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  1. ARCHIMEDES OF SYRACUSE: THE CHEST OF IDEAS by Monte R Anderson, 2009-10-29
  2. The Sand Reckoner of Archimedes by Archimedes of Syracuse, 2010-10-01
  3. Naissance à Syracuse: Archimède, Lucie de Syracuse, Mario Feroce, Alessio Di Mauro, Gaetano Zumbo, Giuseppe Di Grande, Giuseppe Gibilisco (French Edition)
  4. People From Syracuse (City), Sicily: Archimedes, Tonino Accolla, Methodios I of Constantinople, Giuseppe Gibilisco, Elio Vittorini
  5. The legend of Archimedes and the burning mirrors of Syracuse (F.R. note) by D. L Simms, 1964
  6. Archimedes and the burning mirrors of Syracuse by D. L Simms, 1977
  7. The Sand Reckoner: Archimedes, Universe, Syracuse, Sicily, Gelo, son of Hiero II, Academic Paper, Large Numbers, Myriad, Long and Short Scales
  8. Archimedes Russell: Upstate Architect (York State Books) by Evamaria Hardin, 1980-09
  9. Ancient Syracusians: Archimedes, Agathocles, Cephalus, Hiero I of Syracuse, Theocritus, Dionysius I of Syracuse, Philistus, Sophron
  10. The Genius of Archimedes -- 23 Centuries of Influence on Mathematics, Science and Engineering: Proceedings of an International Conference held at Syracuse, ... (History of Mechanism and Machine Science)
  11. Archimedes: Archimedes' Screw, the Sand Reckoner, the Method of Mechanical Theorems, Siege of Syracuse, the Quadrature of the Parabola, Salinon

81. Archimedes
The king of syracuse once asked archimedes to find a way of determining if one of his crowns was pure gold without destroying the crown in the process.
http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/Math/Archimedes.html
Archimedes
born: 287 BC in Syracuse, Sicily
died: 212 BC in Syracuse Archimedes, who combined a genius for mathematics with a physical insight, must rank with Newton, who lived nearly two thousand years later, as one of the founders of mathematical physics.
(Alfred North Whitehead) One of the greatest mathematicians of all time. Method of Exhaustion integration. "Eureka" the first law of hydrostatics. Discovered the laws of levers and used pulleys. His mechanical inventions defeated the Roman fleet of Marcellus. Archimedes was an aristocrat, the son of an astronomer, but little is known of his early life except that he studied for a time in Alexandria, Egypt. Several of his books were preserved by the Greeks and Arabs into the Middle Ages, and, fortunately, the Roman historian Plutarch described a few episodes from his life. In many areas of mathematics as well as in hydrostatics and statics, his work and results were not surpassed for over 1500 years! He found the area and tangents to the curve traced by a point moving with uniform speed along a straight line which is revolving with uniform angular speed about a fixed point. This curve, described by r = a in polar coordinates, is now called the "

82. 10.2. Archimedes (287? -212 B.C.)
Born in 287 BC, in syracuse, a Greek seaport colony in Sicily, archimedes was the son of Phidias, an astronomer. Except for his
http://www.shu.edu/projects/reals/history/archimed.html
10.2. Archimedes (287? -212 B.C.)
IRA Archimedes is considered one of the three greatest mathematicians of all time along with Newton and Gauss. In his own time, he was known as "the wise one," "the master" and "the great geometer" and his works and inventions brought him fame that lasts to this very day. He was one of the last great Greek mathematicians. Born in 287 B.C., in Syracuse, a Greek seaport colony in Sicily, Archimedes was the son of Phidias, an astronomer. Except for his studies at Euclid's school in Alexandria, he spent his entire life in his birthplace. Archimedes proved to be a master at mathematics and spent most of his time contemplating new problems to solve, becoming at times so involved in his work that he forgot to eat. Lacking the blackboards and paper of modern times, he used any available surface, from the dust on the ground to ashes from an extinguished fire, to draw his geometric figures. Never giving up an opportunity to ponder his work, after bathing and anointing himself with olive oil, he would trace figures in the oil on his own skin. Eureka! eureka!

