Hermann Minkowski

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Hermann Minkowski

Hebrew: הרמן מינקובסקי
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kaunas-Kowno, Kaunas, Lithuania
Death: January 12, 1909 (44)
Göttingen, NDS, Germany (Appendicitis)
Place of Burial: Berlin, Germany
Immediate Family:

Son of Lewin Baruch Minkowski and Rachel Minkowski
Husband of Auguste Minkowski
Father of Lily Ruedenberg and Ruth Helene Buschke
Brother of Max Minkowski; Dr. Oskar Minkowski; Fanny Kravinsky and Tuvia Minkowski

Occupation: Mathematician, Professor at University of Göttingen
Managed by: Martin Severin Eriksen
Last Updated:

About Hermann Minkowski

Wikipedia Biographical Summary:

"...Hermann Minkowski (22 June 1864 – 12 January 1909) was a German mathematician, professor at Königsberg, Zürich and Göttingen. He created and developed the geometry of numbers and used geometrical methods to solve problems in number theory, mathematical physics, and the theory of relativity.

Minkowski is perhaps best known for his work in relativity, in which he showed in 1907 that his former student Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity (1905), could be understood geometrically as a theory of four-dimensional space-time, since known as the "Minkowski spacetime"..."

"...Hermann Minkowski was born in Aleksotas, a village in Kaunas Governorate, part of Congress Poland within the Russian Empire (now incorporated into the city of Kaunas, Lithuania) to Lewin Boruch Minkowski, a merchant who subsidized the building of The Choral synagogue in Kovno, and Rachel Taubmann, both of Jewish descent. Hermann was a younger brother of the later astrophysicist, Oskar (born 1858). In different sources Minkowski's nationality is variously given as German, Polish Lithuanian or Lithuanian-German, or Russian.

To escape persecution in Russia the family moved to Königsberg in 1872, where the father became involved in rag export and later in manufacture of mechanical clockwork tin toys (he operated his firm Lewin Minkowski & Son with his eldest son Max).

Minkowski studied in Königsberg and taught in Bonn (1887–1894), Königsberg (1894–1896) and Zürich (1896–1902), and finally in Göttingen from 1902 until his premature death in 1909. He married Auguste Adler in 1897 with whom he had two daughters; the electrical engineer and inventor Reinhold Rudenberg was his son-in-law.

Minkowski died suddenly of appendicitis in Göttingen on 12 January 1909..."

SOURCE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Minkowski

Dictionary of Scientific Biography

MINKOWSKI, Hermann (b. Alexotas, Russia [now Lithuania], 22 June 1864; d. Göttingen, Germany, 12 January 1909) Mathematics.

Minkowski was born of German parents who returned to Germany and settled in Königsberg [now Kaliningrad, Russia] when the boy was eight years old. His older brother Oskar became a famous pathologist. Except for three semesters at the University of Berlin, he received his higher education at Königsberg, where he became a lifelong friend of both Hilbert, who was a fellow student, and the slightly older Hurwitz, who was beginning his professorial career. In 1881 the Paris Academy of Sciences had announced a competition for the Grand Prix des Sciences Mathématiques to be awarded in 1883, the subject being the number of representations of an integer as a sum of five squares of integers; Eisenstein had given formulas for that number but without proof. The Academy was unaware that in 1867 H. J. Smith had published an outline of such a proof, and Smith now sent a detailed memoir developing his methods. Without knowledge of Smith’s paper, the eighteen-year-old Minkowski, in a masterly manuscript of 140 pages, reconstructed the entire theory of quadratic forms in n variables with integral coefficients from Eisenstein’s sparse indications. He gave an even better formulation than Smith’s because he used a more natural and more general definition of the genus of a form, The Academy, unable to decide between two equally excellent, and substantially equivalent, works, awarded the Grand Prix to both Smith and Minkowski.

