Giovanni Poleni Explained

Giovanni Poleni
Birth Date:23 August 1683
Birth Place:Venice, Republic of Venice
Death Place:Padua, Republic of Venice
Resting Place:Basilica del Carmine, Padua
Parents:Giacomo Poleni and Isabella Poleni (née de' Brugnol)
Spouse:Orsola Roberti[1]
Occupation:Physicist, mathematician and antiquarian
Children:6
Workplaces:University of Padua

Giovanni Poleni (pronounced as /it/; 23 August 1683 – 15 November 1761) was a Marquess, physicist, mathematician and antiquarian.[1]

Early life

He was the son of Marquess Jacopo Poleni and studied the classics, philosophy, theology, mathematics, and physics at the School of the Somaschi Fathers, Venice.

Career

He was appointed, at the age of twenty-five, professor of astronomy at Padua. In 1715 he was assigned to the chair of physics, and in 1719 he succeeded Nicholas II Bernoulli as professor of mathematics. As an expert in hydraulic engineering he was charged by the Venetian Senate with the care of the waters of lower Lombardy and with the constructions necessary to prevent floods. He was also repeatedly called in to decide cases between sovereigns whose states were bordered by waterways.

Poleni was the first to build a calculator that used a pinwheel design. Made of wood, his calculating clock was built in 1709;[2] he destroyed it after hearing that Anton Braun had received 10,000 Guldens for dedicating a pinwheel machine of his own design to the emperor Charles VI of Vienna. Poleni described his machine in his Miscellanea in 1709, but it was also described by Jacob Leupold in his Theatrum Machinarum Generale ("The General Theory of Machines") which was published in 1727. In 1729, he also built a tractional device that enabled logarithmic functions to be drawn.

Poleni's observations on the impact of falling weights (similar to Willem 's Gravesande's) led to a controversy with Samuel Clarke and other Newtonians that became a part of the so-called "vis viva dispute" in the history of classical mechanics.[3]

His knowledge of architecture caused Benedict XIV to call him to Rome in 1748 to examine the cupola of St. Peter's, which was rapidly disintegrating.As part of the structural investigation of the dome he used a correctly loaded hanging chain to determine its funicular shape.[4] He promptly indicated the repairs necessary. He also wrote a number of antiquarian dissertations. In 1710 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society,[5] in 1739 the French Academy of Sciences made him a member and later the societies of Berlin and St. Petersburg did the same. The city of Padua elected him as magistrate, and after his death erected his statue by Canova. Venice also honoured him by striking a medal.

He married Orsola Roberti of Bassano della Grappa. A pupil of his was Giovanni Battista Suardi (1711 – 1767).

Principal works

Further reading

Attribution

External links

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. http://www.museoscienza.org/approfondimenti/documenti/macchina_poleni/replica.asp Copy of Poleni's machine
  3. Iltis . C. . The Leibnizian-Newtonian Debates: Natural Philosophy and Social Psychology . 10.1017/S000708740001253X . The British Journal for the History of Science . 6 . 4 . 343–377 . 2009 . 144194873 .
  4. Book: Millais, Malcolm. Building Structures: From Concepts to Design. 2005. 2. 187. 9780415336239. Spon Press.
  5. Web site: Library Archive. Royal Society. 2012-12-05.