Abstract
In 1887, beneath a canopy of stars, Srinivasa Ramanujan commenced his brief existence on this planet. In a universe at the mercy of its entropy, against all odds, a genius was born. His destiny was mathematics, a subject born thousands of years earlier. The power of this discipline is not to be denied. After all, with our minds in the stars, we have placed footprints on the moon. The conquest of the moon was a triumph of applied mathematics; however, it was the landscape of pure mathematics that awaited Ramanujan. In time, he would explore it with passion, leaving footprints lasting for eternity. Professor Bruce C.~Berndt has done a remarkable job of editing the notebooks Ramanujan left behind. In particular, Berndt's Chapter 9 of \textit {Ramanujan's notebooks Part} I provides a magnificent in-depth look at raw mathematical talent in action. The primary purpose of this article is to present three Chapter~9 related results, a series evaluation and two new functional equations, that Ramanujan either missed or his work on them was lost. The secondary purpose is to present what Berndt calls a ``corrected version'' \cite [page 233]{Berndt} of an incorrect Chapter~9 formula of Ramanujan. This series evaluation represents one of the few serious mistakes to be found in Ramanujan's work.
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have