Minkowski received his doctorate in 1885 at Königsberg: he taught at Bonn until 1894, then returned to Königsberg for two years, In 1896 he went to Zurich, where he was Hurwitz’ colleague until 1902; Hilben then obtained the creation of a new professorship for him at Götlingen, where Minkowski taught until his death.

From his Grand Prix paper to his last work Minkowski never ceased to return to the arithmetic of quadratic forms in n variables (“n-ary forms”). Ever since Gauss’s pioneering work on binary quadratic forms at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the generalization of his results to n-ary forms had been the goal of many mathematicians, including Eisenstein, Hermite, Smith, Jordan, and Poincaré. Minkowski’s most important contributions to the theory were (1) for quadratic forms with rational coefficients, a characterization of equivalence of such forms under a linear transformation with rational coefficients, through a system of three invariants of the form and (2) in a paper of 1905, the completion of the theory of reduction for positive definite n-ary quadratic forms with real coefficients, begun by Hermite. The latter had defined a process yielding in each equivalence class (for transformations with integral coefficients) a finite set of “reduced” forms; but it was still possible for this set to consist in more than one form. Minkowski presented a new process of “reduction” giving a unique reduced form in each class. In the space of n-ary quadratic forms (of dimension n(n + 1)/2), the “fundamental domain” of all reduced forms proves to be a polyhedron; Minkowski made a detailed investigation of the relation of this domain to its neighbors and computed its volume, which enabled him to obtain asymptotic formulas for the number of equivalence classes of a given determinant, when the value of that determinant tends to infinity.

This 1905 paper was greatly influenced by the geometric outlook that Minkowski had developed fifteen years earlier—the “geometry of numbers,” as he called it, his most original achievement. He was led to it by the theory of ternary quadratic forms. Following brief indications given by Gauss, Dirichlet had developed a geometrical method of reduction of positive definite ternary forms; Minkowski’s brilliant idea was to use the concept of volume in conjunction with this geometric method, thus obtaining far better estimates than had been possible before. To make matters simpler, consider a binary positive definite quadratic form F(x, y) = ax2 + 2bxy + cy2. To say that F takes a value m when x = p, y = q are integers, means, geometrically, that the ellipse Em of equation F(x, y)= m passes through the point (p, q). To find the minimum M of all such values m, obtained for p, q not both 0, Minkowski observed that for small α, certainly the ellipse Eα will not contain any such points; if one considers the ellipse ½Eα and translates it by sending its center to every point (p, q) with integral coordinates, one obtains an infinite pattern of ellipses which do not touch each other. When α increases and reaches the value M, some of the corresponding ellipses will touch each other but no two will overlap. Now, if A = ac − b2 is the area of the ellipse E1, the ellipse ½EM has area AM2│4, AM2│4 and the total area of the nonoverlapping ellipses which are translations of ½EM and which have centers at the points (p, q) with │p│ ≤ n and │q│ ≤ n is (2n + l)2(AM2│4). It is easy to see, however, that there is a constant c > 0 independent of n, such that all these ellipses are contained in a square of center 0 and of side 2n + 1 + c , so that

(2n + l)2AM2│4) ≤ (2n + 1 + c)2;

Letting n grow to infinity gives the inequality

Not only can this argument be at once extended to spaces of arbitrary finite dimension, but Minkowski had a second highly original idea: He observed that in the preceding geometric argument, ellipses could be replaced by arbitrary convex symmetric curves (and, in higher-dimensional spaces, by symmetric convex bodies). By varying the nature of these convex bodies with extreme ingenuity (polyhedrons, cylinders), he immediately obtained far-reaching discoveries in many domains of number theory. For instance, by associating to an algebraic integer x in a field of algebraic numbers K of degree n over the rationals, the point in ndimensions having as coordinates the rational integers which are the coefficients of x with respect to a fixed basis, Minkowski gave lower bounds for the discriminant of K, which in particular proved that when n > 1, the discriminant may never be equal to 1 and thai there are only a finite number of fields of discriminants bounded by a given number.

