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SOFIA KRUKOVSKY KOVALEVSKAYA
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Content Introduction Kovalevskaya’s Family Early Mathematical Training
Higher Mathematical Training Cauchy-Kovalevskaya Theorem Prizes
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Introduction Sophia Vasilievna Kovalevskaya (1850-1891)
First major Russian female mathematician Analysis Differential equations Mechanics
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Introduction First woman appointed to a full professorship in Northern Europe. She was one of the first women to work for a scientific journal as an editor.
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Kovalevskaya’s Family
Kovalevskaya’s parents, Vasily Vasilievich Kriukovskoi and Elizaveta Fyodorovna Schubert were married on 29 January 1843. Kovalevskaya was born in Moscow on 15 January 1850
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Early Mathematical Training
Sonya turned her bright mind toward mathematics and biology. She was guess that the sine of a central angle is proportional to chord subtended by the angle.
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Higher Mathematical Training
Professor Weiersterass discovered her and from that moment the great mathematician became her friend for life With Weierstrass' support Sofia Kovalevskaya pursued a degree in mathematics, and her work earned her a doctorate from the University of Göttingen in 1874.
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Cauchy-Kovalevskaya Theorem
Her doctoral dissertation on partial differential equations is today called the Cauchy-Kovalevskaya Theorem. It so impressed the faculty that they awarded Kovalevskaya the doctorate without examination and without her having attended any classes at the university.
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Cauchy-Kovalevskaya Theorem
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After Sofia Kovalevskaya and her husband returned to Russia after she earned her doctorate. She began writing fiction novel Vera Barantzova.
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Prizes In 1888 Sofia Kovalevskaya won the Prix Bordin from the French Academie Royale des Sciences for research now called the Kovelevskaya top. She also won a prize from the Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1889, and that same year was appointed to a chair at the university - the first woman appointed to a chair at a modern European university. She was also elected to the Russian Academy of Sciences as a member that same year.
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Finally She only published ten papers before her death from influenza in 1891, after a trip to Paris to see Maxim Kovalensky, a relative of her late husband with whom she was having a love affair.
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