Erland Samuel Bring


Quick Info

Born
19 August 1736
Ausås, Ängelholm, Sweden
Died
20 May 1798
Lund, Sweden

Summary
Erland Bring was a Swedish mathemaician who made contributions to the algebraic solution of equations.

Biography

Erland Bring's parents were Jöns Bring (15 November 1705-1762) and Kristina Elisabet Lagerlöf. Jöns Bring, the son of Ebbe Bring and Abela Klinthea, was the vicar of Ausås and Strövelstorp. He married Kristina Elisabet Lagerlöf (born 28 December 1703) on 19 September 1735 in Matteröd, Skane County, Sweden. Their first child was Erland Samuel Bring, the subject of this biography. A daughter Anna Christina Bring was born in Ausås on 5 June 1747. Anna Christina married Petrus Joseph Münck, bishop of Lund, and had two children, Elisabeth Sophia Münck and Zacharias Justus Münck. She died in 1767. We note that Jöns Bring was one of six siblings, one of whom was Sven LagerBring (1707-1787). Sven LagerBring (or Sven Bring or Sven Lager Bring) was an historian and for many years professor of history at the University of Lund. He was a major influence on his nephew Erland Bring, the subject of this biography.

Erland Bring studied law at Lund from 18 April 1750 and he took the state examination in law in 1757. Following this he served as a lawyer and was a student teacher in the Göta Court of Appeal from 4 November 1757 and at the Svea Court of Appeal from 20 December 1760. He was then appointed as a notary to Lund University on 5 July 1762. In this position he did much administrative work for which his legal training stood him in good stead. This brief summary of Bring's career for the first thirty years of his life is somewhat misleading, for it was a career he followed to give himself financial security rather than one in which he was deeply interested. The topics that Bring loved most from an early age were mathematics and history. In addition to these, he was also interested in philosophy. We can see from the details given above that, although he began a career as a practicing lawyer, he moved as soon as he could into an administrative position at Lund University to be in the academic environment that he loved. Although he had not taken courses or written a dissertation in the Faculty of Arts, nevertheless he was awarded a Master of Arts degree from the University of Lund on 23 June 1766.

The award of the Master's Degree marks the start of Bring's move to a career teaching philosophy and history. He was appointed as a philosophy lecturer on 31 October 1767 and promoted to senior lecturer on 13 October 1770. On 2 May 1778 he became a lecturer in history and a professor of history on 1 September 1779. The reader may wonder why Bring's biography is being set out in a History of Mathematics Archive. In fact, despite the fact that Bring held positions in law, in philosophy and in history, it is for his contributions to mathematics that he is mostly remembered today. Preserved in the library at Lund there are eight volumes of his hand written mathematical work on [1]:-
... various questions in algebra, geometry, analysis and astronomy, and commentaries on the work of De L'Hopital, Christian von Wolf, Leonhard Euler, and other scholars.
He wrote about the geometric construction of airships, a topic of current interest given the public demonstration of a balloon flight by the Montgolfier brothers on 5 June 1783. His most famous work, however, is Meletemata quaedam mathematematica circa transformationem aequationum algebraicarum (1786) which was published at Lund. This work describes Bring's contribution to the algebraic solution of equations. However, all is not as straightforward as it appears as James Joseph Sylvester writes in [6]:-
In the year 1786 Erland Samuel Bring, Professor at the University of Lund in Sweden, showed how by an extension of the method of Tschirnhausen it was possible to deprive the general algebraical equation of the 5th degree of three of its terms without solving an equation higher than the 3rd degree. By a well-understood, however singular, academical fiction, this discovery was ascribed by him to one of his own pupils, a certain Sven Gustaf Sommelius, and embodied in a thesis humbly submitted to himself for approval by that pupil as a preliminary to his obtaining his degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University. [Bring's "Reduction of the Quintic Equation" was republished by the Rev. Robert Harley, F.R.S., in the 'Quarterly Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics,' vol. 6, 1864, p. 45. The full title of the Lund Thesis, as given by Mr Harley (see 'Quart. Journ. Math.,' pp. 44, 45) is as follows: "B. cum D. Meletemata quaedam mathematica circa transformationem aequationum algebraicarum, quae consent. Ampliss. Facult. Philos. in Regia Academia Carolina Praeside D. Erland Sam. Bring, Hist. Profess. Reg. & Ord. publico Eruditoram Examini modeste subjicit Sven Gustaf Sommelius, Stipendiarius Regius & Palmerentzianus Lundensis. Die XIV Decemb., MDCCLXXXVI, L.H.Q.S. -Lundae, typis Berlingianis."] The process for effecting this reduction seems to have been overlooked or forgotten, and was subsequently re-discovered many years later by Mr Jerrard.
Bring discovered an important transformation to simplify a quintic equation. It enabled the general quintic equation to be reduced to one of the form
x5+px+q=0.x^{5} + px + q = 0.
The way he achieved this is as follows. He begins with the quadratic equation x2+mx+n=0x^{2} + mx + n = 0 and makes the substitution x+a+y=0x + a + y = 0 where a=12ma = \large\frac{1}{2}\normalsize m and y2=14m2ny^{2} = \large\frac{1 }{4}\normalsize m^{2}- n. This substitution allows the second highest term in the original equation to be eliminated. In fact, this substitution will eliminate the second highest term for any equation. Bring then considers the general cubic equation x3+mx2+nx+p=0x^{3} + mx^{2} + nx + p = 0. Using the substitution x2+bx+a+y=0x^{2} + bx + a + y = 0 he [2]:-
... writes down without a proof an explicit equation for y. The coefficient of y2y^{2} is rather simple, m2mb2n+3am^{2} - mb - 2n + 3a, but the next coefficient has degree three and nine terms. Bring finds that a linear equation between a and b and a quadratic equation for b gives an equation y3=const.y^{3} = const.
He then goes on to apply the same techniques to quartic equations before moving on to the quintic. Here he is able to apply the same ideas but this time he cannot eliminate all the lower order terms but the best he can do is to reduce the equation to one of the form x5+px+q=0x^{5} + px + q = 0. Now, of course, he has presented a method to solve algebraic equations up to degree 4 and he ends his paper by asking the reader to compare his method for the cubic and the quartic with that given by Cardan and decide for himself which is the most interesting.