Minkowski’s geometric methods also enabled him to reach a far better understanding of the theory of continued fractions and to generalize it into an algorithm which, at least theoretically, gives a criterion for a number to be algebraic. It was similar in principle to Lagrange’s well-known criterion that quadratic irrationals are characterized by periodic continued fractions; but Minkowski also showed that, for his criterion, periodicity occurs in only a small number of cases, which he characterized completely. Finally, if, for instance, one considers (as above, but in three dimensions) an ellipsoid F(x, y, z) = 1 in relation to the lattice L of points with integral coordinates, the largest possible number M will be obtained when the translated ellipsoids are “packed together” as closely as possible. If one makes a linear transformation of the space transforming the ellipsoid in a sphere, L is transformed into another lattice consisting of linear combinations with integral coefficients of three vectors. The problem of finding the largest M, then, is equivalent to the “closest packing of spheres” in space, when the centers are at the vertices of a

Lattice L′ one has to find the lattice L′ that gives this closest packing. Minkowski began the study of that difficult problem (which extends to any n-dimensional space) and of corresponding problems when spheres are replaced by some other type of convex set (particularly polyhedrons); they have been the subject of fruitful research ever since.

The intensive use of the concept of convexity in his “geometry of numbers” led Minkowski to investigate systematically the geometrical properties of convex sets in n-dimensional space, a subject that had barely been considered before. He was the first to understand the importance of the notion of hyperplane of support (both geometrically and analytically), and he proved the existence of such hyperplanes at each point of the boundary of a convex body. Long before the modern conception of a metric space was invented, Minkowski realized that a symmetric convex body in an n-dimensional space defines a new notion of “distance” on that space and, hence, a corresponding “geometry.” His ideas thus paved the way for the founders of the theory of normed spaces in the 1920’s and became the basis for modern functional analysis.

The evaluation of volumes of convex bodies led Minkowski to the very original concept of “mixed volume” of several convex bodies: when K1, K2, K3 are three convex bodies in ordinary space and t1, t2, t3 are three real numbers ≥0, the points t1x1 + t2x2 + t3x3, when xj varies in Kj for j = 1, 2, 3, fill a new convex body, written t1K1 + t2K2 + t3K3. When the volume of this new convex body is computed, it is seen to be a homogeneous polynomial in t1, t2, t3 and the mixed volume V(K1, K2, K3) is the coefficient of t1t2t3 in that polynomial. Minkowski discovered remarkable relations between these new quantities and more classical notions: if K1 is a sphere of radius 1, then V(K1, K, K) is one third of the area of the convex surface bounding K; and V(K1, K1, K) is one third of the mean value of the mean curvature of that surface. He also proved the inequality between mixed volumes V(K1, K2, K3)2 ≥ V(K1, K1, K3) V(K2, K2, K3), from which he derived a new and simple proof of the isoperimetric property of the sphere. As a beautiful application of his concepts of hyperplane of support and of mixed volumes, Minkowski showed that a convex polyhedron having a given number m of faces is determined entirely by the areas and directions of the faces, a theorem that he generalized to convex surfaces by a passage to the limit. He also determined all convex bodies having constant width.

Minkowski was always interested in mathematical physics but did not work in that field until the last years of his life, when he participated in the movement of ideas that led to the theory of relativity. He was the first to conceive that the relativity principle formulated by Lorentz and Einstein led to the abandonment of the concept of space and time as separate entities and to their replacement by a fourdimensional “space-time,” of which he gave a precise definition and initiated the mathematical study; it became the frame of all later developments of the theory and led Einstein to his bolder conception of generalized relativity.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Minkowski’s writings were collected in Gesammelte Abhandlungen, D. Hilbert, ed., 2 vols. (Leipzig-Berlin, 1911). Among his books are Geometrie der Zahlen (Leipzig, 1896; 2nd ed., 1910); and Diophantische Approximationen (Leipzig, 1907; repr. New York, 1957).

