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Fredrik Carl Mülertz Størmer (September 3, 1874 – August 13, 1957) was a Norwegian mathematician and physicist, known both for his work in number theory and for studying the movement of charged particles in the magnetosphere and the formation of aurorae.[1]


Biography

Størmer was born September 3, 1874, in Skien, Norway, the only child of a pharmacist. He studied mathematics at the University of Christiania (now the University of Oslo) from 1892 to 1897, earning the rank of candidatus realium (roughly equivalent to a Ph.D.) in 1898. He then studied with Picard, Poincaré, Painlevé, Jordan, Darboux, and Goursat at the Sorbonne in Paris from 1898 to 1900. On his return to Christiania in 1900 as a research fellow in mathematics, he married Ada Clauson, with whom he eventually had five children. He visited Göttingen in 1902, and returned to Oslo in 1903, where he was appointed as a professor of mathematics, a position he held for 43 years. After he received a permanent position in Oslo, Størmer published his subsequent writings under a shortened version of his name, Carl Størmer. In 1918, he was elected as the first president of the newly-formed Norwegian Mathematical Society. He participated regularly in Scandinavian mathematical congresses, and was president of the 1936 International Congress of Mathematicians in Oslo. Størmer was also affiliated with the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Oslo, which was founded in 1934. He died on August 13, 1957, at Blindern, Norway.[1][2][3][4][5]

Størmer was a foreign member of the Royal Society and a corresponding member of the French Academy of Sciences. He was given honorary degrees by Oxford University (in 1947), the University of Copenhagen, and the Sorbonne, and in 1922 the French Academy awarded him their Janssen Medal.[2][3] In 1971, the crater Störmer on the far side of the Moon was named after him.[6]

Størmer was also an amateur street photographer[7], beginning in his student days, and near the age of 70 he put on an exhibition in Oslo of the photographs of celebrities that he had taken over the years.[2]

He is the grandfather of the famous mathematician Erling Størmer.[citation needed]

Mathematical research

Størmer's first mathematical publication, published when he was a beginning student at the age of 18, concerned trigonometric series generalizing the Taylor expansion of the arcsine function, a problem he revisited again a few years later. Next, he systematically investigated Machin-like formula by which the number π may be represented as a rational combination of the so-called "Gregory numbers" of the form tan -1(1/n). Machin's original formula,

π = 16 tan -1 (1/5) - 4 tan-1 (1/239),

is of this type, and Størmer showed that there were three other ways of representing π as a rational combination of two Gregory numbers. He then investigated combinations of three Gregory numbers, and found 102 representations of π of this form, but was unable to determine whether there might be additional solutions of this type.[1] These representations led to fast algorithms for computing numerical approximations of π; a four-term representation found by Størmer,

π= 176 tan-1 (1/57) + 28 tan-1 (1/239) - 48 tan-1 (1/682) + 96 tan-1 (1/12943)

was used in a record-setting calculation of π to 1,241,100,000,000 decimal digits in 2002 by Yasumasa Kanada.[8] Størmer is also noted for the Størmer numbers, which arose from the decomposition of Gregory numbers in Størmer's work.

Størmer's theorem, which he proved in 1897, shows that, for any finite set P of prime numbers, there are only finitely many pairs of consecutive integers having only the numbers from P as their prime factors. In addition, Størmer describes an algorithm for finding all such pairs. The superparticular ratios generated by these consecutive pairs are of particular importance in music theory.[9] Størmer proves this theorem by reducing the problem to a finite set of Pell equations, and the theorem itself can also be interpreted as describing the possible factorizations of solutions to Pell's equation. Chapman quotes Louis Mordell as saying "His result is very pretty, and there are many applications of it."[2]

Additional subjects of Størmer's mathematical research included Lie groups, the gamma function, and Diophantine approximation of algebraic numbers and of the transcendental numbers arising from elliptic functions. From 1905 Størmer was an editor of the journal Acta Mathematica, and he was also an editor of the posthumously-published mathematical works of Niels Henrik Abel and Sophus Lie.[1][2]