The transformation used by Bring was later discovered independently and generalised by George Birch Jerrard in 1832-35. By the time Jerrard discovered the transformation, Ruffini's work and Abel's work on the impossibility of solving the quintic and higher order equations had been published. However, at the time of Bring's discovery, there was no hint that the quintic could not be solved by radicals and, although Bring does not claim that he discovered his transformation in an attempt to solve the quintic, it is likely that this is in fact why he was examining quintic equations.

In [6] Sylvester writes a little on the later developments of these ideas and it seems appropriate to give these below:-
In a report contained in the 'Proceedings of the British Association' for 1836, Sir William Hamilton showed that Mr Jerrard was mistaken in supposing that the method was adequate to taking away more than three terms of the equation of the 5th degree, but supplemented this somewhat unnecessary refutation of a result, known 'à priori' to be impossible, by an extremely valuable discussion of a question raised by Mr Jerrard as to the number of variables required in order that any system of equations of given degrees in those variables shall admit of being satisfied without solving any equation of a degree higher than the highest of the given degrees. In the year 1886 the senior author of this memoir [Sylvester] showed in a paper in Kronecker's (better known as Crelle's) 'Journal' that the trinomial equation of the 5th degree, upon which by Bring's method the general equation of that degree can be made to depend, has necessarily imaginary coefficients except in the case where four of the roots of the original equation are imaginary, and also pointed out a method of obtaining the absolute minimum degree M of an equation from which any given number of specified terms can be taken away subject to the condition of not having to solve any equation of a degree higher than M. The numbers furnished by Hamilton's method, it is to be observed, are not minima unless a more stringent condition than this is substituted, viz., that the system of equations which have to be resolved in order to take away the proposed terms shall be the simplest possible, i.e., of the lowest possible weight and not merely of the lowest order; in the memoir in 'Crelle,' above referred to, he has explained in what sense the words weight and order are here employed. He has given the name of Hamilton's Numbers to these relative minima (minima, i.e., in regard to weight) for the case where the terms to be taken away from the equation occupy consecutive places in it, beginning with the second.
On 27 April 1791 Bring married Ingrid Katarina Ringberg (28 November 1749 - 7 June 1830), the daughter of Nils Ringberg, who was the vicar of Vasby, and Anna Lovisa Steutner von Sternfeldt.

Finally, let us say a little about Bring's contributions as an historian. The first thing to note is that he had access to the library of history books and manuscripts owned by his uncle Sven LagerBring. We note that Sven published the major three volume work History of Sweden (1769-1776). It is also worth noting that Sven LagerBring undertook a great deal of research but it is considered defective both in style and method. We relate this to explain that his influence on Bring was not the most positive and, perhaps as a consequence, Bring's work on history is not considered to be important. Bring's research contributions to history were mainly a continuation of his teaching and these were at a rather elementary level.

He contributed to Dissertatio gradualis de Territorio Bara (Bara Härad) (1796). Perhaps his most important historical work is Commentarii de vita academica, quam Londini Gothorum degit Samuel Pufendorf (1781) which is useful because of the extensive knowledge that Bring had of the archives of the university through his time at a notary. His biography of Andreas Rydelius was completed in 1782 but only published in 1806 after Bring's death. We note that Andreas Rydelius (1671-1738) was a philosopher and the bishop of Lund from 1734 until his death.

In 1790 Bring was rector of the university. As his health deteriorated with increasing chest problems, he made strenuous efforts to keep up all his duties including his teaching and his research. We end this biography by quoting from [1]:-
The deep significance of the Bring-Jerrard transformation was ascertained only after Charles Hermite (1858) used the above-mentioned trinomial form for the solution of fifth-degree equations with the aid of elliptic modular functions, thereby laying the foundations for new methods of studying and solving equations of higher degrees with the aid of transcendental functions.


References (show)

  1. A P Youschkevitch, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). See THIS LINK.
  2. L Garding, Mathematics and Mathematicians: Mathematics in Sweden before 1950 (American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1998).
  3. M Cantor, Erland Samuel Bring, in Vorlesungen über Geschichte der Mathematik IV (Leipzig, 1908), 130-132.
  4. G Eneström and B Möller, Erland Samuel Bring, in B Boëthius (ed), Svenskt biografiskt lexikon 6 (Albert Bonniers Förlag, Stockholm, 1926), 242-247.
  5. C J D Hill, Nagra ord om Erland Sam. Brings reduktion of 5te gradens equation, Öfversigt of Kongelige vetenskapsakademiens förhandlingar 18 (1861), 317-355.
  6. J J Sylvester and J Hammond, On Hamilton's Numbers, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London A 178 (1887), 285-312.

Additional Resources (show)

Other websites about Erland Bring:

  1. Dictionary of Scientific Biography

Cross-references (show)


Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update July 2015