HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesHarish Chandra, and the semisimple Lie in mathematics

Harish Chandra, and the semisimple Lie in mathematics

Born 100 years ago in Kanpur, Harish Chandra (1923-83) trained to be a physicist and ended up being one of the greatest mathematicians of his age.

January 22, 2023 / 10:05 IST
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Harish Chandra said his lack of training in math was actually an asset, because "knowledge, by advocating caution, tends to inhibit the flight of imagination".
Harish Chandra said his lack of training in math was actually an asset, because "knowledge, by advocating caution, tends to inhibit the flight of imagination".

Among the most prestigious awards in the field of mathematics is the Frank Nelson Cole Prize given by the American Mathematical Society in recognition of notable research work in algebra that has been published in a recognized and peer-reviewed venue. In 1954, the prize was given to Indian mathematician Harish Chandra for his work - in particular for his paper on some applications of the universal enveloping algebra of a semisimple Lie.

It was a complex piece of work, difficult for commoners to follow. But by linking algebra, analysis, geometry, and group theory, it became the cornerstone for much of the modern work in areas like differential geometry, mathematical physics and number theory.

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The complexity is understandable since Harish Chandra, born 100 years ago in 1923, was a polymath in the truest sense of the term. Considered one of the outstanding mathematicians of his generation and certainly one of the greatest India has produced, Chandra graduated from the University of Allahabad where he studied theoretical physics before going on to do his postgraduate research on problems in theoretical physics under Homi Bhabha, at the Indian Institute of Science at Bangalore. His interest in physics was kindled after he stumbled upon Paul Dirac’s influential monograph Principles of Quantum Mechanics in the university library. Subsequently, when in 1945 he went to Cambridge for his PhD, it was under Dirac that he did his research.

But while he completed his doctorate in physics, he was intrigued by the possibilities in mathematics after attending lectures by British mathematician John Edensor Littlewood, whose students included the math wizard Srinivasa Ramanujan, and Marshall Hall, the American mathematician well known for his work in group theory and combinatorics.