In 1912, attempting to solve the
four color problem, Birkhoff introduced the
chromatic polynomial. Even though this line of attack did not prove fruitful, the
polynomial itself became an important object of study in
algebraic graph theory. In 1913, he proved Poincaré's "
Last Geometric Theorem," a special case of the
three-body problem, a result that made him world-famous and improved the international recognition of American mathematics. Birkhoff was also a
contributor to the development of
general relativity. He wrote on the foundations of relativity and
quantum mechanics, publishing (with
R. E. Langer) the monograph
Relativity and Modern Physics in 1923. In 1923, Birkhoff also
proved that the
Schwarzschild geometry is the unique spherically symmetric solution of the
Einstein field equations. A consequence is that
black holes are not merely a mathematical curiosity, but could result from any spherical star having sufficient mass. His theorem was later used to develop the
Oppenheimer–Snyder model. In 1927, he published his
Dynamical Systems. Birkhoff's most durable result has been his 1931 discovery of what is now called the
ergodic theorem. Combining insights from
physics on the
ergodic hypothesis with
measure theory, this theorem solved, at least in principle, a fundamental problem of
statistical mechanics. The ergodic theorem has also had repercussions for dynamics,
probability theory,
group theory, and
functional analysis. He also worked on
number theory, the
Riemann–Hilbert problem, and the
four colour problem. He proposed an axiomatization of
Euclidean geometry different from Hilbert's (see
Birkhoff's axioms); this work culminated in his text
Basic Geometry (1941). His 1933
Aesthetic Measure proposed a
mathematical theory of aesthetics. While writing this book, he spent a year studying the art, music and poetry of various cultures around the world. His 1938
Electricity as a Fluid combined his ideas on philosophy and science. His 1943 theory of gravitation is also puzzling since Birkhoff knew (but didn't seem to mind) that his theory allows as sources only matter which is a
perfect fluid in which the
speed of sound must equal the
speed of light. ==Influence on selection process==