Archimedes$4755$ - meaning and definition. What is Archimedes$4755$
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What (who) is Archimedes$4755$ - definition

MANUSCRIPT PRAYER BOOK WRITTEN OVER A WORK BY ARCHIMEDES
Archimedes palimpsest; Archimedes' Palimpsest; Archimedes Codex; Archimedes Manuscript
  • After imaging a page from the palimpsest, the original Archimedes text is now seen clearly
  • A typical page from the Archimedes Palimpsest. The text of the prayer book is seen from top to bottom, the original Archimedes manuscript is seen as fainter text below it running from left to right
  • alt=The Archimedes Palimpsest
  • Discovery reported in the New York Times on July 16, 1907

Archimedes         
GREEK MATHEMATICIAN AND PHYSICIST (*~287 – †~212 BCE)
Αρχιμηδης; Arcimedes; Archimedes scientific achievements; Archemedes; Archemedies; Archimedies; Arkimedes; Archemedis; Archimeties; Archamedes; Archimedes of Syracuse; Αρχιμήδης; Ἀρχιμήδης; Archimedes Heat Ray; Archimides; Archemides; Arcamedies
·noun An extinct genus of Bryzoa characteristic of the subcarboniferous rocks. Its form is that of a screw.
Archimedes' screw         
  • Animation showing how Archimedes screws can generate power if they are driven by flowing fluid.
  • Archimedes screw design parameters<ref name=":1" />
  • Modern Archimedes' screw which have replaced some of the [[windmill]]s used to drain the [[polder]]s at [[Kinderdijk]] in the [[Netherlands]]
  • A water pump in [[Egypt]] from the 1950s which uses the Archimedes' screw mechanism
  • An Archimedes' screw seen on a [[combine harvester]]
  • Archimedes screw as a form of art by [[Tony Cragg]] at [['s-Hertogenbosch]] in the [[Netherlands]]
MACHINE USED FOR TRANSFERRING WATER FROM A LOW-LYING BODY OF WATER INTO IRRIGATION DITCHES
Archimedes screw; Archimedean screw; Archimedes's screw; Archimedes Screw; Archimedes' Screw; Archimedean Screw; Screwpump; Screw of Archimedes; Screw of archimedes; Archimedies' Screw; Cochlias; Archimedian screw
The Archimedes screw, also known as the Archimedean screw, hydrodynamic screw, water screw or Egyptian screw, is one of the earliest hydraulic machines. Using Archimedes screws as water pumps (Archimedes screw pump (ASP) or screw pump) dates back many centuries.
Archimedean screw         
  • Animation showing how Archimedes screws can generate power if they are driven by flowing fluid.
  • Archimedes screw design parameters<ref name=":1" />
  • Modern Archimedes' screw which have replaced some of the [[windmill]]s used to drain the [[polder]]s at [[Kinderdijk]] in the [[Netherlands]]
  • A water pump in [[Egypt]] from the 1950s which uses the Archimedes' screw mechanism
  • An Archimedes' screw seen on a [[combine harvester]]
  • Archimedes screw as a form of art by [[Tony Cragg]] at [['s-Hertogenbosch]] in the [[Netherlands]]
MACHINE USED FOR TRANSFERRING WATER FROM A LOW-LYING BODY OF WATER INTO IRRIGATION DITCHES
Archimedes screw; Archimedean screw; Archimedes's screw; Archimedes Screw; Archimedes' Screw; Archimedean Screw; Screwpump; Screw of Archimedes; Screw of archimedes; Archimedies' Screw; Cochlias; Archimedian screw
¦ noun a device invented by Archimedes for raising water by means of a helix rotating within a tube.

Wikipedia

Archimedes Palimpsest

The Archimedes Palimpsest is a parchment codex palimpsest, originally a Byzantine Greek copy of a compilation of Archimedes and other authors. It contains two works of Archimedes that were thought to have been lost (the Ostomachion and the Method of Mechanical Theorems) and the only surviving original Greek edition of his work On Floating Bodies. The first version of the compilation is believed to have been produced by Isidorus of Miletus, the architect of the geometrically complex Hagia Sophia cathedral in Constantinople, sometime around AD 530. The copy found in the palimpsest was created from this original, also in Constantinople, during the Macedonian Renaissance (c. AD 950), a time when mathematics in the capital was being revived by the former Greek Orthodox bishop of Thessaloniki Leo the Geometer, a cousin of the Patriarch.

Following the sack of Constantinople by Western crusaders in 1204, the manuscript was taken to an isolated Greek monastery in Palestine, possibly to protect it from occupying crusaders, who often equated Greek script with heresy against their Latin church and either burned or looted many such texts (including at least two other copies of Archimedes). The complex manuscript was not appreciated at this remote monastery and was soon overwritten (1229) with a religious text. In 1899, nine hundred years after it was written, the manuscript was still in the possession of the Greek church, and back in Istanbul, where it was catalogued by the Greek scholar Papadopoulos-Kerameus, attracting the attention of Johan Heiberg. Heiberg visited the church library and was allowed to make detailed photographs in 1906. Most of the original text was still visible, and Heiberg published it in 1915. In 1922 the manuscript went missing in the midst of the evacuation of the Greek Orthodox library in Istanbul, during a tumultuous period following the World War I. Concealed for over 70 years by a Western businessman, forged pictures were painted on top of some text to increase resale value. Unable to sell the book privately, in 1998 the businessman's daughter risked a public auction in New York contested by the Greek church; the U.S. court ruled for the auction, and the manuscript was purchased by an anonymous buyer (rumored to be Jeff Bezos). The texts under the forged pictures, and previously unreadable texts, were revealed by analyzing images produced by ultraviolet, infrared, visible and raking light, and X-ray.

All images and transcriptions are now freely available on the web at the Archimedes Digital Palimpsest under the Creative Commons License CC BY.