On Minkowski’s work, see Harris Hancock, Development of the Minkowski Geometry of Numbers (New York, 1939); and Frederick W. Lanehester, Relativity. An Elementary Explanation of the Space-Time Relations As Established by Minkowski (London, 1935).

J. Dieudonné

About הרמן מינקובסקי (עברית)

הרמן מינקובסקי

' (בגרמנית: Hermann Minkowski‏; 22 ביוני 1864 - 12 בינואר 1909) היה מתמטיקאי ופיזיקאי גרמני ממוצא יהודי.

תוכן עניינים 1 ביוגרפיה 2 עבודתו המדעית 3 ספרים 4 ראו גם 5 קישורים חיצוניים ביוגרפיה מינקובסקי נולד בליטא למשפחה יהודית. אחיו אוסקר היה ביולוג חשוב. מאוחר יותר המיר את דתו. את השכלתו רכש בקניגסברג ובברלין, ובין השאר למד אצל לאופולד קרונקר. בתקופת לימודיו פתר בעיה חשובה בתורת המספרים. בשנת 1885 מונה לדוקטור באוניברסיטת קניגסברג, ומאוחר יותר לימד באוניברסיטת בון. בשנת 1894 מונה למשרת פרופסור באוניברסיטת קניגסברג. בין השנים 1896 עד 1902 לימד במכון הטכנולוגי של ציריך. בשנת 1902 עבר ללמד באוניברסיטת גטינגן, עד מותו בשנת 1909. את המשרה בגטינגן קיבל בסיועו של ידידו הקרוב, דייוויד הילברט. מינקובסקי אף הציע להילברט (במכתב מה-5/1/1900) להציג סדרה של בעיות בקונגרס העולמי במתמטיקה [1]; הילברט אכן עשה זאת, ו23 הבעיות שהציג שם השפיעו במידה רבה ביותר על התפתחות המתמטיקה במאה ה-20.

עבודתו המדעית תרומתו העיקרית של מינקובסקי למדע המתמטיקה היה בתורת המספרים: הוא ייסד את התחום שנקרא 'גאומטריה של מספרים', וגילה את התוצאה היסודית בתחום, משפט מינקובסקי, ממנה נובע שמספר המחלקה של כל שדה מספרים הוא סופי. מינקובסקי עסק גם בגאומטריה, והמציא את גאומטריית נהגי המוניות.

בפיזיקה תרם מינקובסקי תרומה חשובה להבנת תורת היחסות על ידי כך שהקנה מובן גאומטרי לטרנספורמציית לורנץ. המרחב-זמן ההיפרבולי של תורת היחסות הפרטית עם המטריקה {\displaystyle \ ds^{2}=c^{2}dt^{2}-dx^{2}-dy^{2}-dz^{2}}\ ds^2 = c^2 dt^2 - dx^2 - dy^2 - dz^2 קרוי על שמו. הוא גם עזר לאיינשטיין בלימוד חשבון טנזורים, שנמצא מאוחר יותר חיוני מאוד לניסוח תורת היחסות הכללית. מינקובסקי תרם גם להבנתו של המדע בתחום האלקטרומגנטיות.

ספרים "גאומטריה של המספרים", 1896. "חלל וזמן" 1909. ראו גם אי-שוויון מינקובסקי מרחב מינקובסקי פונקציית סימן השאלה של מינקובסקי קישורים חיצוניים ויקישיתוף מדיה וקבצים בנושא הרמן מינקובסקי בוויקישיתוף הרמן מינקובסקי , באתר פרויקט הגנאלוגיה במתמטיקה הרמן מינקובסקי , באתר MacTutor (באנגלית) https://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%94%D7%A8%D7%9E%D7%9F_%D7%9E%D7%99...

