Pedro Nunes
Born: 1502 Alcacer do Sal, Portugal
Died: 11 Ausgust 1578 in Coimbra, Portugal
Unfortunetly there are any real picture of Pedro Nunes, all the pictures that we
know are idealizations from sculptures, as the statue above.
Pedro Nunes or Nunez studied at
Salamanca from 1521 until 1522. He then attended the University of Lisbon where
he obtained a degree in medicine in 1525. He continued his medical studies but
held various teaching posts within the University of Lisbon.
He was appointed to the chair of moral philosophy in 1529 then to the chair of
logic in 1530 then to the chair of
metaphysics in
1532. Not bad going for a medical student!
Nunes moved to the University of Coimbra to the chair of
mathematics in 1537, a post he held until 1562. This was a new post in the
University of Coimbra and it was set up to provide instruction in the technical
requirements for navigation, clearly a topic of great importance in Portugal at
this period when control of sea trade was the chief source of Portuguese wealth.
In addition to this post he was appointed Royal Cosmographer in 1529 and Chief
Royal Cosmographer in 1547. He held this post until his death.
Nunes worked in geometry and spherical trigonometry publishing Treatise on the Sphere. He also did important work in algebra and published Algebra in Spanish.
Outside mathematics he worked in geography, physics, cosmology and he wrote poetry. He also made many important contributions to navigation writing Navigandi Libri Duo in 1546.
Nunes devised a system to allow fractional parts of a degree to be measured. He describes it as:-
drawing on the face of a quadrant for measuring angles 45 concentric arcs, one of which was divided into 90 equal parts or degrees, and the remainder into 89, 88, 87, 86, etc., successively, the last being divided into 46 equal parts. When the index did not exactly cut one of the divisions of the arc of degrees, it passed through or near to one of the divisions of one or other of the other arcs; and by noting the place of that division the fractional parts of a degree were calculated.
He constucted an instrument named "Nónio" (image at left) , used with any other measuring instrument, allowing to measure fractions of the original instrument scale.
Stamp with Pedro Nunes
You can find more about Pedro Nunes here.
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