Thursday, March 26, 2015

Google Doodle Emily Noether

Emmy Noether's 133rd BirthdayEmmy Noether's 133rd Birthday


MY PART:

A challenge I had to face to achieve my goal is distraction. I can get distracted easily. If I am trying to do something, I can't have too much activity around me. I need a quiet, productive space to work in. Facing this challenge is not always easy. To face this challenge I put myself away from my friends and the distracting fun. After I am done with what I am working on, I then allow myself to have fun. One specific occasion was earlier this week when I had to make a PowerPoint. I had to remove myself from the group so I could concentrate on doing my project. I made sure that I limited my fun until my project was fully finished. One comparison I can make is that like Emmy Noether, I am privileged to be able to get an education. People my age and older did not have an opportunity to get an education like I did.

ARTICLE:


Emmy Noether was no ordinary person...need proof? How many people do you know can count Albert Einstein as a fan of their work? The legendary physicist once referred to Noether as, “The most significant creative mathematical genius thus far produced,” a fitting endorsement for a mathematician who made groundbreaking contributions to the fields of abstract algebra and theoretical physics, all the while overcoming deep seated sexism in her line of work. For Noether’s 133rd birthday, I thought it would be best to highlight the mathematician's numerous accomplishments and shine a light on the influence Noether had on the world.

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When I first started tackling this doodle, I originally drew several concepts attempting to visualize Noether’s Theorem due to its revolutionary impact on the way people approach physics. But after discussing my ideas with a few professionals in the field, I decided that the doodle should include references to her mathematical work too. Noether was passionate about math, despite living in an era where women were often excluded from these subjects. While studying at the University of Erlangen as just one of two women at the school, Noether was only allowed to audit classes and needed to obtain permission from her professors in order to attend. After passing her graduation exam, she taught at the school’s Mathematical Institute for seven years without pay, frequently covering her father’s classes when he was out sick and publishing her own papers.
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But there weren’t any obstacles that would stop Noether from her studies. In this doodle,
each circle symbolizes a branch of math or physics that Noether devoted her illustrious career to. From left to right, you can see topology (the donut and coffee mug), ascending/descending chains, Noetherian rings (represented in the doodle by the Lasker-Noether theorem), time, group theory, conservation of angular momentum, and continuous symmetries–and the list keeps going on and on from there! Noether’s advancements not only reflect her brilliance but also her determination in the face of adversity.
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