----------------------------------

Wikipedia Biographical Summary:

"...Hermann Minkowski (22 June 1864 – 12 January 1909) was a German mathematician, professor at Königsberg, Zürich and Göttingen. He created and developed the geometry of numbers and used geometrical methods to solve problems in number theory, mathematical physics, and the theory of relativity.

Minkowski is perhaps best known for his work in relativity, in which he showed in 1907 that his former student Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity (1905), could be understood geometrically as a theory of four-dimensional space-time, since known as the "Minkowski spacetime"..."

"...Hermann Minkowski was born in Aleksotas, a village in Kaunas Governorate, part of Congress Poland within the Russian Empire (now incorporated into the city of Kaunas, Lithuania) to Lewin Boruch Minkowski, a merchant who subsidized the building of The Choral synagogue in Kovno, and Rachel Taubmann, both of Jewish descent. Hermann was a younger brother of the later astrophysicist, Oskar (born 1858). In different sources Minkowski's nationality is variously given as German, Polish Lithuanian or Lithuanian-German, or Russian.

To escape persecution in Russia the family moved to Königsberg in 1872, where the father became involved in rag export and later in manufacture of mechanical clockwork tin toys (he operated his firm Lewin Minkowski & Son with his eldest son Max).

Minkowski studied in Königsberg and taught in Bonn (1887–1894), Königsberg (1894–1896) and Zürich (1896–1902), and finally in Göttingen from 1902 until his premature death in 1909. He married Auguste Adler in 1897 with whom he had two daughters; the electrical engineer and inventor Reinhold Rudenberg was his son-in-law.

Minkowski died suddenly of appendicitis in Göttingen on 12 January 1909..."

SOURCE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Minkowski

Dictionary of Scientific Biography

MINKOWSKI, Hermann (b. Alexotas, Russia [now Lithuania], 22 June 1864; d. Göttingen, Germany, 12 January 1909) Mathematics.

Minkowski was born of German parents who returned to Germany and settled in Königsberg [now Kaliningrad, Russia] when the boy was eight years old. His older brother Oskar became a famous pathologist. Except for three semesters at the University of Berlin, he received his higher education at Königsberg, where he became a lifelong friend of both Hilbert, who was a fellow student, and the slightly older Hurwitz, who was beginning his professorial career. In 1881 the Paris Academy of Sciences had announced a competition for the Grand Prix des Sciences Mathématiques to be awarded in 1883, the subject being the number of representations of an integer as a sum of five squares of integers; Eisenstein had given formulas for that number but without proof. The Academy was unaware that in 1867 H. J. Smith had published an outline of such a proof, and Smith now sent a detailed memoir developing his methods. Without knowledge of Smith’s paper, the eighteen-year-old Minkowski, in a masterly manuscript of 140 pages, reconstructed the entire theory of quadratic forms in n variables with integral coefficients from Eisenstein’s sparse indications. He gave an even better formulation than Smith’s because he used a more natural and more general definition of the genus of a form, The Academy, unable to decide between two equally excellent, and substantially equivalent, works, awarded the Grand Prix to both Smith and Minkowski.

Minkowski received his doctorate in 1885 at Königsberg: he taught at Bonn until 1894, then returned to Königsberg for two years, In 1896 he went to Zurich, where he was Hurwitz’ colleague until 1902; Hilben then obtained the creation of a new professorship for him at Götlingen, where Minkowski taught until his death.

