The 'Archimedes Palimpsest' is a
palimpsest on
parchment in the form of a
codex which originally was a copy of an otherwise unknown work of the ancient
mathematician,
physicist, and
engineer Archimedes of
Syracuse and other authors. Archimedes lived in the
third century BC, but the copy was made in the
10th century by an anonymous scribe. In the
12th century the codex was unbound and washed, in order that the parchment leaves could be folded in half and reused for a Christian
liturgical text. It was a book of nearly 90 pages before being made a palimpsest of 177 pages; the older leaves folded so that each became two leaves of the liturgical book. The erasure was incomplete, and Archimedes' work is now readable using digital processing of
ultraviolet,
X-ray, and visible light.
In
1906 it was briefly inspected in
Constantinople and was published, from photographs, by the
Danish philologist Johan Ludvig Heiberg (
1854–
1928); shortly thereafter Archimedes'
Greek text was translated into
English by
Thomas Heath. Before that it was not widely known among mathematicians, physicists, or historians. It contains
★ "Equilibrium of Planes"
★ "Spiral Lines"
★ "The Measurement of the Circle"
★ "Sphere and Cylinder"
★ "On Floating Bodies" (only known copy in Greek)
★ "The Method of Mechanical Theorems" (only known copy)
★ "Stomachion" (only known copy)
The palimpsest also contains speeches by the 4th century BC politician
Hypereides, and a commentary on
Aristotle's
Categories by
Alexander of Aphrodisias.
[1]
Mathematical content
The most remarkable of the above works is ''The Method'', of which the palimpsest contains the only known copy. In his other works, Archimedes often proves the equality of two areas or volumes with his method of double
contradiction: assuming that the first is bigger than the second leads to a contradiction, as does the assumption that the first be smaller than the second; so the two must be equal. These proofs, still considered to be rigorous and correct, used what we might now consider secondary-school
geometry with rare brilliance. Later writers often criticized Archimedes for not explaining how he arrived at his results in the first place. This explanation is contained in ''The Method''.
Essentially then, the method consists in dividing the two areas or volumes in infinitely many stripes of
infinitesimal width, and "weighing" the stripes of the first figure against those of the second. He considered this method as a useful heuristic but always made sure to prove the results found in this manner using the unrelated and rigorous geometrical methods mentioned above.
He was able to solve problems that would now be treated by
integral calculus, which was formally invented in the
17th century by
Isaac Newton and
Gottfried Leibniz, working independently. Among those problems were that of calculating the
center of gravity of a solid
hemisphere, the center of gravity of a
frustum of a circular
paraboloid, and the area of a region bounded by a
parabola and one of its
secant lines. Contrary to exaggerations found in some
20th century calculus textbooks, he did not use anything like
Riemann sums, either in the work embodied in this palimpsest or in any of his other works. For explicit details of the method used, see
how Archimedes used infinitesimals.
A problem solved exclusively in the ''Method'' is the calculation of the volume of a cylindrical wedge, a result that reappears as theorem XVII (schema XIX) of
Kepler's ''Stereometria''.
Some pages of the ''Method'' remained unused by the author of the Palimpsest and thus they are still lost. Between them, an announced result concerned the volume of the intersection of two cylinders, a figure that Apostol and Mnatsakian have renamed ''n = 4 Archimedean globe'' (and the half of it, ''n = 4 Archimedean dome''), whose volume relates to the ''n''-polygonal pyramid.
In Heiberg's time, much attention was paid to Archimedes' brilliant use of infinitesimals to solve problems about areas, volumes, and centers of gravity. Less attention was given to the ''Stomachion'', a problem treated in the Palimpsest that appears to deal with a children's puzzle. Reviel Netz of
Stanford University has shown that Archimedes found that the ''number of ways'' to solve the puzzle is 17,152. This is perhaps the most sophisticated work in the field of
combinatorics in classical antiquity.
Modern history
From the
1920s, the manuscript lay unknown in the Paris apartment of a collector of manuscripts and his heirs. In
1998 the ownership of the palimpsest was disputed in federal court in New York in the case of the ''Greek Orthodox
Patriarchate of Jerusalem versus
Christie's, Inc''. At some time in the distant past, the Archimedes manuscript had lain in the library of
Mar Saba, near Jerusalem, a monastery bought by the Patriarchate in 1625. The plaintiff contended that the palimpsest had been stolen from one of its monasteries in the 1920s. Judge
Kimba Wood decided in favor of Christie's Auction House on
laches grounds, and the palimpsest was bought for $2 million by an anonymous information technology person.
The palimpsest is now at the
Walters Art Museum in
Baltimore, where conservation continues (as it had suffered considerably from
mold). A more accurate edition of the manuscript, including its drawn geometrical figures, is expected, possibly in 2007.
A team of imaging scientists from the
Rochester Institute of Technology and Johns Hopkins University has used computer processing of digital images from various spectral bands, including ultraviolet and visible light, to reveal more of Archimedes' text. Dr. Reviel Netz
[2] of
Stanford University has been trying to fill in gaps in Heiberg's account with these images.
Sometime after 1938, one owner of the manuscript forged four Byzantine-style religious images in the manuscript in an effort to increase its value. It appeared that these rendered the underlying text forever illegible. Then, in May 2005, highly-focused
X-rays produced at the
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in Menlo Park, California were used to begin deciphering the parts of the 174-page text that have not yet been revealed. The production of x-ray
fluorescence was described by Keith Hodgson, director of SSRL. "
Synchrotron light is created when electrons traveling near the speed of light take a curved path around a storage ring—emitting electromagnetic light in X-ray through infrared wavelengths. The resulting light beam has characteristics that make it ideal for revealing the intricate architecture and utility of many kinds of matter—in this case, the previously hidden work of one of the founding fathers of all science."
[3]
In April 2007 it was announced that a new text had been found in the palimpsest, which was a commentary on the work of
Aristotle attributed to
Alexander of Aphrodisias. Doctor William Noel, the curator of manuscripts at the
Walters Art Museum, said in an interview: "You start thinking striking one palimpsest is gold, and striking two is utterly astonishing. But then something even more extraordinary happened." This referred to the previous discovery of a text by
Hypereides, an
Athenian politician from the
4th century BC, which has also been found within the palimpsest.
[4]
References
★ Reviel Netz and William Noel, ''The Archimedes Codex'', Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007
[5]
External links
★
The Archimedes Palimpsest Project Web Page
★
The Archimedes Palimpsest web pages at the Walters Art Museum
★
The Nova Program outlined
★
The Nova Program teacher's version
★
Did Isaac Barrow read it?
★
May 2005 Stanford Report: Heather Rock Woods, "Archimedes manuscript yields secrets under X-ray gaze" May 19, 2005
★
The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem v. Christies’s Inc., 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13257 (S.D. N.Y. 1999)