Archimedes biography
Archimedes
is considered one of the three greatest mathematicians of all time along
with Newton and Gauss. In his own time, he was known as "the wise
one," "the master" and "the great geometer" and
his works and inventions brought him fame that lasts to this very day.
He was one of the last great Greek mathematicians.
Born in 287 B.C., in Syracuse, a Greek seaport colony in Sicily, Archimedes
was the son of Phidias, the astronomer not the stone cutter of the same
name. Archimedes proved to be a master at mathematics and spent most of
his time contemplating new problems to solve, becoming at times so involved
in his work that he forgot to eat. Lacking the blackboards and paper of
modern times, he used any available surface, from the dust on the ground
to ashes from an extinguished fire, to draw his geometric figures. Never
giving up an opportunity to ponder his work, after bathing and anointing
himself with olive oil, he would trace figures in the oil on his own skin.
Much of Archimedes fame comes from his relationship with Hiero, the king
of Syracuse, and Gelon, Hiero's son. He seemed to make a hobby out of
solving the king's most complicated problems to the utter amazement of
the sovereign. At one time, the king ordered a gold crown and gave the
goldsmith the exact amount of metal to make it. When Hiero received it,
the crown had the correct weight but the monarch suspected that some silver
had been used instead of the gold. Since he could not prove it, he brought
the problem to Archimedes. One day while considering the question, "the
wise one" entered his bathtub and recognized that the amount of water
that overflowed the tub was proportional the amount of his body that was
submerged. This observation is now known as Archimedes' Principle and
gave him the means to solve the problem. He was so excited that he ran
naked through the streets of Syracuse shouting "Eureka! Eureka!"
(I have found it!). The fraudulent goldsmith was brought to justice. Another
time, Archimedes stated "Give me a place to stand on and I will move
the earth." King Hiero, who was absolutely astonished by the statement,
asked him to prove it. In the harbor was a ship that had proved impossible
to launch even by the combined efforts of all the men of Syracuse. Archimedes,
who had been examining the properties of levers and pulleys, built a machine
that allowed him to single-handedly move the ship from a distance away.
He also had many other inventions including the Archimedes' watering screw
and a miniature planetarium.
|