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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GAG-GEO |
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GAUSS, KARL FRIEDRICH (1777-1855) , German mathematician, was born of humble parents at Brunswick on the 3oth of April 1777, and was indebted for a liberal education to the notice which his talents procured him from the reigning duke. His name became widely known by the publication, in his twenty-fifth year (18ot), of the Disquisitiones arithmelicae. In 1807 he was appointed director of the Gottingen observatory, an office which he retained to his death: it is said that he never slept away from under the roof of his observatory, except on one occasion, when he accepted an invitation from Baron von Humboldt.to attend a meeting of natural philosophers at Berlin. In ',Soo he published at Hamburg his Theoria motus corporum coelestium, a work
series of memoirs to the Royal Society of Sciences (Konigliche Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften) at Gottingen. His first memoir on the theory of magnetism, Intensitas vis magneticae terrestris ad mensuram absolutam revocata, was published in 1833, and he shortly afterwards proceeded, in conjunction with Wilhelm Weber, to invent new apparatus for observing the earth's magnetism and its changes; the instruments
instrument and the bifilar magnetometer
instruments
chief
birth
Gauss's collected works were published by the Royal Society of Gottingen, in 7 vols. 4to (Gott., 1863-1871), edited by E. J.Schering (1) the Disquisitiones arithmeticae, (2) Theory of Numbers, (3) Analysis, (4) Geometry and Method of Least Squares, (5) Mathematical Physics, (6) Astronomy, and (7) the Theoria motus corporum coelestium. Additional volumes have since been published, Fu'zdamente der Geometrie usw. (1900), and Geodatische Nachtrage zu Band iv. (1903). They include, besides his various works and memoirs, notices by him of many of these, and of works of other authors in the Gottingen gelehrte Anzeigen, and a considerable amount of previously unpublished matter, Nachlass. Of the memoirs in pure mathematics, comprised for the most part in vols. ii., iii. and iv. (but to these must be added those on Attractions in vol. v.), it may be safely said there is not one which has not signally contributed to the progress of the branch of mathematics to which it belongs, or which would not require to be carefully analysed in a history of the subject. Running through these volumes in order, we have in the second the memoir, Summatio quarundam serierum singularium, the memoirs on the theory of biquadratic residues, in which the notion of complex numbers of the form a+bi was first introduced into the theory of numbers; and included in the Nachlass are some valuable tables. That for the conversion of a fraction into decimals (giving the complete period for all the prime numbers up to 997) is a specimen of the extraordinary love which Gauss had for long arithmetical calculations; and the amount of work
Series , that on Interpolation , and the memoir Determinatio attractionisin which a planetary mass is considered as distributed over its orbit according to the time in which each portion of the orbit is described, and the question (having an implied reference to the theory of secular perturbations) is to find the attraction of such a ring. In the solution the value of an elliptic function
function
paper will be found in the article SURFACE.) And in vol. v. we have a memoir On the Attraction of Homogeneous Ellipsoids, and the already mentioned memoir Allgemeine Lehrsdtze, on the theory of forces attracting according to the inverse square of the distance. (A. CA.)End of Article: GAUSS, KARL FRIEDRICH (1777-1855) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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