Jean Claude Bouquet


Quick Info

Born
7 September 1819
Morteau, Doubs, France
Died
9 September 1885
Paris, France

Summary
Claude Bouquet was a French mathematician who worked on differential geometry and on series expansions of functions and elliptic functions.

Biography

Jean-Claude Bouquet's father was a farmer in the Doubs region of France. Jean-Claude became a school friend of Briot, who was also brought up in the Doubs region, and he went on to work with him for much of his life, collaborating both in teaching and in research. In fact Bouquet was two years younger than Briot but they became friends at the Lycée since both had a fascination for mathematics. Both felt that they wanted to become teachers of mathematics. Bouquet was brought up in a period of unrest with the revolution of 1830. Then during the years he was attending the Lycée there were many disturbances with fighting in the streets of Paris and Lyon on many occasions as enemies of the regime tried to overthrow it by force. However by the time Bouquet went to Paris to enter university there, France had entered a period of political stability and relative prosperity.

Bouquet entered the École Normale Supérieure in 1839, obtaining his doctorate in 1842 for a thesis Sur la variation des intégrales doubles which he submitted to the Faculty of Science in Paris. Briot had been a school teacher of mathematics for a year before entering the École Normale Supérieure and he took one year longer to obtain his doctorate than Bouquet so the two friends obtained their doctorates in the same year. Their careers then took very similar courses.

Bouquet was appointed professor of mathematics at the Lycée in Marseilles, then he went to Lyon as professor of mathematics in the Faculty of Science. In Lyon he met up again with his school friend Briot and the two began a collaboration which lasted throughout their careers. Bouquet returned to Paris shortly before Louis-Napoleon declared himself emperor of the French on 2 December 1852; the Second Empire lasted until 1870. From 1852 until 1858 Bouquet taught at the Lycée Bonaparte (later renamed the Lycée Condorcet) in Paris. Again he was a colleague of Briot and both taught the special mathematics course designed to prepare pupils to take the entrance examinations of the École Normale Supérieure and the École Polytechnique. In 1858 Bouquet moved to the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, the school Galois had graduated from 30 years before, and there again put his energies into preparing pupils for the entrance examinations for the two major Paris universities. He taught there until 1867 when he was appointed maître de conference (essentially an assistant lecturer) at the École Normale Supérieure and as répétiteur at the École Polytechnique. In 1874 Bouquet was appointed professor of differential and integral calculus at the Sorbonne, succeeding Serret who had retired due to ill health. Bouquet taught there until 1884, the year before his death.

Bouquet worked on differential geometry, writing on orthogonal surfaces Note sur les surfaces orthogonales (1946). In the same year he wrote an important memoirs on systems of lines of spaces Remarques sur les systèmes de droites dans l'espace then he published at Lyon in 1848 Mémoire sur propriétés d'un systèmes de droites . This work was carried forward by Bonnet, Darboux and Cayley. With Briot he worked from 1853 onwards on deep studies of Cauchy's ideas of analysis and produced many fundamental papers on series expansions of functions and on elliptic functions. In 1853 they established conditions for a function to be expandable into an entire series in their important paper Note sur le développement des fonctions en séries convergentes, ordonnées suivant les puissances croissantes de la variable .

Bouquet and Briot developed Cauchy's work on the existence of integrals of a differential equation. Together they wrote several important texts. For example Étude des fonctions d'une variable imaginaire ; < (Research on the properties of functions defined by differential equations); and Mémoire sur l'intégration des équations différentielles au moyen des fonctions elliptiques. Between 1859 and 1875 Bouquet worked with Briot on elliptic functions and Bouquet published an excellent text Théorie des fonctions elliptiques in 1875. In the year that he published this text he was elected to the Academy of Sciences in Paris.

Bouquet was as enthusiastic a teacher as he was researcher. There is no doubt that he enjoyed teaching at both secondary school and university level as much as he enjoyed the deep research he undertook. It is worth commenting that although today joint research papers are the norm, this was certainly not the case in the time in which Bouquet worked. It says much about his character that he enjoyed collaborative research. Jules Tannery, who was to write an obituary of Bouquet [2], was taught by him and praised him highly as a teacher.


References (show)

  1. J Itard, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). See THIS LINK.
  2. J Tannery, Jean Claude Bouquet, Mémorial de l'Association des anciens élèves de l'École normale (Paris, 1885).
  3. M Chasles, Rapport sur les progrès de la géometrie en France (Paris, 1870), 214-215.
  4. G H Halphen, Notice nécrologoque sur Bouquet, Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des sciences 102 (1886).

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update August 2006