Astrophysical research

From 1903, when Størmer first observed Kristian Birkeland's experimental attempts to explain the aurora borealis, he was fascinated by aurorae and related phenomena. His first work on the subject attempted to model mathematically the paths taken by charged particles perturbed by the influence of a magnetized sphere, and Størmer eventually published over 48 papers on the motion of charged particles.[2]. By modeling the problem using differential equations and polar coordinates, Størmer was able to show that the radius of curvature of any particle's path is proportional to the square of its distance from the sphere's center. To solve the resulting differential equations numerically, he used Verlet integration, which is therefore also known as Störmer's method.[1] Ernst Brüche and Willard Harrison Bennett verified experimentally Størmer's predicted particle motions; Bennett called his experimental apparatus "Störmerton" in honor of Størmer.[2] Størmer's calculations showed that small variations in the trajectories of particles approaching the earth would be magnified by the effects of the Earth's magnetic field, explaining the convoluted shapes of aurorae.[10] Størmer also considered the possibility that particles might be trapped within the magnetic field, and worked out the orbits of these trapped particles, a prediction that was borne out after his death by the 1958 discovery of the Van Allen radiation belt.[11]

As well as modeling these phenomena mathematically, Størmer took many photographs of aurorae, from 20 different observatories across Norway. He measured their heights and latitudes by triangulation from multiple observatories, and discovered that the aurora are typically as high as 100 kilometers above ground. He classified them by their shapes, and discovered in 1926 the "solar-illuminated aurora", a phenomenon that can occur at twilight when the upper parts of an aurora are lit by the sun; these aurorae can be as high as 1000 km above ground.[12][13] His work, including laboratory 'aurora reproductions', had gathered international popular interest by 1928.[14]

Størmer's book, From the depths of space to the heart of the atom, describing his work in this area, was translated into five different languages from the original Norwegian.[1] A second book, The Polar Aurora (Oxford Press, 1955), contains both his experimental work on aurorae and his mathematical attempts to model them. In his review of this book,[15] J. F. Heard calls Størmer "the acknowledged authority" on aurorae. Heard writes, "The Polar Aurora will undoubtedly remain for many years a standard reference book; it belongs on the desk of anyone whose work or interest is involved with aurorae."

Other astrophysical phenomena investigated by Størmer include pulsations of the earth's magnetic field, echoing in radio transmissions, nacreous clouds and luminous night clouds, zodiacal light, meteor trails, the solar corona and solar vortices, and cosmic rays.[2]

References

1. ^ a b c d e f Brun, Viggo (1958), "Carl Störmer in memoriam", Acta Mathematica 100 (1–2): i–vii, doi:10.1007/BF02559599 .
2. ^ a b c d e f g h Chapman, Sydney (1958), "Fredrik Carl Mulertz Stormer, 1874–1957", Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 4: 257–279, doi:10.1098/rsbm.1958.0021, http://www.jstor.org/stable/769515 .
3. ^ a b Stormer biography, MacTutor history of mathematics archive.
4. ^ Biography (in Norwegian) by Professor Alf Egeland, Institute of Physics, University of Oslo.
5. ^ Some history, Norwegian Mathematical Society.
6. ^ Menzel, D. H.; Minnaert, M.; Levin, B.; Dollfus, A.; Bell, B. (1971), "Report on Lunar Nomenclature by The Working Group of Commission 17 of the IAU", Space Science Reviews 12 (2): 136–186, doi:10.1007/BF00171763 .
7. ^ Stormer's Vest Pocket camera, and his photos
8. ^ Associated press, December 6, 2002; letter from Kanada, October 20, 2005, online at super-computing.org.
9. ^ Halsey, G. D.; Hewitt, Edwin (1972), "More on the superparticular ratios in music", American Mathematical Monthly (Mathematical Association of America) 79 (10): 1096–1100, doi:10.2307/2317424, MR0313189, http://jstor.org/stable/2317424 .
10. ^ Nutting, P. G. (1908), "Störmer's work on the physics of the aurora", Terrestrial Magnetism and Atmospheric Electricity 13: 23, doi:10.1029/TE013i001p00023 . Reprinted in Monthly Weather Review 36 (4): 112–113, 1908, doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1908)36%3C112b:SWOTPO%3E2.0.CO;2.
11. ^ Hess, Wilmot N. (1962), "Energetic particles in the inner Van Allen belt", Space Science Reviews 1 (2): 278–312, doi:10.1007/BF00240580 .
12. ^ Størmer, Alv Egeland, University of Oslo, and Trond Abrahamsen, Andøya Rocket Range.
13. ^ Carl Stormer, NASA IMAGE Education Center.
14. ^ "Auroras shot from the Sun", Popular Science (Bonnier Corporation) 113 (5): 58, November, 1928, ISSN 0161-7370.
15. ^ Heard, J. F., "The Polar Aurora by Carl Størmer", Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 51: 117–118 .


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