Jean-Marie Duhamel
Jean-Marie Constant Duhamel | |
---|---|
Born |
Saint-Malo, France | 5 February 1797
Died |
29 April 1872 75) Paris, France | (aged
Residence | France |
Fields |
Mathematics Physics |
Jean-Marie Constant Duhamel (Saint-Malo, 5 February 1797 – Paris, 29 April 1872) was a French mathematician and physicist. His studies were affected by the troubles of the Napoleonic era. He went on to form his own school École Sainte-Barbe. Duhamel's principle, a method of obtaining solutions to inhomogeneous linear evolution equations, is named after him. He was primarily a mathematician but did studies on the mathematics of heat, mechanics, and acoustics.[1] He also did work in calculus using infinitesimals. Duhamel's theorem for infinitesimals says that the sum of a series of infinitesimals is unchanged by replacing the infinitesimal with its principal part.[2]
Honours
- 19617 Duhamel, asteroid named after him.
References
- ↑ John J O'Connor and Edmund F Robertson. The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive
- ↑ H. J. Ettlinger (1922) "A Simple Form of Duhamel's Theorem and Some New Applications", American Mathematical Monthly 29(7): 239–50
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.