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In 1879 he was elected to a Scholarship in Mathematics at Balliol College, and he matriculated in October, 1880. Besides first classes in the Mathematical Schools, and the Senior and Junior Mathematical Scholarships, he took a second class in Classical Moderations in 1882, and the degree of Bachelor of Music in 1884. In the period 1888-1919 he was Professor of Mathematics at Yorkshire College, now the University of Leeds. A serious illness obliged him to retire in 1919. He made a remarkable recovery, however, and returned to live in Oxford, where he continued his mathematical work, did a little teaching and examining, and increased his fame as a gifted musician. Rogers was a man of extraordinary gifts in many fields, and everything he did, he did well. Besides his mathematics and music he had many interests; he was a born linguist and phonetician, a wonderful mimic who delighted to talk broad Yorkshire, a first-class skater, and a maker of rock gardens. He did things well because he liked doing them. Music was the first necessity in his intellectual life, and after that came mathematics. He had very little ambition or desire for recognition. Rogers is now remembered for a remarkable set of identities which are special cases of results which he had published in 1894. Such names as Rogers- Ramanujan identities, Rogers- Ramanujan continued fractions and Rogers transformations are known in the theory of partitions, combinatorics and hypergeometric series. The Rogers- Ramanujan identities were discovered in the papers On the expansion of some infinite products, Lond. Math. Soc. Proc. 24, 337-352; 25, 318-343 (1893/94) and published in 1894, and rediscovered by S A Ramanujan in 1913 and I Schur in 1917 (cf. , , , ). We can quote Hardy who wrote in 1940 on page 91 of :
The above neglect can be gauged by the fact that in 1936 the future Fields Medallist , Atle Selberg , published a "generalization" of the Rogers- Ramanujan identities which turned out, in fact, to be another special case of Rogers' original result. The Rogers inequality was proved in 1888 in his paper An extension of a certain theorem in inequalities, Messenger of Math. 17 (1888), 145-150. The inequality
which is known as the Hölder inequality, was proved in a slightly different form by Rogers in 1888 and then, also in a different form, by Hölder in 1889. Hölder even made clear that he was indebted to a paper of Rogers by referring to it. In the above form together with its integral version the inequalities were stated and used by F Riesz in 1910. In 1920 Hardy wrote "By the well known inequality... which seems to be due to Hölder : see Edmund Landau (1907)". Then in 1934 in the well known Inequalities book of Hardy - Littlewood - Pólya on page 25 it was stated in an footnote that " Hölder states the theorem in a less symmetrical form given a little earlier by Rogers". As we can see Hölder was luckier that Pringsheim (1902), Jensen (1906), Landau (1907), Riesz (1910, 1913), Hardy (1920) and then Hardy - Littlewood - Pólya put Hölder name instead of Rogers's name to that inequality and now almost everybody refers to it as Hölder 's inequality. However, it should be called the Rogers inequality or Rogers- Hölder - Riesz inequality or, at least, Rogers- Hölder or Hölder -Rogers inequality (cf. , , and especially , where more is written about this interesting story). Rogers published over thirty papers in mathematics. Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |