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         Archimedes Of Syracuse:     more detail
  1. ARCHIMEDES OF SYRACUSE: THE CHEST OF IDEAS by Monte R Anderson, 2009-10-29
  2. The Sand Reckoner of Archimedes by Archimedes of Syracuse, 2010-10-01
  3. Naissance à Syracuse: Archimède, Lucie de Syracuse, Mario Feroce, Alessio Di Mauro, Gaetano Zumbo, Giuseppe Di Grande, Giuseppe Gibilisco (French Edition)
  4. People From Syracuse (City), Sicily: Archimedes, Tonino Accolla, Methodios I of Constantinople, Giuseppe Gibilisco, Elio Vittorini
  5. The legend of Archimedes and the burning mirrors of Syracuse (F.R. note) by D. L Simms, 1964
  6. Archimedes and the burning mirrors of Syracuse by D. L Simms, 1977
  7. The Sand Reckoner: Archimedes, Universe, Syracuse, Sicily, Gelo, son of Hiero II, Academic Paper, Large Numbers, Myriad, Long and Short Scales
  8. Archimedes Russell: Upstate Architect (York State Books) by Evamaria Hardin, 1980-09
  9. Ancient Syracusians: Archimedes, Agathocles, Cephalus, Hiero I of Syracuse, Theocritus, Dionysius I of Syracuse, Philistus, Sophron
  10. The Genius of Archimedes -- 23 Centuries of Influence on Mathematics, Science and Engineering: Proceedings of an International Conference held at Syracuse, ... (History of Mechanism and Machine Science)
  11. Archimedes: Archimedes' Screw, the Sand Reckoner, the Method of Mechanical Theorems, Siege of Syracuse, the Quadrature of the Parabola, Salinon

41. Archimedes
Archimedes AKA archimedes of syracuse Type Human Male Current OccupationRetired Former Occupations Military Advisor to the Greek King, Inventor
http://www.thefixsite.com/travelers/archimedes.html
Archimedes
AKA:
Archimedes of Syracuse
Type: Human Male
Current Occupation: Retired
Former Occupations: Military Advisor to the Greek King, Inventor, Mathematician
Marital Status: Single
Strength: Below Average
Endurance: Superior
Intelligence: Legendary
Cunning: Average
Education: Legendary Bravery: Above Average Speed: Average Charm: Above Average Preferred Weapons: his amazing intelligence Height: Weight: 140 lbs. Background: Archimedes was a famous Greek inventor that held the Romans at bay for months during the Battle of Syracuse with his amazing inventions. He discovered many things, including some of the basic theorums of geometry and mathematics. Career Highlights: Archimedes built many inventions, but his greatest was a time machine made from wood. Career Mishaps: The old inventor traveled to the far future of the 11th century to find futuristic warriors to help fight at the battle of Syracuse, but he failed to take into account the effect it would have on future history (see issue #9). Most redeeming quality: He's brilliant.

42. Archimedes' Life
wrote in his Bibliotheke, Most remarkable of all, they draw off streams of waterby the socalled Egyptian screws, which archimedes of syracuse invented when
http://physics.weber.edu/carroll/Archimedes/life.htm
Archimedes (~287 - 212 BC)
  • His father is thought to have been an astronomer, an interest he passed on to his son.
    Archimedes probably spent some time in Egypt early in his career, and probably studied Euclid at the Great Library of Alexandria.
    While in Egypt, he invented the Archimedes screw.
    Diodorus Siculus (first century BC), wrote in his Bibliotheke
    "Most remarkable of all, they draw off streams of water by the so-called Egyptian screws, which Archimedes of Syracuse invented when he went by ship to Egypt." Archimedes screws are still being used today
    He resided for most of his life in Syracuse, the principal city-state in Sicily.
    Archimedes was on intimate terms with Syracuse's king, Hiero II, and served as his military advisor.
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43. Geometrie Mit Dem Computer: Geschichte
Translate this page Angle Trisection by archimedes of syracuse TRISECTION AN EXACT SOLUTION ProjektWinkeldreiteilung mit interaktiven Applets Trisecting the Angle. Euklid,
http://www.learn-line.nrw.de/angebote/geometrie/medfoy/mat_ge.htm
mod.Unterricht Unterrichtsreihen Files Geometrie und Geschichte der Mathematik verschieden Themen aus der Geschichte der Geometrie Quadratur des Kreises Squaring the Circle (E)
Ein Mathematiker meldete sich nun mit einer neuen Theorie
(D) Dreiteilung des Winkels Angle Trisection by Archimedes of Syracuse
TRISECTION AN EXACT SOLUTION

Projekt Winkeldreiteilung mit interaktiven Applets
Trisecting the Angle
Euklid Unterichtsmaterialien zum Werk Euklids (E)
13 Books of Euclid
illustrated by interactive applets
Elemente von Euklid (E)

Greek Mathematics and its Modern Heirs
Thales Thales of Miletus Archimedes Archimedes (E)
Archimedes of Syracuse
(St. Andrews-College)
Archimedes-Biographie
von Cr. Rorres (E)
Archimedes
Pythagoras Pythagoras von Samos (St. Andrews-College) Fibonacci/Goldener Schnitt Fibonnacci (St. Andrews-College) The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers verschieden Die Idee, das Vorhaben

44. Mathematicians: Archimedes
Also includes a timeline. http//www.mcs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/contents.htmlarchimedes of syracuse Detailed biography along with related links.
http://www.slider.com/Kids_and_Teens/School_Time/Math/Mathematicians/Archimedes.
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    Archimedes Page:
    Archimedes
    Student-written profile introduces the thinker and his contributions to the world of math. http://tqjunior.thinkquest.org/4116/History/archimedes.htm?tqskip=1
    Archimedes
    Provides a detailed biography, including a look at the times in which he lived, the importance of his discoveries, his life, and his death. Also includes a timeline. http://www.mcs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/contents.html
    Archimedes of Syracuse
    Detailed biography along with related links. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Archimedes.html
    Archimedes of Syracuse: The Father of Buoyancy
    Offers a short summary of the scholar's life. Also provides a detailed look at his theory of flotation. http://www.engineering.usu.edu/jrestate/workshop/buoyancy.htm
    Encarta: Archimedes
    Encyclopedia article provides a brief overview of his life and accomplishments.
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  • 45. Archimedes
    . archimedes of syracuse. Born 287 BC inSyracuse, Sicily Died 212 BC in Syracuse, Sicily. ?
    http://nkiso.u-tokai.ac.jp/math/komori/jpeg/archimed.htm
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    Archimedes of Syracuse
    Born: 287 B.C. in Syracuse, Sicily
    Died: 212 B.C. in Syracuse, Sicily
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    46. Mathematics.History Of Mathematics - ChatArea.com
    pi. Around 200 BCE, archimedes of syracuse found that pi is somewhereabout 3.14 (in fractions, Greeks did not have decimals). Knowledge
    http://www.chatarea.com/Mathematics.m84861
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    Archimedes, First Discoverer of Pi
    posted on: 8/26/2002 3:37:40 AM (NOTE: The above information was gleaned from an article in The New Yorker magazine, March 2, 1992, called "Profiles: The Mountains of Pi" Did u know that Archimedes was the first mathematician to discover the value of pi up to 10000 digits!!! Notes on Pi: Pi is the most famous ratio in mathematics, and is one of the most ancient numbers known to humanity. Pi is approximately 3.14 - the number of times that a circle's diameter will fit around the circle. Pi goes on forever, and can't be calculated to perfect precision: 3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751.... This is known as the decimal expansion of pi. No apparent pattern emerges in the succession of digits - a predestined yet unfathomable code. They do

    47. The Production Of Electricity By A Generator Driven By A Buoyancy Engine
    I had been researching the works of archimedes of syracuse and other Greek NaturalPhilosophers when I saw a means for employing Archimedes' findings in an
    http://www.nuenergy.org/buoyancy/buoyancy.htm
    The Production of Electricity by a Generator Driven by a Buoyancy engine by denis alan de Shon 7242 Seven Oaks Avenue Baton Rouge, LA 70806 majden@cox.net Working Title : Buoyant Power, My name is denis alan de Shon; I'm a researcher for Advanced Consulting Group in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. I had been researching the works of Archimedes of Syracuse and other Greek Natural Philosophers when I saw a means for employing Archimedes' findings in an engine to produce electricity, This is accomplished by the introduction of excess pressurized gases from industry, both compressed air as well as compressed petroleum gases, into a buoyancy engine which turns a generator to produce electricity from the latent power in relatively low power compressed gases. Here's a brief History of Buoyancy. Archimedes of Syracuse was a Genius Greek Mathematician and Natural Philosopher. Recall, he's the one who jumped out of his tub at the Syracuse Baths and ran naked toward his home shouting "Eureka, Eureka" (I Have Found). In his bath, he realized that the mass of his body disposed in the tub displaced a certain amount of water.

    48. Chapter 16: Archimedes
    The most illustrious mathematician of this later age was also themechanical wizard of antiquity, archimedes of syracuse. Among
    http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/arch.htm
    Selections from Julia E. Diggins, String, Straightedge, and Shadow Viking Press, New York , 1965. (Illustrations by Corydon Bell)
    16. A ROYAL ROAD, AFTER ALL
    During the 4th century B.C., Greek geometry burst its bonds and went on to the tremendous discoveries of the "age of giants." And Greek culture, too, burst from the mainland of Hellas and spread to most of the eastern Mediterranean. Both developments were connected with the romantic figure of Alexander the Great. After Plato's time, teachers and alumni from the Academy had gone on to found schools of their own. In particular, Plato's most famous associate, the great philosopher Aristotle, had set up the Lyceum in Athens, and started the systematic classification of human knowledge. And Aristotle's most renowned pupil was the warrior king Alexander of Macedon, who tried to conquer the world. In thirteen years, Alexander extended his rule over Greece proper, and Ionia, Phoenicia, Egypt, and the vast Persian domains as far as India. Then he died, and his empire broke up. But throughout those far-flung lands, he had founded Greek cities and planted the seeds of Greek civilization-the Greek language, Greek art, and, of course, Greek mathematics. Mathematicians traveled with his armies. And there is even a

    49. Mathcards.com - Mathematician Trading Cards
    Just like baseball cards, but with short profiles of mathematicians.Category Kids and Teens School Time Math Mathematicians...... archimedes of syracuse. The images and biographical content forthe Math Cards on this site are used with permission from the
    http://www.mathcards.com/
    Euler Laplace Cauchy Descartes Archimedes Leibniz Khayyam Liouville Lorentz Minkowski Mobius Pythagoras Ramanujan Riemann Tsu Khwarizmi Hopital Bernoulli Fibonacci Fourier Godel Picard Stokes Sturm Taylor Agnesi Cavalieri Stevin Gauss Lagrange Lobachevsky Galois Seki Cardano Weierstrass Jacobi Eisenstein Hamilton Hilbert Euclid
    Omar Khayyam
    The images and biographical content for the "Math Cards" on this site are used with permission from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive of the University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Scotland. Special thanks to Edmund Robertson , Head of the School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences at the University of St Andrews, and one of the developers of the History of Mathematics Archive

    50. Untitled
    archimedes of syracuse (Born 287 BC 212 BC) Give me but one firm spot onwhich to stand, and I will move the earth. . archimedes of syracuse (ca.
    http://lhs.lexingtonma.org/Teachers/Trainor/pi/pi.htm
    ARCHIMEDES'
    POLYGON METHOD FOR CALCULATING
    THE VALUE OF Pi

    "If a person does not keep pace with their companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer" Henry David Thoreau
    ARCHIMEDES OF SYRACUSE (Born 287 B.C. - 212 B.C.)
    "Give me but one firm spot on which to stand, and I will move the earth."
    Archimedes of Syracuse (ca. 287-212 B.C.) was an ingenious mathematician, physicist, engineer and inventor. He was the first to develop a method for calculating Pi to a useful degree of accuracy. Pi is equal to the circumference (C) of a given circle divided by the diameter (D) of the circle (Pi = C/D). The diameter is a straight line and consequently easy to measure, but the circumference is a curved line therefore, it's measure could only be poorly estimated. Archimedes solved the curved line measuring problem by first constructing an inscribed regular polygon within the a given circle and adding up the measure of the sides (the perimeter). He clearly understood the perimeter's (P) measure would be less than the circle's circumference. Therefore, he constructed a second regular polygon circumscribed on the outside of the circle. This polygon's perimeter measure would be greater than the circle's circumference. He then substituted the average of the two polygon's perimeters as the circle's circumference "C". His equation was Pi = (polygon's perimeter didvided by polygon's diameter) or =P/D. He measured the diameter "D" of his constructed circle. Using a 96 sided regular polygon, his calculations for Pi using the formula, Pi = C/D produced the following results:

    51. Surfing The Net With Kids
    archimedes of syracuse The father of buoyancy People have been aware ofobjects floating on water (or sinking) since before recorded history.
    http://www.spokane.net/kids/z-1129.asp
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    (Sites that receive or are not listed.) Buoyancy Buoyancy (the force that keeps things afloat) is a concept for curious minds of all ages. From the youngest (Does it float or sink?) to the most sophisticated (Density is calculated by dividing mass by volume), I've found something for everyone. Archimedes of Syracuse: The father of buoyancy "People have been aware of objects floating on water (or sinking) since before recorded history. But it was not until Archimedes of Syracuse came along, that the theory of flotation and the buoyancy principle were defined." Archimedes was a mathematician born in Syracuse on the island of Sicily in 287 B.C. According to this University of Utah site, Archimedes is best remembered for an incident involving the crown of King Hiero II. Learn why Archimedes shouted "Eureka!" and how he proved that the king's crown maker had defrauded him. Blues Clues: Sink or float?

    52. Ref: Hellenist And Roman Age (325 BC - 450 AD) By Miles Hodges
    Archimedes (Chris Rorres) Archimedes (Paul Golba) archimedes of syracuse (St.Andrews) archimedes of syracuse (Eric Weisstein) Archimedes (IMSSFlorence).
    http://www.newgenevacenter.org/reference/hellenists2.htm
    People of Ideas during
    THE HELLENIST AND ROMAN AGE
    (325 BC to 450 AD)
    CONTENTS
    Early Hellenist Philosophers
    Development of the Physical Sciences
    Roman Contributions to Philosophy
    Later Hellenist Philosophers
    Hellenist and Roman History: General Sources
    EARLY HELLENIST PHILOSOPHERS
    Diogenes of Synope (c. 412-323 BC)
    Diogenes, who was a contemporary of Plato and Aristotle, laid out an important part of the Hellenistic world-view with his Cynicism. Please note: the Cynicism of the originator of this philosophy, Diogenes, had little in common with what we today understand as cynicism. Even before Philip and Alexander had arrived on the Greek scenethe constant warring among the Greeks, the hunger of Athens for power and dominion over its neighbors, the general sense that things were not right politically in Greecehad caused Diogenes to begin to look to inner or personal integrity as a substitute for lost public integrity (which had once been the focus of the moral life in Greece).

    53. Untitled
    Med venlig hilsen. Brian Bech Nielsen. archimedes of syracuse (ca.287ca. 212 BC). Greek mathematician who flourished in Sicily. He
    http://www.dfi.aau.dk/fys101/fys101_u10.html
    UGESEDDEL 10
    • Afleveringsopgave til uge 46

    Med venlig hilsen Brian Bech Nielsen
    Archimedes of Syracuse (ca. 287-ca. 212 BC) Greek mathematician who flourished in Sicily. He is generally considered to be the greatest mathematician of ancient times. Most of the facts about his life come from a biography about the Roman soldier Marcellus written by the Roman biographer Plutarch. Archimedes performed numerous geometric proofs using the rigid geometric formalism outlined by Euclid, excelling especially at computing areas and volumes using the method of exhaustion. He was especially proud of his discovery for finding the volume of a sphere, showing that it is two thirds the volume of the smallest cylinder that can contain it. At his request, the figure of a sphere and cylinder was engraved on his tombstone. In fact, it is often said that Archimedes would have invented calculus if the Greeks had only possessed a more tractable mathematical notation. By inscribing and circumscribing polygons on a circle, for instance, he was able to constrain the value of (pi ) between 3 10/71 and 3+1/7. Archimedes was also an outstanding engineer, formulating Archimedes' principle of buoyancy and the law of the lever. Legend has it that Archimedes discovered his principle of buoyancy, which states that the buoyancy force is equal to the weight of the liquid displaced, while taking a bath, upon which he is supposed to have run naked through the streets of Syracuse shouting "Eureka!" (I have found it). Archimedes is also purported to have invented the Archimedean screw. Some of Archimedes's geometric proofs were actually motivated by mechanical arguments which led him to the correct answer. During the Roman siege of Syracuse, he is said to have single-handedly defended the city by constructing lenses to focus the Sun's light on Roman ships and huge cranes to turn them upside down. When the Romans finally broke the siege, Archimedes was killed by a Roman soldier after snapping at him "Don't disturb my circles," a reference to a geometric figure he had outlined on the sand.

    54. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
    archimedes of syracuse 287-212 BC archimedes of syracuse lived most ofhis life in the Greek city of Syracuse, on the island of Siciliy.
    http://library.thinkquest.org/C0110195/history/bio.html
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    55. No 1, Arhimed, Gymnasia Banja Luka
    archimedes of syracuse (c. 287212 BC) Greek mathematician who in his Measurementof a Circle, Quadrature of the Parabola, and On Spirals tackled difficult
    http://www.gimnazijabl.rs.ba/arhimed/god02/broj01.htm
    Arhimed
    No 2
    E-mail: arhimed@gimnazijabl.rs.ba
    The newspaper for popularization and advancement of the exact sciences Archimedes of Syracuse (c. 287-212 BC) Greek mathematician who in his Measurement of a Circle, Quadrature of the Parabola , and On Spirals tackled difficult problems of description and mensuration in plane geometry. Comparable work in solid geometry was displayed in his On the Sphere and Cylinder and On Conoids and Spheroids . Equally original was Archimedes’ On Floating Bodies , the first application of mathematics to hydrostatics, and his work on the lever, specific gravity, and the centre of gravity of a variety of bodies. In pure mathematics he succeeded in solving cubic equations, squaring a parabola, and summing higher series as well as, in The Sand Reckoner , providing a notation for the representation of very large numbers. In The Method , an important work discovered only in 1906, Archimedes described how the use of mechanical principles firs led him to consider such propositions as “the area of any segment of a parabola is 4/3 times that the triangle with the same base and height”. His mathematical proof, by the method of exhaustion, came later. Taken from:
    THE PENGUIN DICTIONARY OF MATHEMATICS Edited by David Nelson SECOND EDITION , 1998, page 16 th (The Cover Story in original is not this one, nor the translation, but (on Serbian language):

    56. Zeal.com - United States - New - Library - Sciences - Mathematics - Mathematicia
    Contributed by antigone . 6. History of Mathematics archimedes of syracuse http//www.math.tamu.edu/~don.allen/history/archimed/archime
    http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=568973

    57. Listings Of The World Kids And Teens School Time Math
    tqskip=1 Added Nov-25-02; archimedes of syracuse Post Review Detailedbiography along with related links. http//www-history.mcs.st
    http://listingsworld.com/Kids_and_Teens/School_Time/Math/Mathematicians/Archimed

    58. SCC-LRC/Library: Millennium
    Take me back MATH PROJECT TOPICS archimedes of syracuse. archimedes of syracuse(ca.287ca.212 BC) http//www.treasure-troves.com/bios/Archimedes.html.
    http://www.seminole.cc.fl.us/lrc/Millennium.htm
    Millennium Middle School
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    TOPICS: CHEMISTRY CONSUMER GENERAL SCIENCE MATH ... PHYSICS ALL TOPICS: About Science (About.com)
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    NEWTON has many features that provide a variety of discussion areas, conferencing (chat) environments for teachers and scientists, internet service for teachers and the Ask A Scientist (AAS) program that has fielded over 10 000 questions from students and teachers. Scientists from all over the world are engaged in answering AAS questions. NEWTON offers an alternate to classroom use of the Internet with complete protection from advertisements and inappropriate web sites. NEWTON receives and stores information on world medical concerns, Jet Propulsion Laboratory news, computer technical assistance and Problem Based Learning listserves that can be easily searched for information. Britannica Online
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    59. Archimedes
    archimedes of syracuse. Born 287 BC in Syracuse, Sicily Died 212 BC in Syracuse,Sicily. Mathematiker Bild Archimedes was a native of Syracuse, Sicily.
    http://sfabel.tripod.com/mathematik/database/Archimedes.html
    Archimedes of Syracuse
    Born: 287 BC in Syracuse, Sicily
    Died: 212 BC in Syracuse, Sicily
    Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index
    Previous
    (Alphabetically) Next Welcome page Archimedes greatest contributions were in geometry. His methods anticipated the integral calculus 2,000 years before Newton and Leibniz Archimedes was a native of Syracuse, Sicily. Stories from Plutarch, Livy, and others describe machines invented by Archimedes for the defence of Syracuse. These include the catapult, the compound pulley and a burning-mirror. Among Archimedes most famous works is Measurement of the Circle , in which he put the exact value of between the values 3 and 3 . This he obtained by circumscribing and inscribing a circle with regular polygons having 96 sides. Archimedes proved, among many other geometrical results, that the volume of a sphere is two-thirds the volume of a circumscribed cylinder. This he considered his most significant accomplishments, requesting that a representation of a cylinder circumscribing a sphere be inscribed on his tomb. His fascination with geometry is beautifully described by Plutarch.

    60. Archimedes (courtesy Of The Cincinnati Network)
    archimedes of syracuse (ca. 287ca. 212 BC). Physics 30 Fluid Mechanics - Archimedes'Principle. From Archimedes to Newton Part I. Archimedes (ca. 287-212 BC).
    http://www.exxnet.com/resources/archime.htm
    Archimedes:
    (Prepared 10/29/98)
  • Archimedes of Syracuse (ca. 287-ca. 212 BC)
  • Physics 30: Fluid Mechanics - Archimedes' Principle
  • From Archimedes to Newton Part I
  • Archimedes (ca. 287-212 BC) ...
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