83. Wiskundigen - Archimedes
archimedes heeft zijn hele leven in syracuse gewoond, hoewel sommige geschiedschrijvers beweren dat hij Egypte heeft bezocht en daar zijn beroemde schroef van
http://www.wiskundeweb.nl/Wiskundegeschiedenis/Wiskundigen/Archimedes.html
Archimedes
Archimedes
Zelf was hij vooral geboeid door de zuivere wiskunde, met name de meetkunde en door de natuurkunde. Hij berekende met de zogenaamde 'uitputtingsmethode' (een voorloper van het integreren) de oppervlakte en de inhoud van allerlei vlakke en ruimtelijke objecten. Maar het bekendst is hij tegenwoordig door de wet van Archimedes (over voorwerpen die in vloeistof zijn ondergedompeld). Archimedes werd in 212 v.Chr. door de Romeinen vermoord tijdens de verovering van Syracuse.
Links naar anderstalige sites:
Syracuse en het begin van het Romeinse Rijk
270 - 215 v.Chr.: Regering van Hieroon II van Syracuse.
264 - 238 v.Chr.: De Eerste Punische Oorlog.
211 v.Chr.: De verovering van Syracuse door de Romeinen.
219 - 201 v.Chr.: De Tweede Punische Oorlog.
Over Archimedes
Hoewel Archimedes veel roem oogstte met zijn machines vond hij dat zuivere wiskunde de enige wetenschap was die de moeite van het bestuderen waard was. Hij was vooral gefascineerd door de meetkunde, zelfs zo erg dat hij ook tijdens gewone dagelijkse bezigheden als eten, in bad gaan en dergelijke voortdurend geometrische figuren tekende en bestudeerde.
  • Toepassingen van de uitputtingsmethode van Eudoxus:
    Een door de Grieken bedachte methode die hen in staat stelde om de oppervlakte en de inhoud van allerlei vlakke en ruimtelijke figuren (zoals de cirkel, de cilinder, de kegel en de bol) te bepalen. Het is een voorloper van het 'integreren' wat wij tegenwoordig toepassen.

84. HistoryWiz: The Siege Of Syracuse
archimedes and his Famous Walls of syracuse. The city of syracuse was finally sacked by the Romans in spite of the splendid defenses of archimedes.
http://www.historywiz.com/didyouknow/syracuse.htm
The Siege of Syracuse
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they shared a privileged background and a close friendship while together they worked to save the free world More fascinating facts from the HistoryWiz archives Archimedes and his Famous Walls of Syracuse
an artistic interpretation:
Archimedes by Jusepe de Ribera

(1591-1652) Museo del Prado
(Madrid, Spain) Archimedes, the Greek mathematician, built the ingenious defenses of the city of Syracuse which so successfully kept out the Romans until the city let its guard down. Polybius describes some of these defenses: Universal History by Polibius Book VIII
The city of Syracuse was finally sacked by the Romans in spite of the splendid defenses of Archimedes. When the city was taken he was intently working despite the uproar around him.

85. BBC - History - Archimedes (c.290/280 BC - 212/211 BC)
archimedes (c.290/280 BC 212/211 BC). archimedes was born and mainly lived in syracuse on the eastern coast of Sicily. He is believed
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/archimedes.shtml
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Archimedes (c.290/280 BC - 212/211 BC)
Archimedes was born and mainly lived in Syracuse on the eastern coast of Sicily. He is believed to have been close to Hieron II, King of Syracuse, who tried to encourage Archimedes to use his extraordinary talents for practical purposes. The King had commissioned a gold wreath that he wished to consecrate to the gods. When the wreath was delivered, it weighed the correct amount for which he had been charged. However, he was concerned that some of the gold had been replaced by an equal weight of a metal of lesser value, such as silver or lead. Because of its consecrated nature, dissection or analysis was impossible. Archimedes was presumably pondering this quandary while visiting the public baths in Syracuse. As he sank into the bath, water overflowed: the further he sank, the more water poured out. Upon realising that the amount of water displaced was a direct measure of his volume, legend has it that he leapt from the bath and ran, naked and dripping, to the King, repeatedly shouting 'Eureka' (I have found it). He knew that if he immersed the crown in water and measured the overflow, he could find its volume. Whatever its shape, if the crown were pure gold it should have an equal volume to an equal weight of pure gold, whatever shape that had. When Archimedes measured the volume of the crown it was greater than the volume of a kilo of gold, and Hieron saw that he had been cheated.

