- Bonaventura Cavalieri
Bonaventura Francesco Cavalieri (in
Latin , Cavalerius) (1598 -November 30 ,1647 ) was an Italian mathematician known for "Cavalieri's principle", which states that thevolume s of two objects are equal if the areas of their corresponding cross-sections are in all cases equal. Two cross-sections correspond if they are intersections of the body with planes equidistant from a chosen base plane. The principle was originally discussed by the 3rd century Chinese mathematicianLiu Hui in his commentary on "The Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Art ".Needham, Volume 3, 143.] Cavalieri developed a "method of the indivisibles," which he used to determine areas and volumes. It was a significant step on the way to moderninfinitesimal calculus ( [http://eom.springer.de/I/i050950.htm] ).Life
Born in
Milan , Cavalieri studiedtheology in themonastery of San Gerolamo in Milan andgeometry at theUniversity of Pisa . He published eleven books, his first being published in 1632. He worked on the problems ofoptics and motion. His astronomical and astrological work remained marginal to these main interests, though his last book, "Trattato della ruota planetaria perpetua" (1646), was dedicated to the former. He was introduced toGalileo through academic and ecclesiastical contacts. Cavalieri would write at least 112 letters to Galileo. Galileo said of Cavalieri, "few, if any, sinceArchimedes , have delved as far and as deep into the science of geometry." [http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/cavaleri.html]Galileo exerted a strong influence on Cavalieri encouraging him to work on his new method and suggesting fruitful ideas. Building on the classicmethod of exhaustion , Cavalieri developed a geometrical approach to calculus and published a treatise on the topic, "Geometria indivisibilibus continuorum nova quadam ratione promota" ("Geometry, developed by a new method through the indivisibles of the continua," 1635). In this work, an area is considered as constituted by an indefinite number of parallel segments and a volume as constituted by an indefinite number of parallel planar areas. Such elements are called indivisibles respectively of area and volume and provide the building blocks of Cavalieri's method.Cavalieri also constructed a hydraulic pump for his monastery and published tables of
logarithm s, emphasizing their practical use in the fields of astronomy andgeography . He died atBologna .The
lunar crater Cavalerius is named for the Latin name of Bonaventura Cavalieri.Notes
References
* [http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/cavaleri.html The Galileo Project: Cavalieri]
External links
*
* [http://eom.springer.de/I/i050950.htm Infinitesimal Calculus] - , an article on its historical development, in Encyclopaedia of Mathematics, Michiel Hazewinkel ed.
* [http://www.dividano.de More informations about the method of Cavalieri]
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