*Special
Seminar
Professor
Umran S. Inan
Winter
2002-2003
Date: Wednesday, January 29, 2003
Time: 4:15 PM – Refreshments at 4:00
New
Location: Packard
#101
Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center
Archimedes
(287 – 212 BC) has long been considered to be the most brilliant
mathematician, physicist and engineer of antiquity – and among the best
mathematicians in all our history. But,
what is this: was he also the originator of a type of calculus?
Yes, according to a treatise in a 10th century palimpsest
which was found recently. A
palimpsest is a book in which the original written material (Archimedes’ text
in this case) was scraped from the parchment and overwritten. Fortunately, the ink used by the scribe who copied the
Archimedes’ text was so good that it could not be entirely erased.
Among the seven valuable treatises
included in the palimpsest were Method of
Mechanical Theorems, which was referred to in the ancient literature but
never found, and On Floating Bodies,
which in the original Greek , had been lost for over 1000 years. In the Method of Mechanical Theorems, mathematicians were greatly surprise
to find that Archimedes used a form of integral calculus to determine the areas
and volumes of complex two- and three-dimensional bodies.
What a pity that this treatise, as well as others, were not available to
budding European mathematicians and physicists before the renaissance period!
In this seminar the journey of the palimpsest will be traced, and some of the remarkable accomplishments of this man will be discussed.