86. Indexplorian | Thema/categorie
archimedes van syracuse ( Oude Nabije Oosten (3500 tot -1000) ) baanbrekers - baanbreker - archimedes - archimedes van syracuse - syracuse -
http://www.explorian.com/ned/indexplo/cat.cfm?MAINCAT=Geschiedenis&SUBCAT=Oude N

87. Archimedes' Times
city of Carthage itself. The Greek city of syracuse, where archimedes lived, initially supported Carthage. But early in the war
http://departments.weber.edu/physics/carroll/Archimedes/times.htm
Historical Interlude
At the beginning of the third century BC, the Mediterranean basin was controlled by the Carthaginians in the west and the Greeks in the east. The Romans controlled only a small area around Rome, but were poised to march. They locked horns with Carthage in the First Punic War (264-241 BC), during which they greatly expanded their territory, although they did not capture the city of Carthage itself. The Greek city of Syracuse, where Archimedes lived, initially supported Carthage. But early in the war Rome forced a treaty of alliance from Syracuse's king, Hiero II, that called for Syracuse to pay tribute and provide grain to the Romans. Marcellus and Hiero II The Second Punic War began in 218 BC. Hannibal crossed the Alps into Italy (218 BC) and defeated of the Romans at Cannae (216 BC). Hannibal's successes in Italy helped convince many Syracusans that they were allied with the wrong side.
Hiero II honored his treaty with Rome while he lived. However, upon his death in 215 BC he was succeeded by his 15-year-old grandson Hieronymos who began negotiations with Hannibal. Hiernoymos was assassinated in 214 BC, leading to civil war in Syracuse between the pro-Carthaginian and pro-Roman factions. The pro-Carthaginian faction was eventually victorious.

88. Archimedes - Succeed Through Biographies
Early years. archimedes was born in syracuse, Sicily in about 287 BC. Although Sicily is near Italy, syracuse was considered Greek city at the time.
http://www.school-for-champions.com/biographies/archimedes.htm
School for Champions Biographies Famous Speeches History ... Good Grades
Biography of ancient Greek mathematician and inventor Archimedes. Also refer to Euclid, geometry, integral calculus, water pump, pi, area, volume, Syracuse, Carthage, Romans, Marcellus, School for Champions, Kurtus Technologies, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Archimedes - Early and Middle Years
by Ron Kurtus (6 September 2001) Archimedes (287- 212 BC) was a great ancient Greek mathematician, devising ways to calculate areas and volumes, defining pi, and formulating integral calculus. But it was his inventions, such as a water pump, and discoveries such as hydrostatics, that made him famous in his time. Some of his inventions are still used today. He was killed when the Romans overran his city. Questions you may have about this are:
  • What did Archimedes achieve through the years? What influenced his inventions? How did he die?
This lesson will try to answer those questions. There is a mini-quiz at the end of the lesson.
Early years
Archimedes was born in Syracuse, Sicily in about 287 BC. Although Sicily is near Italy, Syracuse was considered Greek city at the time. His father was an astronomer, who had occasional dealings with the Syracuse king.

89. Archimedes
Biography of archimedes. archimedes was born in syracuse, Sicily in 287 BC He was the son of Phidias, an astronomer. He was born during the time of Hiero.
http://www.andrews.edu/~calkins/math/biograph/bioarch.htm
Back to the Table of Contents
Biographies of Mathematicians - Archimedes
Table of Contents
Introduction
Archimedes was a Greek mathematician that was one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. His ideas and inventions were all ahead of his time, some by centuries. He anticipated many discoveries of modern Science, such as Integral Calculas. Sadly, though, most of his work was lost. He is known for his great inventions, to his great scientific mind, to basically becoming the father of Geometry.
Biography of Archimedes
Archimedes was born in Syracuse, Sicily in 287 B.C. He was the son of Phidias, an astronomer. He was born during the time of Hiero. Archimedes was very fascinated with geometry and spent most of his life finding out things such as the measurement of pi. He was educated at Euclid's school in Alexandria, Egypt. Because of lack of paper he would do his work in dirt and oil, using a stick and his finger to write. He wrote many books on Mathematics, but most of them were lost or destroyed. Archimedes did not hold any public office, however due to his close relationship with King Heiro, King of Sicily, he did donate many of his inventions to the state for war. His inventions seemed to be quite useful in the war. He was unfortunately killed in 212, B.C.

90. Archimedes - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
archimedes became a popular figure as a result of his involvement in the defense of syracuse against the Roman siege in the First and Second Punic Wars.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes
Archimedes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
See also Archimedes computer Archimedes (disambiguation) Archimedes of Syracuse (circa 287 BC 212 BC ), was a Greek mathematician astronomer philosopher ... physicist and engineer Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Discoveries
2 Writings by Archimedes

3 Quotes about Archimedes

4 See also
...
edit
Discoveries
Archimedes became a popular figure as a result of his involvement in the defense of Syracuse against the Roman siege in the First and Second Punic Wars . He is reputed to have held the Romans at bay with war engines of his design ; to have been able to move a full-size ship complete with crew and cargo by pulling a single rope; to have discovered the principles of density and buoyancy while taking a bath (thereupon taking to the streets naked calling " eureka " - "I have found it!"); and to have invented the irrigation device known as Archimedes' screw In creativity and insight, he exceeded any other mathematician prior to the European renaissance . In a civilization with an awkward numeral system and a language in which "a myriad" (literally ten thousand) meant "infinity", he

91. Experiment 3-4
It was archimedes (of syracuse, Sicily, 287 BC to 212 BC) who receives credit for realizing that this could be measured as a valuable characteristic property.
http://homepage.mac.com/dtrapp/PhysicalScience/lab3_4.html
Physical Science
Experiment 3-4
Density of Solids
Background Information
We have all noticed that some objects give us the impression of being heavy while others seem light. But this is not just a matter of mass. a large sheet of aluminum seem light while a much smaller piece of lead seem light. Apparently our impressions are formed by comparing the objects' mass to what we anticipate their mass should be. It was Archimedes (of Syracuse, Sicily, 287 BC to 212 BC) who receives credit for realizing that this could be measured as a valuable characteristic property. Archimedes may have been the greatest mathematician of ancient times. His job entailed applied mathematics including fortifying and defending the city from invasions, tasks that history (or perhaps mythology) records he approached with "out of the box" creativity. Archimedes was asked by Hiero, the king of Syracuse, to determine whether a crown fashioned by alchemists had been made of the pure gold provided, or diluted in both content and value as rumored of some alchemists. The task was complicated because the king wished the content of the crown determined, but required that it not be altered or destroyed in testing. Procedures such as melting point would destroy the craftsmanship of the crown. Archimedes could not find an established procedure which was capable of the task. Serendipity is a process where a mind prepared in all the relevant understanding seems to accidentally discover a solution to a perplexing problem.

92. Archimedes Palimpsest
art and science. As a youth in syracuse archimedes developed his natural curiosity and penchant for problem solving. When he had
http://www.thewalters.org/archimedes/archimedes1.html
Archimedes
Archimedes
was born in the city of Syracuse on the island of Sicily in 287 BC. He was the son of an astronomer and mathematician named Phidias. Aside from that, very little is known about the early life of Archimedes or his family. Some maintain that he belonged to the nobility of Syracuse, and that his family was in some way related to that of Hiero II, King of Syracuse.
Amphitheatre, Syracuse In the third century BC, Syracuse was a hub of commerce, art and science. As a youth in Syracuse Archimedes developed his natural curiosity and penchant for problem solving. When he had learned as much as he could from his teachers, Archimedes traveled to Egypt in order to study in Alexandria. Founded by Alexander the Great in 331 BC, Alexandria had, by Archimedes' time, earned a reputation for great learning and scholarship.

93. Gillian Bradshaw: The Sand-Reckoner
Gillian Bradshaw The SandReckoner. Summary Returning to syracuse after a two-year stay in Egypt, archimedes finds syracuse on the brink of war with Rome.
http://www.addison.lib.il.us/6bradshaw.asp
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Gillian Bradshaw: The Sand-Reckoner
Summary

Returning to Syracuse after a two-year stay in Egypt, Archimedes finds Syracuse on the brink of war with Rome. Archimedes’s father, lying ill, asks him to teach, but Archimedes’s great love is the study of mathematics and geometry. He offers his services to the king and begins making catapults in anticipation of a Roman siege. Brilliant, yet always alone, he meets a young woman, the king’s half-sister, who seems to share his love of music and is willing to listen to his dreams. As the Roman army advances, Archimedes faces treachery within the corps of engineers that threat threatens the future of Syracuse. Discussion Questions
Questions asked at the book discussion
  • Not much is known about the actual life of Archimedes. Do you think it is easier to write a novel about a historical figure about whom a lot is known or about whom little is known? Why? Why do you think the author chose to write about this particular episode in the life of Archimedes?

