Archimedes biography
Though
he had many great inventions, Archimedes considered his purely theoretical
work to be his true calling. His accomplishments are numerous. He devised
a new way to approximate square roots. Unhappy with the unwieldy Greek
number system, he devised his own that could accommodate larger numbers
more easily. He invented the entire field of hydrostatics with the discovery
of the Archimedes' Principle. However, his greatest invention was integral
calculus. He also anticipated the invention of differential calculus as
he devised ways to approximate the slope of the tangent lines to his figures.
In addition, he also made many other discoveries in geometry, mechanics
and other fields.
The end of Archimedes life was anything but uneventful. King Hiero had
been so impressed with his friend's inventions that he persuaded him to
develop weapons to defend the city. These inventions would prove quite
useful. In 212 B.C., Marcellus, a Roman general, decided to conquer Syracuse
with a full frontal assault on both land and sea. The Roman legions were
routed. Huge catapults hurled 500 pound boulders at the soldiers; large
cranes with claws on the end lowered down on the enemy ships, lifted them
in the air, and then threw them against the rocks; and systems of mirrors
focused the sun rays to light enemy ships on fire. The Roman soldiers
refused to continue the attack and fled at the mere sight of anything
projecting from the walls of the city. Marcellus was forced to lay siege
to the city, which fell after eight months. Archimedes was killed by a
Roman soldier when the city was taken. The traditional story is that the
mathematician was unaware of the taking of the city. While he was drawing
figures in the dust, a Roman soldier stepped on them and demanded he come
with him. Archimedes responded, "Don't disturb my circles!"
The soldier was so enraged that he pulled out his sword and slew the great
geometer. When Archimedes was buried, they placed on his tombstone the
figure of a sphere inscribed inside a cylinder and the 2:3 ratio of the
volumes between them, the solution to the problem he considered his greatest
achievement.
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