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Henri Lebesgue |
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Henri LebesgueHenri Léon Lebesgue (June 28, 1875 – July 26, 1941) was a French mathematician, most famous for his theory of integration. Lebesgue's integration theory was originally published in his dissertation, Intégral, longueur, aire ("Integral, length, area"), at the University of Nancy in 1902.Lebesgue's father was a typesetter, who died of tuberculosis when his son was still very young, and Lebesgue himself suffered from poor health throughout his life. After the death of his father, his mother worked tirelessly to support him. He was a brilliant student in primary school, and he later studied at the Ecole Normale Supérieure. Lebesgue married the sister of one of his fellow students, and he and his wife had two children, Suzanne and Jacques. He worked on his dissertation while teaching in Nancy at a preparatory school. Lebesgue's theory of integrationThis is a non-technical treatment from a historical point of view; see the article Lebesgue integration for a technical treatment from a mathematical point of view. Integration is a mathematical operation that corresponds to the informal idea of finding the area under the graph of a function. In the nineteenth century, Augustin Cauchy finally developed a rigorous theory of limitss, and Bernhard Riemann followed up on this by formalising what is now called the Riemann integral. Lebesgue invented a new method of integration to solve this problem. Lebesgue integration has the beautiful property that every function with a Riemann integral also has a Lebesgue integral, and for those functions the two integrals agree. As part of the development of Lebesgue integration, Lebesgue invented the concept of Lebesgue measure, which extends the idea of length from intervals to a very large class of sets, called measurable sets (so, more precisely, simple functions are functions that take a finite number of values, and each value is taken on a measurable set). The Lebesgue integral was deficient in one respect. Lebesgue's other achievements In addition to his dissertation, Although Lebesgue's integral was an example of the power of generalisation, Lebesgue himself did not approve of generalisation in general and spent the rest of his life working on very specific problems, generally in mathematical analysis. Related articles
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