Emagister
Encuentra tu siguiente formación

Acceso usuarios

Fermat's Treatise on Quadrature: A New Reading

RECERCAT - Dipòsit de Recerca de Catalunya
Colabora: Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Departament d'Economia i EmpresaAutor/es: Jaume Paradís; Josep Pla; Pelegrí Viader; Resumen ...  ver todo
Tipo: Monografía
Fuente: www.emagister.com
Formato: Adobe PDF , 303 KB
Tiempo de lectura: < 3 horas
Nivel: medio
Idioma: Inglés

Para descargar este curso, compártelo en Facebook o menciónanos en Twitter. ¡Que se entere todo el mundo! :)

o si prefieres, crea una cuenta Emagister o entra con la tuya

¿Quieres aprender todavía más... pagando un poco?
 
Analisis Estadistico de Datos On-Line. SPSS. Estadística.
Estadistica On-Line | Precio: Consultar
Curso A distancia
 
Curso A distancia

Los usuarios que vieron este curso también se interesan por...

Formación Gratis
Online Gratuito

Temario ↑ subir

Fermat's Treatise on Quadrature: A New Reading
Colabora: Universitat Pompeu Fabra. Departament d'Economia i Empresa

Autor/es:

Jaume Paradís; Josep Pla; Pelegrí Viader;

Resumen :

The Treatise on Quadrature of Fermat (c. 1659), besides containing the first known proof of the computation of the area under a higher parabola, R x+m/n dx, or under a higher hyperbola, R x-m/n dx— with the appropriate limits of integration in each case—, has a second part which was not understood by Fermat’s contemporaries. This second part of the Treatise is obscure and dificult to read and even the great Huygens described it as 'published with many mistakes and it is so obscure (with proofs redolent of error) that I have been unable to make any sense of it'. Far from the confusion that Huygens attributes to it, in this paper we try to prove that Fermat, in writing the Treatise, had a very clear goal in mind and he managed to attain it by means of a simple and original method. Fermat reduced the quadrature of a great number of algebraic curves to the quadrature of known curves: the higher parabolas and hyperbolas of the first part of the paper. Others, he reduced to the quadrature of the circle. We shall see how the clever use of two procedures, quite novel at the time: the change of variables and a particular case of the formula of integration by parts, provide Fermat with the necessary tools to square very easily curves as well-known as the folium of Descartes, the cissoid of Diocles or the witch of Agnesi.