Information about Joseph Fourier
Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier | |
| Born | March 21 1768 Auxerre, Yonne, France |
|---|---|
| Died | May 16 1830 (aged 62) Paris, France |
| Residence | |
| Nationality | |
| Field | Mathematician, physicist, and historian |
| Institutions | École Normale École Polytechnique |
| Alma mater | École Normale |
| Academic advisor | Joseph Lagrange |
| Notable students | Gustav DirichletGiovanni PlanaClaude-Louis Navier |
| Known for | Fourier transform |
| Religion | Roman Catholic |
Life
Fourier was born at Auxerre (now in the Yonne département of France), the son of a tailor. He was orphaned at age eight. Fourier was recommended to the Bishop of Auxerre, and through this introduction, he was educated by the Benvenistes of the Convent of St. Mark. The commissions in the scientific corps of the army were reserved for those of good birth, and being thus ineligible, he accepted a military lectureship on mathematics. He took a prominent part in his own district in promoting the French Revolution, and was rewarded by an appointment in 1795 in the École Normale Supérieure, and subsequently by a chair at the École Polytechnique.Fourier went with Napoleon Bonaparte on his Egyptian expedition in 1798, and was made governor of Lower Egypt. Cut off from France by the English fleet, he organized the workshops on which the French army had to rely for their munitions of war. He also contributed several mathematical papers to the Egyptian Institute which Napoleon founded at Cairo, with a view of weakening English influence in the East. After the British victories and the capitulation of the French under General Menou in 1801, Fourier returned to France, and was made prefect of Isère, and it was while there that he made his experiments on the propagation of heat.
Fourier moved to England in 1816. Later he returned to France, and in 1822 succeeded Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre as Permanent Secretary of the French Academy of Sciences.
In 1822 he published his Théorie analytique de la chaleur, in which he bases his reasoning on Newton's law of cooling, namely, that the flow of heat between two adjacent molecules is proportional to the extremely small difference of their temperatures. In this work he claims that any function of a variable, whether continuous or discontinuous, can be expanded in a series of sines of multiples of the variable. Though this result is not correct, Fourier's observation that some discontinuous functions are the sum of infinite series was a breakthrough. The question of determining when a function is the sum of its Fourier series has been fundamental for centuries. Joseph Louis Lagrange had given particular cases of this (false) theorem, and had implied that the method was general, but he had not pursued the subject. Johann Dirichlet was the first to give a satisfactory demonstration of it with some restrictive conditions. A more subtle, but equally fundamental, contribution is the concept of dimensional homogeneity in equations; i.e. an equation can only be formally correct if the dimensions match on either side of the equality.
Fourier left an unfinished work on determinate equations which was edited by Claude-Louis Navier and published in 1831. This work contains much original matter — in particular, there is a demonstration of Fourier's theorem on the position of the roots of an algebraic equation. Joseph Louis Lagrange had shown how the roots of an algebraic equation might be separated by means of another equation whose roots were the squares of the differences of the roots of the original equation. François Budan, in 1807 and 1811, had enunciated the theorem generally known by the name of Fourier, but the demonstration was not altogether satisfactory. Fourier's proof is the same as that usually given in textbooks on the theory of equations. The final solution of the problem was given in 1829 by Jacques Charles François Sturm.
Other work
Fourier is also credited with the discovery in 1824 that gases in the atmosphere might increase the surface temperature of the Earth [1]. This was the effect that would later be called the greenhouse effect. He established the concept of planetary energy balance - that planets obtain energy from a number of sources that cause temperature increase. Planets also lose energy by infrared radiation (that Fourier called "chaleur obscure" or "dark heat") with the rate increasing with temperature. A balance is reached between heat gain and heat loss; the atmosphere shifts the balance toward the higher temperatures by slowing the heat loss. Although Fourier understood that rate of infrared radiation increases with temperature, the Stefan-Boltzmann law which gives the exact form of this dependency (a fourth-power law) was discovered fifty years later.Fourier recognized that Earth primarily gets energy from Solar radiation, to which the atmosphere is transparent, and that geothermal heat doesn't contribute much to the energy balance. However, he mistakenly believed that there is a significant contribution of radiation from interplanetary space.
