Matthew O'Brien (mathematician)

Matthew O'Brien (1814–1855) was an Irish mathematician.

Matthew O'Brien
Born1814
Died22 August 1855(1855-08-22) (aged 41)
Petit Ménage, Jersey
Alma materTrinity College, Dublin
Caius College, Cambridge
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsKing's College London

Life and work

O'Brien was born at Ennis (county Clare) son of a medical doctor.[1] In 1830 he was admitted in the Trinity College, Dublin, and in 1834 in the Caius College (university of Cambridge) where he graduated in 1838 as third wrangler,[2] as pupil of William Hopkins.[3] During a brief period (1840–1841) he was fellow of Caius College.[4]

From 1844 to 1854 he was lecturer on Natural Philosophy and Mathematics at King's College London, he simultaneously held the post of lecturer on Astronomy in the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.[5]

O'Brien was the author of twenty mathematical papers and some elementary textbooks. His most notable contribution was in theory and application of the vector method,[6] in a set of papers published between 1846 and 1852.[7] However, he did not finish fully developing the method because some of his theories were unsatisfactory,[8] and because he failed to include a treatment of associativity.[9] His work was very innovative, but his ideas where almost completely ignored by his contemporaries.[10]

gollark: It interfaced with a few C things.
gollark: Legacy code.
gollark: A race condition in tax handling meant that sometimes people accidentally got charged the entire national budget.
gollark: GTech™ test nation 10462670 did actually have a bug like that.
gollark: Instead of "wires", we just emit electron beams.

References

  1. Lynch, page 81.
  2. Crowe, page 97.
  3. Lynch, page 82.
  4. Craik, page 169.
  5. Craik, page 219.
  6. Lynch, page 83.
  7. Smith, page 174.
  8. Craik, page 335.
  9. Crowe, page 100.
  10. Lynch, page 86.

Bibliography

  • Craik, Alex D.D. (2008). Mr Hopkins' Men: Cambridge Reform and British Mathematics in the 19th Century. Springer. ISBN 978-1-84800-132-9.
  • Crowe, Michael J. (1994). A History of Vector Analysis: The Evolution of the Idea of a Vectorial System. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-67910-5.
  • Lynch, Peter (2014). "Matthew O'Brien: an inventor of vector analysis". Bulletin of the Irish Mathematical Society. 74: 81–88. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.704.858. ISSN 0791-5578.
  • Smith, G.C. (1982). "Matthew O'Brien's anticipation of vectorial mathematics". Historia Mathematica. 9 (2): 172–190. doi:10.1016/0315-0860(82)90002-7. ISSN 0315-0860.
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