From his Grand Prix paper to his last work Minkowski never ceased to return to the arithmetic of quadratic forms in n variables (“n-ary forms”). Ever since Gauss’s pioneering work on binary quadratic forms at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the generalization of his results to n-ary forms had been the goal of many mathematicians, including Eisenstein, Hermite, Smith, Jordan, and Poincaré. Minkowski’s most important contributions to the theory were (1) for quadratic forms with rational coefficients, a characterization of equivalence of such forms under a linear transformation with rational coefficients, through a system of three invariants of the form and (2) in a paper of 1905, the completion of the theory of reduction for positive definite n-ary quadratic forms with real coefficients, begun by Hermite. The latter had defined a process yielding in each equivalence class (for transformations with integral coefficients) a finite set of “reduced” forms; but it was still possible for this set to consist in more than one form. Minkowski presented a new process of “reduction” giving a unique reduced form in each class. In the space of n-ary quadratic forms (of dimension n(n + 1)/2), the “fundamental domain” of all reduced forms proves to be a polyhedron; Minkowski made a detailed investigation of the relation of this domain to its neighbors and computed its volume, which enabled him to obtain asymptotic formulas for the number of equivalence classes of a given determinant, when the value of that determinant tends to infinity.

This 1905 paper was greatly influenced by the geometric outlook that Minkowski had developed fifteen years earlier—the “geometry of numbers,” as he called it, his most original achievement. He was led to it by the theory of ternary quadratic forms. Following brief indications given by Gauss, Dirichlet had developed a geometrical method of reduction of positive definite ternary forms; Minkowski’s brilliant idea was to use the concept of volume in conjunction with this geometric method, thus obtaining far better estimates than had been possible before. To make matters simpler, consider a binary positive definite quadratic form F(x, y) = ax2 + 2bxy + cy2. To say that F takes a value m when x = p, y = q are integers, means, geometrically, that the ellipse Em of equation F(x, y)= m passes through the point (p, q). To find the minimum M of all such values m, obtained for p, q not both 0, Minkowski observed that for small α, certainly the ellipse Eα will not contain any such points; if one considers the ellipse ½Eα and translates it by sending its center to every point (p, q) with integral coordinates, one obtains an infinite pattern of ellipses which do not touch each other. When α increases and reaches the value M, some of the corresponding ellipses will touch each other but no two will overlap. Now, if A = ac − b2 is the area of the ellipse E1, the ellipse ½EM has area AM2│4, AM2│4 and the total area of the nonoverlapping ellipses which are translations of ½EM and which have centers at the points (p, q) with │p│ ≤ n and │q│ ≤ n is (2n + l)2(AM2│4). It is easy to see, however, that there is a constant c > 0 independent of n, such that all these ellipses are contained in a square of center 0 and of side 2n + 1 + c , so that

(2n + l)2AM2│4) ≤ (2n + 1 + c)2;

Letting n grow to infinity gives the inequality

Not only can this argument be at once extended to spaces of arbitrary finite dimension, but Minkowski had a second highly original idea: He observed that in the preceding geometric argument, ellipses could be replaced by arbitrary convex symmetric curves (and, in higher-dimensional spaces, by symmetric convex bodies). By varying the nature of these convex bodies with extreme ingenuity (polyhedrons, cylinders), he immediately obtained far-reaching discoveries in many domains of number theory. For instance, by associating to an algebraic integer x in a field of algebraic numbers K of degree n over the rationals, the point in ndimensions having as coordinates the rational integers which are the coefficients of x with respect to a fixed basis, Minkowski gave lower bounds for the discriminant of K, which in particular proved that when n > 1, the discriminant may never be equal to 1 and thai there are only a finite number of fields of discriminants bounded by a given number.

Minkowski’s geometric methods also enabled him to reach a far better understanding of the theory of continued fractions and to generalize it into an algorithm which, at least theoretically, gives a criterion for a number to be algebraic. It was similar in principle to Lagrange’s well-known criterion that quadratic irrationals are characterized by periodic continued fractions; but Minkowski also showed that, for his criterion, periodicity occurs in only a small number of cases, which he characterized completely. Finally, if, for instance, one considers (as above, but in three dimensions) an ellipsoid F(x, y, z) = 1 in relation to the lattice L of points with integral coordinates, the largest possible number M will be obtained when the translated ellipsoids are “packed together” as closely as possible. If one makes a linear transformation of the space transforming the ellipsoid in a sphere, L is transformed into another lattice consisting of linear combinations with integral coefficients of three vectors. The problem of finding the largest M, then, is equivalent to the “closest packing of spheres” in space, when the centers are at the vertices of a

Lattice L′ one has to find the lattice L′ that gives this closest packing. Minkowski began the study of that difficult problem (which extends to any n-dimensional space) and of corresponding problems when spheres are replaced by some other type of convex set (particularly polyhedrons); they have been the subject of fruitful research ever since.