Fourier referred to an experiment by M. de Saussure, who exposed a black box to sunlight. When a thin sheet of glass is put on top of the box, the temperature inside of the box increases [2]. Infrared radiation was discovered by William Herschel twenty five years later.
See also
References
- Initial text from the public domain Rouse History of Mathematics
- Fourier, J.-B.-J. Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de l'Institut de France VII. 570-604 (1827) (greenhouse effect essay)
- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men by François Arago
External links
- O'Connor, John J; Edmund F. Robertson "Joseph Fourier". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
- Fourier 1827: MEMOIRE sur les températures du globe terrestre et des espaces planétaires
- Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France
- Joseph Fourier at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
| Preceded by Pierre-Édouard Lémontey | Seat 5 Académie française 1826–1830 | Succeeded by Victor Cousin |
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Fourier, Joseph |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Mathematician, physicist, and historian |
| DATE OF BIRTH | March 21, 1768 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Auxerre, Yonne, France |
| DATE OF DEATH | May 16, 1830 |
| PLACE OF DEATH | Paris, France |
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Auxerre
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Yonne
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Coat of arms of the Yonne department
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mathematician is a person whose primary area of study and research is the field of mathematics.
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Problems in mathematics
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historian is an individual who studies history and who writes on history.[1] The person may be an authority (or expert) over history,<ref name="wordnetprinceton" /> but this is not a requirement.
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École normale supérieure (also known as Normale Sup', Normale, ENS, ENS-Paris, ENS-Ulm or Ulm) is a prestigious French grande école, possibly the most prestigious.
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École polytechnique (the “Polytechnic School”), often referred to by the nickname X, is the foremost French grande école of engineering (according to French and international rankings).
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École normale supérieure (also known as Normale Sup', Normale, ENS, ENS-Paris, ENS-Ulm or Ulm) is a prestigious French grande école, possibly the most prestigious.
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Joseph Louis, comte de Lagrange
Joseph Louis Lagrange
Born January 25 1736
Turin, Italy
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Joseph Louis Lagrange
Born January 25 1736
Turin, Italy
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Lejeune Dirichlet
Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet
Born January 13 1805
Düren, French Empire
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Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet
Born January 13 1805
Düren, French Empire
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Giovanni Antonio Amedeo Plana (November 6, 1781–January 20, 1864) was an Italian astronomer and mathematician.
He was born in Voghera, Italy to Antonio Maria Plana and Giacoboni. At the age of 15 he was sent to live with his uncles in Grenoble to complete his education.
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He was born in Voghera, Italy to Antonio Maria Plana and Giacoboni. At the age of 15 he was sent to live with his uncles in Grenoble to complete his education.
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Henri Navier
Bust of Claude Louis Marie Henri Navier at the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées
Born 10 January 1785
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Bust of Claude Louis Marie Henri Navier at the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées
Born 10 January 1785
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Fourier transform, named in honor of French mathematician Joseph Fourier, is a certain linear operator that maps functions to other functions. Loosely speaking, the Fourier transform decomposes a function into a continuous spectrum of its frequency components
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March 21 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Motto
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Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité
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mathematician is a person whose primary area of study and research is the field of mathematics.
..... Click the link for more information.
Problems in mathematics
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physicist is a scientist who studies or practices physics. Physicists study a wide range of physical phenomena spanning all length scales: from the sub-atomic particles from which all ordinary matter is made (particle physics) to the behavior of the material Universe as a whole
..... Click the link for more information.
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Fourier series is a mathematical tool used for analyzing periodic functions by decomposing such a function into a weighted sum of much simpler sinusoidal component functions sometimes referred to as normal Fourier modes, or simply modes for short.
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In thermal physics, heat transfer is the passage of thermal energy from a hot to a cold body. When a physical body, e.g. an object or fluid, is at a different temperature than its surroundings or another body, transfer of thermal energy
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