Sofia Vasilyevna Kovalevskaya (Софья Васильевна Ковалевская) (January 15, 1850 – February 10, 1891) was the first major Russian female mathematician and a student of Karl Weierstrass in Berlin. In 1884, she was appointed professor at Stockholm University, the third woman in Europe to become a professor.
Her mother was Elizaveta Fyodorovna Schubert (1820-1879), a German. She was granddaughter of Theodor Schubert aka Fyodor Ivanovich Schubert (mathematician and astronomer of the St Petersburg Academy of Sciences) via Fyodor Fyodorovich Schubert (another Academician) and had more education and "appreciation of the finer things" than her husband.
As Vasily Vasilievich Krukovsky had a Polish father, and a Russian mother, Kovalevskaya was only a quarter-Russian by descent. She had great appreciation for the Polish revolutionary movement of the 19th century.
There seem to have been several roots to Sofia's mathematical bent. Some came from her father, accidentally; he had studied calculus in the army, and when they ran short of proper wallpaper for one house, he used lithographed notes from lectures by Ostrogradsky instead. Sofia spent many hours of childhood scrutinising the strange scribbles. Something of it seems to have stuck for when she later took calculus it came to her very quickly, as if it had always been there.
She adored her uncle Pyotr Vasilievich Krukovsky, a self-taught eccentric with especial fondness for mathematics.
While reading a book on optics given to her by a family friend, she came across trigonometric concepts unfamiliar to her at the time, which she tried to explain on her own. She explained it in the same manner it was explained historically, and the friend was so impressed he implored Sophia's father to let her take private mathematical study, calling her "a new Pascal" in the process.
Kovalevskaya had a crush on Fyodor Dostoevsky and practiced his favourite piano work, Beethoven's Pathetique Sonata, to get his attention, but he was focused on the older sister Anna and he very probably proposed to her.
In 1880, Kovalevskaya moved to Moscow but was not allowed to take an examination for the Master degree in the university. A year later she left Moscow for Berlin and Paris, trying to get a professor's job there.
She also essentially completed the study of rotating solids, applying the then-new theory of Abelian functions (and thus "justifying" the enormous effort that was put into the theory). For this study, namely for the paper On the Rotation of a Solid Body about a Fixed Point, Kovalevskaya was awarded a special prize by the Paris Academy of Science in 1888. In the next year she was awarded the prize of Swedish Academy of Science for her second work on this subject.
As late as in 1889, she became the first female Correspondent Member of St. Petersburg Academy of Science, being elected there on the initiative of Pafnuty Chebyshev among others.
Kovalevskaya died of influenza, complicated by pneumonia, in Stockholm and is interred there in the Norra begravningsplatsen.
There were two biographical movies released about her in the USSR in 1956 and in 1985.
Some of her scientific works include:
19th century mathematicians | Russian mathematicians | Russian scientists | Swedish scientists | Women mathematicians | 1850 births | 1891 deaths
Соф'я Кавалеўская | София Ковалевска | Sofia Kovalevskaya | Sofja Kowalewskaja | Sofia Kovalevskaya | Sofja Kovalevskaja | Sofia Kovalevskaïa | Sofia Kovalevskaya | Sofija Kovaļevska | Szofja Kovalevszkaja | ソフィア・コワレフスカヤ | Zofia Kowalewska | Sofia Vasilyevna Kovalevskaja | Ковалевская, Софья Васильевна | Соња Коваљевска | Sofia Kovalevskaja | 柯瓦列夫斯卡娅
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"Sofia Kovalevskaya".
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