94. Archimedes Was Born In The Year 298B.C In Syracuse Sicily.
archimedes was born in the year 298B.C in syracuse Sicily. Below is a short sample of the essay archimedes was born in the year 298B.C in syracuse Sicily. .
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Archimedes was born in the year 298B.C in Syracuse Sicily.
Below is a short sample of the essay "Archimedes was born in the year 298B.C in Syracuse Sicily." . If you sign up you could be reading the rest of this essay in under two minutes. Registered users should log in to view the full essay ... r. An interesting fact is that after Archimedes proved the relationship between the volume of a sphere is two thirds of the cylinder, he inscribed it onto his tomb. In the geometry, he discovered the center of gravity of plane figures. There were two books written by the mathematician himself. One of them was about parallelogram, a triangle and a ... All formatting has been removed from the sample of this essay. Inside Coursework.Info , all coursework and essays can be viewed with all of the original formatting retained - including pictures, tables, images and graphs, as well as the . You may also be interested in the word count, writing time and other details

95. Archimedes
archimedes principle archimedes screw archimedes biography archimedes picture archimedes syracuse archimedes principal archimedes pi archimedes invention
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Student-written profile introduces the thinker and his contributions to the world of math.
http://tqjunior.thinkquest.org/4116/History/archimedes.htm?tqskip=1 Archimedes Provides a detailed biography, including a look at the times in which he lived, the importance of his discoveries, his life, and his death. Also includes a timeline. http://www.mcs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/contents.html

96. Subpoenaed In Syracuse
in syracuse. TOM HOLT. Tom Holt used to be a lawyer, but he s better now. His latest novel, Valhalla, is published by Orbit. Dada-da-dum, sang archimedes,
http://www.physics.ohio-state.edu/~wilkins/writing/Assign/topics/ult-lawyer-joke
19 October 2000
Nature
Subpoenaed in Syracuse TOM HOLT Tom Holt used to be a lawyer, but he's better now. His latest novel, Valhalla , is published by Orbit.
"Da-da-da- dum "Hold it!" said a voice from behind. Archimedes jumped, thereby increasing the size of the pool and, coincidentally, proving the hypothesis he'd been working on. "Who the hell are you?" he asked. The stranger stepped out of a fold of shimmering blue light. "You don't know me," he said. "My name's Calvin Dieb. I'm a lawyer." Archimedes stared at the blue light, the stranger's outlandish clothes. "Are you a god?" he asked. "Nah. Easy mistake to make, though," the stranger reassured him. "Actually, I'm from the future. Three thousand, one hundred and fifty years, to be exact. In my century, we've figured out how to travel backwards in time. Oh, forget I said that, by the way." He chuckled. "Don't want that outstandingly intuitive mind of yours getting on the job back here in the Dark Ages, could lead to serious doo-doo. So," he went on, stepping clear of the blue fire and vanishing it with a click of his fingers, "this is it, then. The big moment. Congratulations." "Is it?"

97. Science Mathematics Mathematicians Archimedes - Open Site
archimedes, the Greek mathematician was born in syracuse, Sicily in 290 BC and sadly died in syracuse at the hands of a Roman soldier during its sacking in 212
http://open-site.org/Science/Mathematics/Mathematicians/Archimedes/

98. Archimedes
archimedes This World Wide Web (WWW) site, suitable for grades 9 to 12, describes the life, mathematics, and inventions of archimedes. A timeline presents information on other historical events
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.mcs.drexel.edu/~crorres/Archimedes/c

99. µÓÃÒ Archimedes
The summary for this Thai page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.ipst.ac.th/ThaiVersion/publications/in_sci/archimedes.html
µÓҢͧ Archimedes
¶Ö§áÁé Alexandria ¨Ðà»ç¹ÈÙ¹Âì¡ÅÒ§¢Í§ÇÔ·ÂÒ¡Ò áÅÐÇÔ·ÂÒ¡·Ø¡¤¹ã¹âÅ¡ ÊÁѹÑ鹡çµÒÁ áµèàÁ×èÍ Archimedes ÊÓà稡ÒÈÖ¡ÉÒ à¢Òä´éµÑ´ÊÔ¹ã¨à´Ô¹·Ò§¡ÅѺ Syracuse ·Ñ¹·Õ áÅÐä´éãªéªÕÇÔµÍÂÙè·ÕèºéÒ¹à¡Ô´ µÒº¨¹ÇÒÐÊØ´·éÒ¢ͧªÕÇÔµ ¶Ö§¨ÐÍÂÙèä¡Å·Õè Syracuse áµè Archimedes ¡çÂѧà¢Õ¹¨´ËÁÒµԴµè͡Ѻ ¹Ñ¡ÇÔªÒ¡Ò¡Õ¡·Õè Alexandria µÅÍ´àÇÅÒ áÅШҡàÍ¡ÊÒ¹Õéàͧ·ÕèâÅ¡ä´éÙé ã¹àÇÅÒµèÍÁÒÇèÒ Archimedes ¤Ô´ÍÐäÍÂÙè áÅÐÙéÍÐäºéÒ§ http://www.treasure-troves.com/bios/Archimedes.html ¹Ñ¡»ÐÇѵÔÈÒʵìª×èÍ Plutarch ºÑ¹·Ö¡äÇéÇèÒ ¡Ò·Õè Archimedes ÁÕ¤ÇÒÁÊÒÁÒ¶·Ò§¤³ÔµÈÒʵìÊÙ§ÁÒ¡ à¾ÒÐà»ç¹¤¹·ÕèÁÕ¤ÇÒÁ ÁØè§ÁÑè¹ÁÒ¡ Archimedes ÊÒÁÒ¶·ØèÁà·¤ÇÒÁʹ㨠¤Ø蹤Դá¡é»Ñ­ËÒà´ÕÂÇä´éà»ç¹àÇÅÒ¹Ò¹ ¨¹·ÓãËéÅ×Á¡Ò»¯ÔºÑµÔÀÒ¡Ô¨»Ð¨ÓÇѹàªè¹ ¡Ô¹¢éÒÇ Ë×ÍÍÒº¹éÓ à»ç¹µé¹ àÇÅÒÁջѭËÒ·Õèµéͧ¢º¤Ô´ àÁ×èÍàË繡ͧàÈÉ¢Õéà¶éÒ Archimedes ¡ç¨ÐãªéäÁé¢Õ´àÊ鹡ͧà¶éÒãËéà»ç¹Ù»à¢Ò¤³Ôµ Ë×ÍàÇÅÒ¤¹ãªéàÍÒ¹éÓÁѹ·Ò¹Ç´µÒÁµÑÇ Archimedes ¡ç¨Ðãªé¹ÔéÇ¢Õ´µÒÁµÑÇ·ÕèªØèÁ´éǹéÓÁѹà»ç¹á¼¹ÀÒ¾µèÒ§æ à»ç¹µé¹ ¹Ô·Ò¹à¡ÕèÂǡѺ¤ÇÒÁã¨ÅÍ¢ͧ Archimedes ·ÕèâÅ¡Ùé¨Ñ¡´Õ à¡Ô´¢Öé¹àÁ×èÍ¡ÉѵÔÂì Hieron·Õè 3 áË觡ا Syracuse «Öè§à»ç¹­ÒµÔËèÒ§æ ¡Ñº Archimedes ä´é·§ÇèÒ¨éÒ§ªèÒ§·Í§¤ÓãËé·ÓÁ§¡Ø®ÊÓËѺ¾Ðͧ¤ì áµèä´é·§Ê§ÊÑÂÇèÒ ªèÒ§·Í§¤Óä´éáͺàÍҷͧᴧãÊèá·¹ ¾Ðͧ¤ì¨Ö§·§ºÑ­ªÒãËé Archimedes µÇ¨Êͺà×èͧ¹Õé «Öè§ Archimedes ¡çä´éãªéÇÔ¸Õ·Ò§ÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵìµÇ¨¾ºÇèÒ ªèÒ§·Í§¤Ó ¤¹¹Ñ鹤´â¡§¨Ô§áÅзѹ·Õ·Õ辺à¢Òä´éÇÔè§ÍÍ¡¨Ò¡ÍèÒ§ÍÒº¹éÓ仵ÒÁ¶¹¹ã¹àÁ×ͧ Syracuse â´ÂäÁèä´éãÊèàÊ×éͼéÒáµèÍÂèҧ㴠¾éÍÁ¡Ñº µÐ⡹éͧÇèÒ Eureka Eureka «Öè§ÁÕ¤ÇÒÁËÁÒÂÇèÒ¢éÒÙéáÅéÇ ¢éÒÙéáÅéÇ

100. IRA: 10. Historical Tidbits

http://www.shu.edu/html/teaching/math/reals/history/

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