'Friedrich Robert Helmert' (
★
July 31 1843 in
Freiberg, Saxonia; â€
June 15 1917 in
Potsdam) was a celebrated German
geodesist and an important writer on the theory of errors.
After schooling in Freiberg and
Dresden Helmert entered the Polytechnische Schule, now Technische Universität in Dresden to study engineering science in
1859. Finding him especially enthusiastic about geodesy, one of his teachers, August Nagel, hired him while still a student to work on the triangulation of the Erzgebirge and the drafting of the trigonometric network for
Saxony. In
1863 Helmert became Nagel's assistant on the Central European Arc Measurement. After a year's study of mathematics and astronomy Helmert obtained his doctor's degree from the
University of Leipzig in
1867 for a thesis based on his work for Nagel.
In
1870 Helmert became instructor and in
1872 professor at
RWTH Aachen, the new Technical University in
Aachen. At Aachen he wrote ''Die mathematischen und physikalischen Theorien der höheren Geodäsie'' (Part I was published in 1880 and Part II in 1884). This work laid the foundations of modern
geodesy. See
history of geodesy.
The method of
least squares had been introduced into geodesy by
Gauss and Helmert wrote a fine book on least squares (1872, with a second edition in 1907) in this tradition. Hald (p. 633) gives this assessment: "[It] is a pedagogical masterpiece; it became a standard text until it was superseded by expositions using matrix algebra." In
1876 Helmert published an article deriving the distribution of the sample variance for a
normal population. The work was described in German textbooks, including his own, but the English statisticians
'Student' and
Fisher did not know of it and re-derived the distribution.
From
1887 Helmert was professor of advanced geodesy at the
University of Berlin and director of the Geodetic Institute. In 1916 he had a stroke and died of its effects the following year.
Helmert received many honours. He was president of the global
geodetic association of "
Internationale Erdmessung", member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences in
Berlin and recipient of some 25 German and foreign decorations.
''See also:''
Helmert transformation,
coordinate system,
Helmert-Wolf blocking,
national survey, terrestrial
gravity field
Bibliography
★ Walther Fischer "Helmert, Friedrich Robert" ''Dictionary of Scientific Biography'' volume 7, pp. 239-241, New York: Scribners 1973.
★ Anders Hald (1998) ''A History of Mathematical Statistics from 1750 to 1930'' New York: Wiley.
★ O. B. Sheynin (1995). Helmert's work in the theory of errors. ''Archive for History of Exact Sciences,'' 49, 73-104.
★ Die Genauigkeit der Formel von Peters zur Berechnung des wahrscheinlichen Fehlers directer Beobachtungen gleicher Genauigkeit, ''Astron. Nach.,'' 88, (1876), 192-218) An extract from the paper is translated and annotated in H. A. David & A. W. F. Edwards (eds.) ''Annotated Readings in the History of Statistics'', New York: Springer 2001.
External links
★
Royal Society citation 1908 (very succinct)
There is an obituary at
★
MNRAS '78' (1918) 256
There is a photograph of Helmert at
★
Helmert on the
Portraits of Statisticians page
and three more at
★
Helmert
See also
★
memorial stone
The first edition of Helmert's textbook on least squares is available at the GDZ site
★
''Die Ausgleichsrechnung nach der Methode der kleinsten Quadrate''
A partial scan of ''Die mathematischen und physikalischen Theorien der höheren Geodäsie'' (Part I) is available on the site
★
Friedrich Robert Helmert (1841-1917)
There is an account of Helmert's work on the theory of errors in section 10.6 of
★
Oscar Sheynin Theory of Probability: A Historical Essay