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(b.) -1831 July 17(d.)1906 December 11
Bio/Description
After graduating from the ?cole d'Application in Metz, Mannheim he became an officer of the French artillery. It was while he was a student at the ?cole d'Application that the ideas for the slide rule came to him. He invented what may be considered the first of the modern slide rules around 1850. This was a new scale system that used a runner to perform calculations. The Mannheim rule, which also brought into general use a cursor, or indicator, was much used in France, and after about 1880 it was imported in large numbers into other countries. Although slide rules existed before his time, invented by Oughtred and Gunter and others, it was he who standardized the modern version of the slide rule which was in common use until pocket calculators took over a few years ago. After several years in the military, he was appointed to the ?cole Polytechnique in Paris, while continuing his army career. In 1864 he was appointed as Professor of Descriptive Geometry at the ?cole Polytechnique. He retired from his army post in 1890, having attained the rank of colonel in the engineering corps. He continued teaching at the ?cole Polytechnique until he retired in 1901 at the age of 70. He made numerous contributions to geometry and for his outstanding contributions to the subject he was awarded the Poncelet Prize of the Acad?mie des Sciences in 1872. He studied the polar reciprocal transformation introduced by Chasles and applied his results to kinetic geometry. His own definition of kinetic geometry considered it to be the study of motion of a figure without reference to any forces, time or other properties external to the figure. He also studied surfaces, in particular Fresnel's wave surfaces.
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Date of Birth:
1831 July 17 -
Date of Death:
1906 December 11 -
Gender:
Male -
Noted For:
Inventor of a type of slide rule which was in common use until pocket calculators took over a few years ago -
Category of Achievement:
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More Info: