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Evangelista Torricelli

Evangelista Torricelli (/ˌtɒriˈɛli/ TORR-ee-CHEL-ee;[1][2] Italian: [evandʒeˈlista torriˈtʃɛlli] ; 15 October 1608 – 25 October 1647) was an Italian physicist and mathematician, and a student of Galileo. He is best known for his invention of the barometer, but is also known for his advances in optics and work on the method of indivisibles. The torr is named after him.

Evangelista Torricelli
Evangelista Torricelli by Lorenzo Lippi (c. 1647)
Born(1608-10-15)15 October 1608
Died25 October 1647(1647-10-25) (aged 39)
NationalityItalian
Alma materSapienza University of Rome
Known forBarometer
Torricelli's experiment
Torricelli's equation
Torricelli's law
Torricelli point
Torricelli's trumpet
Torricellian vacuum
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
Mathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Pisa
Academic advisorsBenedetto Castelli
Notable studentsVincenzo Viviani
Signature

Biography edit

Early life edit

Torricelli was born on 15 October 1608 in Rome, the firstborn child of Gaspare Torricelli and Caterina Angetti.[3] His family was from Faenza in the Province of Ravenna, then part of the Papal States. His father was a textile worker and the family was very poor. Seeing his talents, his parents sent him to be educated in Faenza, under the care of his uncle, Giacomo (James), a Camaldolese monk, who first ensured that his nephew was given a sound basic education. He then entered young Torricelli into a Jesuit College in 1624, possibly the one in Faenza itself, to study mathematics and philosophy until 1626, by which time his father, Gaspare, had died. The uncle then sent Torricelli to Rome to study science under the Benedictine monk Benedetto Castelli, professor of mathematics at the Collegio della Sapienza (now known as the Sapienza University of Rome).[4][5] Castelli was a student of Galileo Galilei.[6] "Benedetto Castelli made experiments on running water (1628), and he was entrusted by Pope Urban VIII with hydraulic undertakings."[7] There is no actual evidence that Torricelli was enrolled at the university. It is almost certain that Torricelli was taught by Castelli. In exchange he worked for him as his secretary from 1626 to 1632 in a private arrangement.[8] Because of this, Torricelli was exposed to experiments funded by Pope Urban VIII. While living in Rome, Torricelli became also the student of the mathematician Bonaventura Cavalieri, with whom he became great friends.[6] It was in Rome that Torricelli also became friends with two other students of Castelli, Raffaello Magiotti and Antonio Nardi. Galileo referred to Torricelli, Magiotti, and Nardi affectionately as his "triumvirate" in Rome.[9]

Career edit

 
Torricelli's statue in the Museo di Storia Naturale di Firenze

In 1632, shortly after the publication of Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Torricelli wrote to Galileo of reading it "with the delight ... of one who, having already practiced all of geometry most diligently ... and having studied Ptolemy and seen almost everything of Tycho Brahe, Kepler and Longomontanus, finally, forced by the many congruences, came to adhere to Copernicus, and was a Galileian in profession and sect". (The Vatican condemned Galileo in June 1633, and this was the only known occasion on which Torricelli openly declared himself to hold the Copernican view.)

Aside from several letters, little is known of Torricelli's activities in the years between 1632 and 1641, when Castelli sent Torricelli's monograph of the path of projectiles to Galileo, then a prisoner in his villa at Arcetri. Although Galileo promptly invited Torricelli to visit, Torricelli did not accept until just three months before Galileo's death. The reason for this was that Torricelli's mother, Caterina Angetti died.[6] "(T)his short intercourse with the great mathematician enabled Torricelli to finish the fifth dialogue under the personal direction of its author; it was published by Viviani, another pupil of Galileo, in 1674."[7] After Galileo's death on 8 January 1642, Grand Duke Ferdinando II de' Medici asked Torricelli to succeed Galileo as the grand-ducal mathematician and chair of mathematics at the University of Pisa. Right before the appointment, Torricelli was considering returning to Rome because of there being nothing left for him in Florence,[6] where he had invented the barometer. In this new role he solved some of the great mathematical problems of the day, such as finding a cycloid's area and center of gravity. As a result of this study, he wrote the book the Opera Geometrica in which he described his observations. The book was published in 1644.[6]

Little was known about Torricelli in regard to his works in geometry when he accepted the honorable position, but after he published Opera Geometrica two years later, he became highly esteemed in that discipline.[10] "He was interested in Optics, and invented a method whereby microscopic lenses might be made of glass which could be easily melted in a lamp."[7] As a result, he designed and built a number of telescopes and simple microscopes; several large lenses, engraved with his name, are still preserved in Florence. On 11 June 1644, he famously wrote in a letter to Michelangelo Ricci:

Noi viviamo sommersi nel fondo d'un pelago d'aria. (We live submerged at the bottom of an ocean of air.)[11]

However his work on the cycloid involved him in a controversy with Gilles de Roberval, who accused him of plagiarizing his earlier solution of the problem of its quadrature. Although it appears that Torricelli reached his solution independently, the matter was still in dispute up to his death.[12]

Death edit

 
Evangelista Torricelli portrayed on the frontpage of Lezioni d'Evangelista Torricelli
 
Torricelli's experiment
 
Torricelli lunar crater map

Torricelli died of fever, most likely typhoid,[3][13] in Florence on 25 October 1647,[14] 10 days after his 39th birthday, and was buried at the Basilica of San Lorenzo. He left all his belongings to his adopted son Alessandro. "Belonging to that first period are his pamphlets on Solidi spherali, Contatti and the major part of the propositions and sundry problems which were gathered together by Viviani after Torricelli's death. This early work owes much to the study of the classics."[6] Sixty-eight years after Torricelli had died, his genius still filled his contemporaries with admiration, as evidenced by the anagram below the frontispice of Lezioni accademiche d'Evangelista Torricelli published in 1715: En virescit Galileus alter, meaning "Here blossoms another Galileo."

Honours edit

In Faenza, a statue of Torricelli was created in 1868 in gratitude for all that Torricelli had done in advancing science during his short lifetime.[7]

The asteroid 7437 Torricelli and a crater on the Moon were named in his honour.

The mountain range Torricelli Mountains on New Guinea carry his name.

In 1830, botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle published Torricellia, which is a genus of flowering plants from Asia belonging to the family Torricelliaceae. They were named in Evangelista Torricelli's honour.[15]

Torricelli's work in physics edit

The perusal of Galileo's Two New Sciences (1638) inspired Torricelli with many developments of the mechanical principles there set forth, which he embodied in a treatise De motu (printed amongst his Opera geometrica, 1644). Its communication by Castelli to Galileo in 1641, with a proposal that Torricelli should reside with him, led to Torricelli traveling to Florence, where he met Galileo, and acted as his amanuensis during the three remaining months of his life.[12]

Suction pumps and the invention of the barometer edit

Torricelli's work led to first speculations about atmospheric pressure, and to the corollary invention of the mercury barometer (from the Greek word baros, meaning weight[16]) -- the principle of which was described as early as 1631 by René Descartes, although there is no evidence that Descartes ever built such an instrument.[17]

The barometer arose from the need to solve a theoretical and practical problem: a suction pump could only raise water up to a height of 10 metres (34 ft) (as recounted in Galileo's Two New Sciences). In the early 1600s, Torricelli's teacher, Galileo, argued that suction pumps were able to draw water from a well because of the "force of vacuum."[16] This argument, however, failed to explain the fact that suction pumps could only raise water to a height of 10 metres.

After Galileo's death, Torricelli proposed, rather, that we live in a "sea of air" that exerts a pressure analogous in many ways to the pressure of water on submerged objects.[18] According to this hypothesis, at sea level, the air in the atmosphere has weight that roughly equals the weight of a 10-meter column of water.[16] When a suction pump creates a vacuum inside a tube, the atmosphere no longer pushes on the water column below the piston but still pushes down on the surface of the water outside, thus causing the water to rise until its weight counterbalances the weight of the atmosphere. This hypothesis might have led him to a striking prediction: That a suction pump might only raise mercury, which is 13 times heavier than water, to 1/13 the height of the water column (76 centimeters) in a similar pump. (It is possible however that Torricelli carried out the mercury experiment first, and then formulated his sea of air hypothesis[18]).

In 1643, Torricelli filled a meter-long tube (with one end sealed off) with mercury—thirteen times denser than water—and set the open end of the tube into a basin of the liquid metal and raised the sealed end so the tube stood vertically. The mercury level in the tube fell until it was about 76 centimetres (30 in) above the surface of the mercury basin, producing a Torricellian vacuum above.[19] This was also the first recorded incident of creating permanent vacuum.

A second unambiguous prediction of Torricelli's sea of air hypothesis was made by Blaise Pascal, who argued, and proved, that the mercury column of the barometer should drop at higher elevations. Indeed, it dropped slightly on top of a 50-meter bell tower, and much more so at the peak of a 1460-meter mountain.

As we know now, the column's height fluctuates with atmospheric pressure at the same location, a fact which plays a key role in weather forecasting. Baseline changes in the column's height at different elevations, in turn, underlie the principle of the altimeter. Thus, this work laid the foundations for the modern concept of atmospheric pressure, the first barometer, an instrument that would later play a key role in weather forecasting, and the first pressure altimeter, which measures altitude and is often used in hiking, climbing, skiing, and aviation.

The solution to the suction pump puzzle and the discovery of the principle of the barometer and altimeter have perpetuated Torricelli's fame with terms such as "Torricellian tube" and "Torricellian vacuum". The torr, a unit of pressure used in vacuum measurements, is named after him.

Torricelli's law edit

Torricelli also discovered a law, regarding the speed of a fluid flowing out of an opening, which was later shown to be a particular case of Bernoulli's principle. He found that water leaks out a small hole in the bottom of a container at a rate proportional to the square root of the depth of the water. So if the container is an upright cylinder with a small leak at the bottom and y is the depth of the water at time t, then

 

for some constant k > 0.[20]

Torricelli's principle edit

The concept of center of gravity was discovered by Archimedes. Torricelli, following in his footsteps, discovered an important new principle, Torricelli’s principle, which says: if any number of bodies be so connected that, by their motion, their centre of gravity can neither ascend nor descend, then those bodies are in equilibrium.[12] This is essentially a version of the principle of virtual work. This principle was later used by Christiaan Huygens to study pendulum motion.

The study of projectiles edit

Torricelli studied projectiles and how they traveled through the air. "Perhaps his most notable achievement in the field of projectiles was to establish for the first time the idea of an envelope: projectiles sent out at [...] the same speed in all directions trace out parabolas which are all tangent to a common paraboloid. This envelope became known as the parabola di sicurezza (parabola of safety)."[6][5]

Cause of wind edit

Torricelli gave the first scientific description of the cause of wind:

... winds are produced by differences of air temperature, and hence density, between two regions of the earth.[4]

Torricelli's work in mathematics edit

Torricelli is also famous for the discovery of the Torricelli's trumpet (also - perhaps more often - known as Gabriel's Horn) whose surface area is infinite, but whose volume is finite. This was seen as an "incredible" paradox by many at the time, including Torricelli himself, and prompted a fierce controversy about the nature of infinity, also involving the philosopher Hobbes. It is supposed by some to have led to the idea of a "completed infinity". Torricelli tried several alternative proofs, attempting to prove that its surface area was also finite - all of which failed.[citation needed]

Torricelli was also a pioneer in the area of infinite series. In his De dimensione parabolae of 1644, Torricelli considered a decreasing sequence of positive terms   and showed the corresponding telescoping series   necessarily converges to  , where L is the limit of the sequence, and in this way gives a proof of the formula for the sum of a geometric series.

Torricelli developed further the method of indivisibles of Cavalieri. Many 17th century mathematicians learned of the method through Torricelli whose writing was more accessible than Cavalieri's.[21]

Italian submarines edit

 
Torricelli (S-512);0837310

Several Italian Navy submarines were named after Evangelista Torricelli:

  • A Micca class submarine, built in 1918, stricken in 1930
  •  
    Title page to a 1823 copy of Lezioni accademiche
     
    1959 Evangelista Torricelli commemorative stamp of the U.S.S.R.
    An Archimede class submarine (1934), transferred to Spain in 1937 and renamed General Mola, stricken in 1959
  • A Benedetto Brin class submarine (1937), sank in the Red Sea due to the British Navy in 1940
  • Evangelista Torricelli, the former USS Lizardfish, transferred to Italy in 1960 and decommissioned in 1976

Selected works edit

His original manuscripts are preserved at Florence, Italy. The following have appeared in print:

  • Trattato del moto (before 1641)
  • Opera geometrica (1644)
  • Lezioni accademiche (Firenze, 1715)
  • Esperienza dell'argento vivo (Berlin, 1897)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2022-06-11.
  2. ^ "Torricelli". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  3. ^ a b Frank N. Magill (13 September 2013). The 17th and 18th Centuries: Dictionary of World Biography. Taylor & Francis. pp. 3060–. ISBN 978-1-135-92421-8.
  4. ^ a b O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Evangelista Torricelli", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  5. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Robinson, Philip (March 1994). "Evangelista Torricelli". The Mathematical Gazette. 78 (481): 37–47. doi:10.2307/3619429. JSTOR 3619429. S2CID 250441421.
  7. ^ a b c d Jervis-Smith, Frederick John (1908). Evangelista Torricelli. Oxford University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9781286262184.
  8. ^ "Evangelista Torricelli". Turnbull world wide web server. J J O'Conno and E F Robertson. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  9. ^ Favaro, Antonio, ed. (1890–1909). Opere di Galileo Galilei. Edizione Nazionale. Vol. XVIII (in Italian). Florence: Barbera. p. 359.
  10. ^ Mancosu, Paolo; Ezio, Vailati (March 1991). "Torricelli's Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century". Isis. 82 (1): 50–70. doi:10.1086/355637. JSTOR 233514. S2CID 144679838.
  11. ^ Walker, Gabrielle (2010). An Ocean of Air: A Natural History of the Atmosphere. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781408807132.
  12. ^ a b c   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Torricelli, Evangelista". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 61–62.
  13. ^ Annelies Wilder-Smith; Marc Shaw; Eli Schwartz (7 June 2007). Travel Medicine: Tales Behind the Science. Routledge. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-35216-4.
  14. ^ Timbs, John (1868). Wonderful Inventions: From the Mariner's Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable. London: George Routledge and Sons. p. 41. ISBN 978-1172827800. Torricelli died in 1647, ...
  15. ^ "Torricellia DC. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  16. ^ a b c "Evangelista Torricelli".
  17. ^ Timbs, John (1868). Wonderful Inventions: From the Mariner's Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable. London: George Routledge and Sons. pp. 41. ISBN 978-1172827800. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  18. ^ a b "Harvard Case Histories In Experimental Science, Volume I". Harvard University Press. 1957.
  19. ^ Gillispie, Charles Coulston (1960). The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas. Princeton University Press. p. 100. ISBN 0-691-02350-6.
  20. ^ Driver, R. (May 1998). "Torricelli's Law: An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE". The American Mathematical Monthly. 105 (5): 454. doi:10.2307/3109809. JSTOR 3109809.
  21. ^ Amir Alexander (2014). Infinitesimal: How a Dangerous Mathematical Theory Shaped the Modern World. Scientific American / Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374176815.

References edit

  • Aubert, André (1989). "Prehistory of the Zeta-Function". In Aubert, Karl Egil; Bombieri, Enrico; Goldfeld, Dorian (eds.). Number Theory, Trace Formulas and Discrete Groups. Academic Press. ISBN 978-1483216232.
  • de Gandt, François, ed. (1987). L'Oeuvre de Torricelli: Science galiléene et nouvelle géométrie. Publications de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Nice. Vol. 32. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.
  • Shampo, M. A.; Kyle, R A (March 1986). "Italian physicist-mathematician invents the barometer". Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 61 (3): 204. doi:10.1016/s0025-6196(12)61850-3. PMID 3511332.
  • Jervis-Smith, Frederick John (1908). Evangelista Torricelli. Oxford University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9781286262184.
  • Driver, R. (May 1998). "Torricelli's Law: An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE". The American Mathematical Monthly. 105 (5): 454. doi:10.2307/3109809. JSTOR 3109809.
  • Mancosu, Paolo; Ezio, Vailati (1991). "Torricelli's Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century". Isis. 82 (1): 50–70. doi:10.1086/355637. S2CID 144679838.
  • Robinson, Philip J. (1994). "Evangelista Torricelli". The Mathematical Gazette. 78 (481): 37–47. doi:10.2307/3619429. JSTOR 3619429. S2CID 250441421.
  • Segre, Michael (1991). In the wake of Galileo. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
  • Timbs, John (1868). Wonderful Inventions: From the Mariner's Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable. London: George Routledge and Sons. p. 41. ISBN 978-1172827800.

External links edit

  • Evangelista Torricelli, Encyclopædia Britannica Evangelista Torricelli | Italian physicist and mathematician
  • Evangelista Torricelli, Treccani Enciclopedia Torricèlli, Evangelista nell'Enciclopedia Treccani
  • Evangelista Torricelli at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • University of Florence article
  • The Galileo Correspondence Project at Stanford University 2018-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • Scientist of the Day – Evangelista Torricelli at Linda Hall Library
  • Robinson, Philip J. (1994). "Evangelista Torricelli". The Mathematical Gazette. 78 (481): 37–47. doi:10.2307/3619429. JSTOR 3619429. S2CID 250441421.
  • Sarton (1923). "Reviewed work: Opere di Evangelista Torricelli, Gino Loria, Giuseppe Vassura". Isis. 5 (1): 151–154. doi:10.1086/358128. JSTOR 223606.
  • Mancosu, Paolo; Vailati, Ezio (1991). "Torricelli's Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century". Isis. 82 (1): 50–70. doi:10.1086/355637. JSTOR 233514. S2CID 144679838.
  • "Classic Inventions: Torricelli's Vacuum". The Science News-Letter. 16 (436): 97–99. 1929. doi:10.2307/3905198. JSTOR 3905198.
  • Driver, R. D. (1998). "Torricelli's Law: An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE". The American Mathematical Monthly. 105 (5): 453–455. doi:10.2307/3109809. JSTOR 3109809.

evangelista, torricelli, torr, chel, italian, evandʒeˈlista, torriˈtʃɛlli, october, 1608, october, 1647, italian, physicist, mathematician, student, galileo, best, known, invention, barometer, also, known, advances, optics, work, method, indivisibles, torr, na. Evangelista Torricelli ˌ t ɒr i ˈ tʃ ɛ l i TORR ee CHEL ee 1 2 Italian evandʒeˈlista torriˈtʃɛlli 15 October 1608 25 October 1647 was an Italian physicist and mathematician and a student of Galileo He is best known for his invention of the barometer but is also known for his advances in optics and work on the method of indivisibles The torr is named after him Evangelista TorricelliEvangelista Torricelli by Lorenzo Lippi c 1647 Born 1608 10 15 15 October 1608Rome Papal StatesDied25 October 1647 1647 10 25 aged 39 Florence Grand Duchy of TuscanyNationalityItalianAlma materSapienza University of RomeKnown forBarometerTorricelli s experimentTorricelli s equationTorricelli s lawTorricelli pointTorricelli s trumpetTorricellian vacuumScientific careerFieldsPhysicsMathematicsInstitutionsUniversity of PisaAcademic advisorsBenedetto CastelliNotable studentsVincenzo VivianiSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Career 1 3 Death 1 4 Honours 2 Torricelli s work in physics 2 1 Suction pumps and the invention of the barometer 2 2 Torricelli s law 2 3 Torricelli s principle 2 4 The study of projectiles 2 5 Cause of wind 3 Torricelli s work in mathematics 4 Italian submarines 5 Selected works 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Torricelli was born on 15 October 1608 in Rome the firstborn child of Gaspare Torricelli and Caterina Angetti 3 His family was from Faenza in the Province of Ravenna then part of the Papal States His father was a textile worker and the family was very poor Seeing his talents his parents sent him to be educated in Faenza under the care of his uncle Giacomo James a Camaldolese monk who first ensured that his nephew was given a sound basic education He then entered young Torricelli into a Jesuit College in 1624 possibly the one in Faenza itself to study mathematics and philosophy until 1626 by which time his father Gaspare had died The uncle then sent Torricelli to Rome to study science under the Benedictine monk Benedetto Castelli professor of mathematics at the Collegio della Sapienza now known as the Sapienza University of Rome 4 5 Castelli was a student of Galileo Galilei 6 Benedetto Castelli made experiments on running water 1628 and he was entrusted by Pope Urban VIII with hydraulic undertakings 7 There is no actual evidence that Torricelli was enrolled at the university It is almost certain that Torricelli was taught by Castelli In exchange he worked for him as his secretary from 1626 to 1632 in a private arrangement 8 Because of this Torricelli was exposed to experiments funded by Pope Urban VIII While living in Rome Torricelli became also the student of the mathematician Bonaventura Cavalieri with whom he became great friends 6 It was in Rome that Torricelli also became friends with two other students of Castelli Raffaello Magiotti and Antonio Nardi Galileo referred to Torricelli Magiotti and Nardi affectionately as his triumvirate in Rome 9 Career edit nbsp Torricelli s statue in the Museo di Storia Naturale di FirenzeIn 1632 shortly after the publication of Galileo s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems Torricelli wrote to Galileo of reading it with the delight of one who having already practiced all of geometry most diligently and having studied Ptolemy and seen almost everything of Tycho Brahe Kepler and Longomontanus finally forced by the many congruences came to adhere to Copernicus and was a Galileian in profession and sect The Vatican condemned Galileo in June 1633 and this was the only known occasion on which Torricelli openly declared himself to hold the Copernican view Aside from several letters little is known of Torricelli s activities in the years between 1632 and 1641 when Castelli sent Torricelli s monograph of the path of projectiles to Galileo then a prisoner in his villa at Arcetri Although Galileo promptly invited Torricelli to visit Torricelli did not accept until just three months before Galileo s death The reason for this was that Torricelli s mother Caterina Angetti died 6 T his short intercourse with the great mathematician enabled Torricelli to finish the fifth dialogue under the personal direction of its author it was published by Viviani another pupil of Galileo in 1674 7 After Galileo s death on 8 January 1642 Grand Duke Ferdinando II de Medici asked Torricelli to succeed Galileo as the grand ducal mathematician and chair of mathematics at the University of Pisa Right before the appointment Torricelli was considering returning to Rome because of there being nothing left for him in Florence 6 where he had invented the barometer In this new role he solved some of the great mathematical problems of the day such as finding a cycloid s area and center of gravity As a result of this study he wrote the book the Opera Geometrica in which he described his observations The book was published in 1644 6 Little was known about Torricelli in regard to his works in geometry when he accepted the honorable position but after he published Opera Geometrica two years later he became highly esteemed in that discipline 10 He was interested in Optics and invented a method whereby microscopic lenses might be made of glass which could be easily melted in a lamp 7 As a result he designed and built a number of telescopes and simple microscopes several large lenses engraved with his name are still preserved in Florence On 11 June 1644 he famously wrote in a letter to Michelangelo Ricci Noi viviamo sommersi nel fondo d un pelago d aria We live submerged at the bottom of an ocean of air 11 However his work on the cycloid involved him in a controversy with Gilles de Roberval who accused him of plagiarizing his earlier solution of the problem of its quadrature Although it appears that Torricelli reached his solution independently the matter was still in dispute up to his death 12 Death edit nbsp Evangelista Torricelli portrayed on the frontpage of Lezioni d Evangelista Torricelli nbsp Torricelli s experiment nbsp Torricelli lunar crater mapTorricelli died of fever most likely typhoid 3 13 in Florence on 25 October 1647 14 10 days after his 39th birthday and was buried at the Basilica of San Lorenzo He left all his belongings to his adopted son Alessandro Belonging to that first period are his pamphlets on Solidi spherali Contatti and the major part of the propositions and sundry problems which were gathered together by Viviani after Torricelli s death This early work owes much to the study of the classics 6 Sixty eight years after Torricelli had died his genius still filled his contemporaries with admiration as evidenced by the anagram below the frontispice of Lezioni accademiche d Evangelista Torricelli published in 1715 En virescit Galileus alter meaning Here blossoms another Galileo Honours edit In Faenza a statue of Torricelli was created in 1868 in gratitude for all that Torricelli had done in advancing science during his short lifetime 7 The asteroid 7437 Torricelli and a crater on the Moon were named in his honour The mountain range Torricelli Mountains on New Guinea carry his name In 1830 botanist Augustin Pyramus de Candolle published Torricellia which is a genus of flowering plants from Asia belonging to the family Torricelliaceae They were named in Evangelista Torricelli s honour 15 Torricelli s work in physics editThe perusal of Galileo s Two New Sciences 1638 inspired Torricelli with many developments of the mechanical principles there set forth which he embodied in a treatise De motu printed amongst his Opera geometrica 1644 Its communication by Castelli to Galileo in 1641 with a proposal that Torricelli should reside with him led to Torricelli traveling to Florence where he met Galileo and acted as his amanuensis during the three remaining months of his life 12 Suction pumps and the invention of the barometer edit Main article Barometer Torricelli s work led to first speculations about atmospheric pressure and to the corollary invention of the mercury barometer from the Greek word baros meaning weight 16 the principle of which was described as early as 1631 by Rene Descartes although there is no evidence that Descartes ever built such an instrument 17 The barometer arose from the need to solve a theoretical and practical problem a suction pump could only raise water up to a height of 10 metres 34 ft as recounted in Galileo s Two New Sciences In the early 1600s Torricelli s teacher Galileo argued that suction pumps were able to draw water from a well because of the force of vacuum 16 This argument however failed to explain the fact that suction pumps could only raise water to a height of 10 metres After Galileo s death Torricelli proposed rather that we live in a sea of air that exerts a pressure analogous in many ways to the pressure of water on submerged objects 18 According to this hypothesis at sea level the air in the atmosphere has weight that roughly equals the weight of a 10 meter column of water 16 When a suction pump creates a vacuum inside a tube the atmosphere no longer pushes on the water column below the piston but still pushes down on the surface of the water outside thus causing the water to rise until its weight counterbalances the weight of the atmosphere This hypothesis might have led him to a striking prediction That a suction pump might only raise mercury which is 13 times heavier than water to 1 13 the height of the water column 76 centimeters in a similar pump It is possible however that Torricelli carried out the mercury experiment first and then formulated his sea of air hypothesis 18 In 1643 Torricelli filled a meter long tube with one end sealed off with mercury thirteen times denser than water and set the open end of the tube into a basin of the liquid metal and raised the sealed end so the tube stood vertically The mercury level in the tube fell until it was about 76 centimetres 30 in above the surface of the mercury basin producing a Torricellian vacuum above 19 This was also the first recorded incident of creating permanent vacuum A second unambiguous prediction of Torricelli s sea of air hypothesis was made by Blaise Pascal who argued and proved that the mercury column of the barometer should drop at higher elevations Indeed it dropped slightly on top of a 50 meter bell tower and much more so at the peak of a 1460 meter mountain As we know now the column s height fluctuates with atmospheric pressure at the same location a fact which plays a key role in weather forecasting Baseline changes in the column s height at different elevations in turn underlie the principle of the altimeter Thus this work laid the foundations for the modern concept of atmospheric pressure the first barometer an instrument that would later play a key role in weather forecasting and the first pressure altimeter which measures altitude and is often used in hiking climbing skiing and aviation The solution to the suction pump puzzle and the discovery of the principle of the barometer and altimeter have perpetuated Torricelli s fame with terms such as Torricellian tube and Torricellian vacuum The torr a unit of pressure used in vacuum measurements is named after him Torricelli s law edit Torricelli also discovered a law regarding the speed of a fluid flowing out of an opening which was later shown to be a particular case of Bernoulli s principle He found that water leaks out a small hole in the bottom of a container at a rate proportional to the square root of the depth of the water So if the container is an upright cylinder with a small leak at the bottom and y is the depth of the water at time t then d y d t k u y y displaystyle frac dy dt k sqrt u y y nbsp for some constant k gt 0 20 Torricelli s principle edit The concept of center of gravity was discovered by Archimedes Torricelli following in his footsteps discovered an important new principle Torricelli s principle which says if any number of bodies be so connected that by their motion their centre of gravity can neither ascend nor descend then those bodies are in equilibrium 12 This is essentially a version of the principle of virtual work This principle was later used by Christiaan Huygens to study pendulum motion The study of projectiles edit Torricelli studied projectiles and how they traveled through the air Perhaps his most notable achievement in the field of projectiles was to establish for the first time the idea of an envelope projectiles sent out at the same speed in all directions trace out parabolas which are all tangent to a common paraboloid This envelope became known as the parabola di sicurezza parabola of safety 6 5 Cause of wind edit Torricelli gave the first scientific description of the cause of wind winds are produced by differences of air temperature and hence density between two regions of the earth 4 Torricelli s work in mathematics editTorricelli is also famous for the discovery of the Torricelli s trumpet also perhaps more often known as Gabriel s Horn whose surface area is infinite but whose volume is finite This was seen as an incredible paradox by many at the time including Torricelli himself and prompted a fierce controversy about the nature of infinity also involving the philosopher Hobbes It is supposed by some to have led to the idea of a completed infinity Torricelli tried several alternative proofs attempting to prove that its surface area was also finite all of which failed citation needed Torricelli was also a pioneer in the area of infinite series In his De dimensione parabolae of 1644 Torricelli considered a decreasing sequence of positive terms a 0 a 1 a 2 displaystyle a 0 a 1 a 2 ldots nbsp and showed the corresponding telescoping series a 0 a 1 a 1 a 2 displaystyle a 0 a 1 a 1 a 2 cdots nbsp necessarily converges to a 0 L displaystyle a 0 L nbsp where L is the limit of the sequence and in this way gives a proof of the formula for the sum of a geometric series Torricelli developed further the method of indivisibles of Cavalieri Many 17th century mathematicians learned of the method through Torricelli whose writing was more accessible than Cavalieri s 21 Italian submarines edit nbsp Torricelli S 512 0837310Several Italian Navy submarines were named after Evangelista Torricelli A Micca class submarine built in 1918 stricken in 1930 nbsp Title page to a 1823 copy of Lezioni accademiche nbsp 1959 Evangelista Torricelli commemorative stamp of the U S S R An Archimede class submarine 1934 transferred to Spain in 1937 and renamed General Mola stricken in 1959 A Benedetto Brin class submarine 1937 sank in the Red Sea due to the British Navy in 1940 Evangelista Torricelli the former USS Lizardfish transferred to Italy in 1960 and decommissioned in 1976Selected works editHis original manuscripts are preserved at Florence Italy The following have appeared in print Trattato del moto before 1641 Opera geometrica 1644 Lezioni accademiche Firenze 1715 Esperienza dell argento vivo Berlin 1897 See also editGeometric median Logarithmic spiral Torricellian chamber Vena contracta Gasparo Berti Stefano degli AngeliNotes edit Torricelli Evangelista Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 2022 06 11 Torricelli Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 6 August 2019 a b Frank N Magill 13 September 2013 The 17th and 18th Centuries Dictionary of World Biography Taylor amp Francis pp 3060 ISBN 978 