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Ernest Cesàro

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Ernest Cesàro
NameErnest Cesàro
Birth date23 February 1859
Birth placeNaples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Death date29 June 1906
Death placeTurin, Kingdom of Italy
FieldsMathematics
Alma materUniversity of Naples, École Polytechnique
Doctoral advisorJoseph Bertrand
Known forCesàro summation

Ernest Cesàro was an Italian-born French mathematician known principally for the development of summability methods and contributions to real analysis and differential geometry. He worked in Paris and Turin, interacting with many contemporaries in the mathematical communities of France and Italy, and left a legacy through methods that informed research in Fourier analysis, summability theory, and the study of divergent series.

Early life and education

Cesàro was born in Naples during the reign of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and later moved to France for studies, connecting to institutions such as the École Polytechnique and the Sorbonne. He studied under and interacted with figures linked to Joseph Bertrand, Camille Jordan, Charles Hermite, and the broader Parisian mathematical milieu including links to Henri Poincaré, Jules Tannery, and Émile Picard. His formative education bridged Italian and French centers like the University of Naples and the École Normale Supérieure networks, exposing him to currents associated with Augustin-Louis Cauchy, Niels Henrik Abel, Sofya Kovalevskaya, and others who shaped late 19th-century analysis.

Mathematical career and academic positions

Cesàro held positions that connected him to academies and universities across France and Italy, contributing to exchanges among institutions such as the University of Turin, the Accademia dei Lincei, and the Société Mathématique de France. His career placed him in contact with mathematicians including Ulisse Dini, Felix Klein, Georg Cantor, Eduard Study, and administrators of research like Gustave Eiffel-era patrons of science. He contributed to periodicals and conferences associated with editors and organizers such as Jules Henri Poincaré-linked journals and meetings in Paris, Turin, and Berlin, intersecting with scholarship by Karl Weierstrass, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Élie Cartan, and Sophus Lie.

Major contributions and works

Cesàro is primarily remembered for what is now called Cesàro summation, a method for assigning values to certain divergent series that influenced later work in Fourier series and analytic continuation. His techniques relate to summability theories developed in parallel with contributions by Bernhard Riemann, Georg Cantor, Kurt Hensel, Émile Borel, Gustav Mittag-Leffler, and Jacques Hadamard. He published on topics in differential geometry with affinities to studies by Henri Poincaré, Luigi Bianchi, Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, Tullio Levi-Civita, and connections to tensor calculus used later by Albert Einstein. Cesàro's publications engaged methods comparable to those of Camille Jordan on linear algebraic forms, Joseph Fourier on series, Karl Pearson-era statistics in methodology, and the operational techniques used by Hermann Schwarz and Émile Picard. He produced papers and notes that were read alongside works by James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Kelvin, William Thomson, André-Marie Ampère, and contemporaneous mathematical expositions in the Annales scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure.

Influence and legacy

Cesàro's summability method became a standard tool referenced by later analysts including Hardy (G. H. Hardy), John Edensor Littlewood, Norbert Wiener, Frigyes Riesz, Marcel Riesz, and researchers in functional analysis like Stefan Banach and David Hilbert. His ideas influenced treatments of Fourier convergence studied by Henri Lebesgue, Salem (Raphaël Salem), Lars Ahlfors, and André Weil in harmonic analysis and number theory contexts. The Cesàro mean appears in probabilistic and ergodic formulations related to work by Birkhoff (George D. Birkhoff), Paul Erdős, Alfréd Rényi, and applications in later computational contexts touched upon by Alan Turing, John von Neumann, and Claude Shannon. Institutions and textbooks citing his methods include works linked to Cambridge University Press, Gauthier-Villars, and curricula influenced by professors at École Polytechnique and the University of Turin.

Personal life and awards

Cesàro's life intersected with cultural and scientific circles in Naples, Paris, and Turin, engaging with contemporaries from academies such as the Académie des Sciences and Italian scholarly societies like the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. He corresponded and associated with mathematicians across Europe and was recognized posthumously in historical surveys alongside figures like Giuseppe Peano, Enrico Betti, Bernhard Riemann, and Joseph-Louis Lagrange. While not decorated with major state honors commonly granted to some contemporaries, his name endures through the eponymous summability method cited in works connected to Cambridge, Oxford, Princeton University, and numerous mathematical journals.

Category:19th-century mathematicians Category:Italian mathematicians Category:1859 births Category:1906 deaths