathematical institutions (where only males could enter). He autographed his research and studies as "Mr. Leblanc" to hide his identity. His interest in mathematics was so much that he did everything he could to prove it to others. In order to attend the school in Paris, Sophie had to steal the identity of the M. Leblanc student and dress like a man, and only in this way was able to increase her knowledge and expose and present new ideas for some years.


Germain never married, depended economically throughout his life on the financial support provided by his family. He died due to breast cancer in 1831. Although the disease had manifested itself to him two years before, it continued until the end overturned in the world of science.

He made important contributions to number theory and the theory of elasticity. One of his most important works was the study of what were later known as prime numbers of Sophie Germain (prime numbers whose double increased by one unit is also a prime number).

Acknowledgments Received

In 1830 Gauss proposed her for the Honoris Causa Doctorate from the University of Göttingen, of which he was a professor and in which he had great influence. Although at that time his proposal was rejected, however, a few months after the death of Sophie, he received this title of doctor honoris causa by the University of Göttingen.


At present, the Institute of France, at the proposal of the Academy of Sciences, awards annually "Le prix Sophie Germain" to the researcher who has done the most important work in Mathematics. Likewise, a street in Paris and a Lyceum bear her name, and a plaque, in the house where she died (number 13 on Rue de Savoie), remembers her as a mathematician and philosopher.


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THE ANECDOTE OF LIFE that caught my attention about Sophie Germain is that "she read everything that fell into her hands with a burning that worried her family. The Italian mathematician Guglielmo Libri, who will later become his friend, narrated how he overcame the obstacles that his parents had devised to curb his passion for Mathematics. So that she could not study in secret at night, they decided to leave her without light, without heating and without her clothes. Sophie seemed docile, but only in appearances; At night, while his family slept, he wrapped himself in blankets and studied by candlelight that he had previously hidden. One day they found her asleep on her desk, with the ink frozen, in front of a sheet full of calculations. Her tenacity overcame the resistance of her parents who, although they did not understand her dedication to Mathematics, ended up leaving her free to study. "


Friends I invite you to be persistent women like our Sophie to achieve the goals that we set!

Links consulted:
History summarizes us among the 10 most important women in science. https://www.fayerwayer.com/2011/03/7-grandes-mujeres-de-la-ciencia/
Biography Sophie Germain. https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophie_Germain
Biography SophieGermain. https://matematicascercanas.com/2015/04/01/sophie-germain-francia-1776-1831/



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Women are great, no women, no human way forward.

completely agree with you. Thanks for your time to read.

Women are a living example of overcoming and love, very interesting this information about this great woman. @mariu congratulations.

thank you, I'm glad you liked my publication.

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