1 135 92421 8 a b O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Evangelista Torricelli MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews a b Chisholm 1911 a b c d e f g Robinson Philip March 1994 Evangelista Torricelli The Mathematical Gazette 78 481 37 47 doi 10 2307 3619429 JSTOR 3619429 S2CID 250441421 a b c d Jervis Smith Frederick John 1908 Evangelista Torricelli Oxford University Press p 9 ISBN 9781286262184 Evangelista Torricelli Turnbull world wide web server J J O Conno and E F Robertson Retrieved 2016 08 05 Favaro Antonio ed 1890 1909 Opere di Galileo Galilei Edizione Nazionale Vol XVIII in Italian Florence Barbera p 359 Mancosu Paolo Ezio Vailati March 1991 Torricelli s Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century Isis 82 1 50 70 doi 10 1086 355637 JSTOR 233514 S2CID 144679838 Walker Gabrielle 2010 An Ocean of Air A Natural History of the Atmosphere London Bloomsbury ISBN 9781408807132 a b c nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Torricelli Evangelista Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 61 62 Annelies Wilder Smith Marc Shaw Eli Schwartz 7 June 2007 Travel Medicine Tales Behind the Science Routledge p 71 ISBN 978 1 136 35216 4 Timbs John 1868 Wonderful Inventions From the Mariner s Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable London George Routledge and Sons p 41 ISBN 978 1172827800 Torricelli died in 1647 Torricellia DC Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved 12 March 2021 a b c Evangelista Torricelli Timbs John 1868 Wonderful Inventions From the Mariner s Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable London George Routledge and Sons pp 41 ISBN 978 1172827800 Retrieved 2 June 2014 a b Harvard Case Histories In Experimental Science Volume I Harvard University Press 1957 Gillispie Charles Coulston 1960 The Edge of Objectivity An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas Princeton University Press p 100 ISBN 0 691 02350 6 Driver R May 1998 Torricelli s Law An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE The American Mathematical Monthly 105 5 454 doi 10 2307 3109809 JSTOR 3109809 Amir Alexander 2014 Infinitesimal How a Dangerous Mathematical Theory Shaped the Modern World Scientific American Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0374176815 References editAubert Andre 1989 Prehistory of the Zeta Function In Aubert Karl Egil Bombieri Enrico Goldfeld Dorian eds Number Theory Trace Formulas and Discrete Groups Academic Press ISBN 978 1483216232 de Gandt Francois ed 1987 L Oeuvre de Torricelli Science galileene et nouvelle geometrie Publications de la Faculte des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Nice Vol 32 Paris Les Belles Lettres Shampo M A Kyle R A March 1986 Italian physicist mathematician invents the barometer Mayo Clinic Proceedings 61 3 204 doi 10 1016 s0025 6196 12 61850 3 PMID 3511332 Jervis Smith Frederick John 1908 Evangelista Torricelli Oxford University Press p 9 ISBN 9781286262184 Driver R May 1998 Torricelli s Law An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE The American Mathematical Monthly 105 5 454 doi 10 2307 3109809 JSTOR 3109809 Mancosu Paolo Ezio Vailati 1991 Torricelli s Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century Isis 82 1 50 70 doi 10 1086 355637 S2CID 144679838 Robinson Philip J 1994 Evangelista Torricelli The Mathematical Gazette 78 481 37 47 doi 10 2307 3619429 JSTOR 3619429 S2CID 250441421 Segre Michael 1991 In the wake of Galileo New Brunswick Rutgers University Press Timbs John 1868 Wonderful Inventions From the Mariner s Compass to the Electric Telegraph Cable London George Routledge and Sons p 41 ISBN 978 1172827800 External links editEvangelista Torricelli Encyclopaedia Britannica Evangelista Torricelli Italian physicist and mathematician Evangelista Torricelli Treccani Enciclopedia Torricelli Evangelista nell Enciclopedia Treccani Evangelista Torricelli at the Mathematics Genealogy Project nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evangelista Torricelli University of Florence article The Galileo Correspondence Project at Stanford University Archived 2018 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Scientist of the Day Evangelista Torricelli at Linda Hall Library Robinson Philip J 1994 Evangelista Torricelli The Mathematical Gazette 78 481 37 47 doi 10 2307 3619429 JSTOR 3619429 S2CID 250441421 Sarton 1923 Reviewed work Opere di Evangelista Torricelli Gino Loria Giuseppe Vassura Isis 5 1 151 154 doi 10 1086 358128 JSTOR 223606 Mancosu Paolo Vailati Ezio 1991 Torricelli s Infinitely Long Solid and Its Philosophical Reception in the Seventeenth Century Isis 82 1 50 70 doi 10 1086 355637 JSTOR 233514 S2CID 144679838 Classic Inventions Torricelli s Vacuum The Science News Letter 16 436 97 99 1929 doi 10 2307 3905198 JSTOR 3905198 Driver R D 1998 Torricelli s Law An Ideal Example of an Elementary ODE The American Mathematical Monthly 105 5 453 455 doi 10 2307 3109809 JSTOR 3109809 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelista Torricelli amp oldid 1199101465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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