The intensive use of the concept of convexity in his “geometry of numbers” led Minkowski to investigate systematically the geometrical properties of convex sets in n-dimensional space, a subject that had barely been considered before. He was the first to understand the importance of the notion of hyperplane of support (both geometrically and analytically), and he proved the existence of such hyperplanes at each point of the boundary of a convex body. Long before the modern conception of a metric space was invented, Minkowski realized that a symmetric convex body in an n-dimensional space defines a new notion of “distance” on that space and, hence, a corresponding “geometry.” His ideas thus paved the way for the founders of the theory of normed spaces in the 1920’s and became the basis for modern functional analysis.

The evaluation of volumes of convex bodies led Minkowski to the very original concept of “mixed volume” of several convex bodies: when K1, K2, K3 are three convex bodies in ordinary space and t1, t2, t3 are three real numbers ≥0, the points t1x1 + t2x2 + t3x3, when xj varies in Kj for j = 1, 2, 3, fill a new convex body, written t1K1 + t2K2 + t3K3. When the volume of this new convex body is computed, it is seen to be a homogeneous polynomial in t1, t2, t3 and the mixed volume V(K1, K2, K3) is the coefficient of t1t2t3 in that polynomial. Minkowski discovered remarkable relations between these new quantities and more classical notions: if K1 is a sphere of radius 1, then V(K1, K, K) is one third of the area of the convex surface bounding K; and V(K1, K1, K) is one third of the mean value of the mean curvature of that surface. He also proved the inequality between mixed volumes V(K1, K2, K3)2 ≥ V(K1, K1, K3) V(K2, K2, K3), from which he derived a new and simple proof of the isoperimetric property of the sphere. As a beautiful application of his concepts of hyperplane of support and of mixed volumes, Minkowski showed that a convex polyhedron having a given number m of faces is determined entirely by the areas and directions of the faces, a theorem that he generalized to convex surfaces by a passage to the limit. He also determined all convex bodies having constant width.

Minkowski was always interested in mathematical physics but did not work in that field until the last years of his life, when he participated in the movement of ideas that led to the theory of relativity. He was the first to conceive that the relativity principle formulated by Lorentz and Einstein led to the abandonment of the concept of space and time as separate entities and to their replacement by a fourdimensional “space-time,” of which he gave a precise definition and initiated the mathematical study; it became the frame of all later developments of the theory and led Einstein to his bolder conception of generalized relativity.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Minkowski’s writings were collected in Gesammelte Abhandlungen, D. Hilbert, ed., 2 vols. (Leipzig-Berlin, 1911). Among his books are Geometrie der Zahlen (Leipzig, 1896; 2nd ed., 1910); and Diophantische Approximationen (Leipzig, 1907; repr. New York, 1957).

On Minkowski’s work, see Harris Hancock, Development of the Minkowski Geometry of Numbers (New York, 1939); and Frederick W. Lanehester, Relativity. An Elementary Explanation of the Space-Time Relations As Established by Minkowski (London, 1935).

J. Dieudonné

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Hermann Minkowski's Timeline

1864
June 22, 1864
Kaunas-Kowno, Kaunas, Lithuania
1898
June 9, 1898
Zurich, Zürich, Switzerland
1902
1902
Switzerland
1909
January 12, 1909
Age 44
Göttingen, NDS, Germany
????
Friedhof Heerstraße, Berlin, Germany