Dame Mary Cartwright
Lisa Jardine celebrates the achievements of the mathematician Dame Mary Cartwright, whose work helped wartime radar engineers and became the foundation of chaos theory.
Lisa Jardine celebrates the achievements of the mathematician Dame Mary Cartwright, the first woman mathematician to be elected to the Royal Society.
During World War Two, she responded to a request from the British government to address an issue with early and still-secret radar systems. Together with her colleague Professor J. E. Littlewood, they were able to help war-time radar engineers circumvent a problem that was making radar unreliable.
Her findings were not fully understood by her peers at first. It would take a generation before mathematicians realised that her discoveries were the foundation of what became a new field of science: chaos theory.
Dame Mary Cartwright was very modest and did not want eulogies at her funeral, but Lisa Jardine takes the opportunity of International Woman's Day to blow Dame Mary's trumpet on her behalf.
Last on
A Point of View: Mary, queen of maths
Maths genius Mary Cartwright was a modest soul and one of the early founders of chaos theory. It's time we recognised her massive contribution, says historian Lisa Jardine.
Μύ
Broadcasts
- Fri 8 Mar 2013 20:50Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Sun 10 Mar 2013 08:50Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
Podcast
-
A Point of View
A weekly reflection on a topical issue.