- Vincenzo Viviani
Infobox Scientist
name = Vincenzo Viviani
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caption = Vincenzo Viviani
birth_date =April 5 ,1622
birth_place =Florence
death_date =September 22 ,1703
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nationality = Italian
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field =mathematics
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doctoral_advisor = Galileo
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known_for =Viviani's Theorem ,Viviani's curve
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footnotes =Vincenzo Viviani (
April 5 ,1622 -September 22 ,1703 ) was an Italianmathematician andscientist . He was a pupil of Torricelli and a disciple of Galileo.Biography
Born and raised in
Florence , Viviani studied at aJesuit school. There, Grand Duke Ferdinando II de' Medici furnished him a scholarship to purchase mathematical books. He became a pupil ofEvangelista Torricelli and worked onphysics andgeometry .In 1639, at the age of 17, he was an assistant of
Galileo Galilei inArcetri . He remained a disciple until Galileo's death in 1642. From 1655 to 1656, Viviani edited the first edition of Galileo's collected works.After Torricelli's 1647 death, Viviani was appointed to fill his position at the
Accademia dell'Arte del Disegno in Florence. Ferdinand II also appointed him engineer with the Uffiziali dei Fiumi— a position Viviani would hold for the rest of his life. Viviani was also one of the first members of the Grand Duke's experimental academy, the Accademia del Cimento, when it was created a decade later.In 1660, Viviani and
Giovanni Alfonso Borelli conducted an experiment to determine the speed ofsound . Timing the difference between the seeing the flash and hearing the sound of acannon shot at a distance, they calculated a value of 350 meters per second, considerably better than the previous value of 478 meters per second obtained byPierre Gassendi . The currently accepted value is 331.29 meters per second at 0°C. In 1661 he experimented with the rotation of pendulums, 190 years before the famous demonstration by Foucault.By 1666, Viviani started to receive many job offers as his reputation as a mathematician grew. That same year,
Louis XIV of France offered him a position at the Académie Royale and John II Casimir of Poland offered Viviani a post as hisastronomer . Fearful of losing Viviani, the Grand Duke appointed him court mathematician. Viviani accepted this post and turned down his other offers.In 1687, he published a book on engineering, "Discorso intorno al difendersi da' riempimenti e dalle corrosione de' fiumi".
Upon his death, Viviani left an almost completed work on the resistance of solids, which was subsequently completed and published by
Luigi Guido Grandi .In the 1730s, the Church finally allowed Galileo to be reburied in a grave with an elaborate monument. The monument that was created in the church of
Santa Croce was constructed with the help of funds left by Viviani for that specific purpose. Viviani's own remains were moved to Galileo's new grave as well.The lunar crater Viviani is named after him.
ee also
*
Viviani's Theorem
*Viviani's curve External links
* [http://galileo.rice.edu/sci/viviani.html Viviani] page at
Rice University 's Galileo Project
* [http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Viviani.html Viviani article] at theUniversity of St Andrews
* [http://www.cut-the-knot.org/Curriculum/Geometry/Viviani.shtml Viviani's Theorem]
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