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Apéry was active in politics and for a few years in the 1960s was president of the [[Calvados (department)|Calvados]] [[Radical Party of the Left|Radical Party]]. He abandoned politics after the reforms instituted by [[Edgar Faure]] after the [[May 1968 in France|1968 revolt]], when he realised that university life was running against the tradition he had always upheld.
Apéry was active in politics and for a few years in the 1960s was president of the [[Calvados (department)|Calvados]] [[Radical Party of the Left|Radical Party]]. He abandoned politics after the reforms instituted by [[Edgar Faure]] after the [[May 1968 in France|1968 revolt]], when he realised that university life was running against the tradition he had always upheld.

==See also==
* [[Apéry's constant]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 21:32, 16 August 2015

Roger Apéry (14 November 1916 – 18 December 1994) was a Greek-French mathematician most remembered for Apéry's theorem, that ζ(3) is an irrational number where ζ denotes the Riemann zeta function.

Apéry was born in Rouen in 1916 to a French mother and Greek father. After studies at the École Normale Supérieure (interrupted by a year as prisoner of war during World War II) he was appointed Lecturer at Rennes. In 1949 he was appointed Professor at the University of Caen where he remained until his retirement. He died after a long illness in Caen in 1994.

In 1979 he published an unexpected proof of the irrationality of ζ(3), which is the sum of the inverses of the cubes of the positive integers. An indication of the difficulty is that the corresponding problem for other odd powers remains unsolved. Nevertheless, many mathematicians have since worked on the so-called Apéry sequences to seek alternative proofs that might apply to other odd powers (F. Beukers, A. van der Poorten, M. Prevost, K. Ball, T. Rivoal, Wadim Zudilin and others).

Apéry was active in politics and for a few years in the 1960s was president of the Calvados Radical Party. He abandoned politics after the reforms instituted by Edgar Faure after the 1968 revolt, when he realised that university life was running against the tradition he had always upheld.

See also

  • F. Apéry (1996). "Roger Apéry, 1916-1994: A Radical Mathematician". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 18 (2): 54–61. doi:10.1007/BF03027295.
  • A. van der Poorten (1979). "A proof that Euler missed..." (PDF). The Mathematical Intelligencer. 1 (4): 195–203. doi:10.1007/BF03028234.

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