Trigometer

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|descrizione= Instrument described by Philippe Danfrie, which replicates the system of graduated arms with sights hinged onto a fixed base, already used in [[Baldassarre Lanci's distantiometer]], in the [[holometer]], and in Bernardo Puccini's [[gnomon]]. At the hinge points the two vanes (one of them sliding) carry a graduated arc for measuring angles, while the fixed base, mounted on a stand, houses a compass. Its field of operation covers all of the standard operations, including land surveying.  
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|descrizione= Instrument described by Philippe Danfrie, which replicates the system of graduated arms with sights hinged onto a fixed base, already used in the [[Surveying Instrument by Baldassarre Lanci]], in the [[holometer]], and in Bernardo Puccini's [[gnomon]]. At the hinge points the two vanes (one of them sliding) carry a graduated arc for measuring angles, while the fixed base, mounted on a stand, houses a compass. Its field of operation covers all of the standard operations, including land surveying.  

Revision as of 10:49, 20 July 2010

Name coined by the inventor (in French, trigometre) combining the Greek words trigonos (triangular) and metron (measure).

Contents

Inventor

Philippe Danfrie


Historic Period

1586-87


Description

Instrument described by Philippe Danfrie, which replicates the system of graduated arms with sights hinged onto a fixed base, already used in the Surveying Instrument by Baldassarre Lanci, in the holometer, and in Bernardo Puccini's gnomon. At the hinge points the two vanes (one of them sliding) carry a graduated arc for measuring angles, while the fixed base, mounted on a stand, houses a compass. Its field of operation covers all of the standard operations, including land surveying.


Bibliographical Resources

Danfrie, Philippe. L'usage du trigometre, in Various mathematical exercises and notes, New York, Columbia University, Butler Library, Smith Collection 44.
Danfrie, Philippe. Déclaration de l'usage du graphomètre par la pratique duquel l'on peut mesurer toutes distances des choses de remarque qui se pourront voir et discerner du lieu ou il sera posé et pour arpenter terres, bois, prés et faire plans de villes et forteresses, cartes géographiques et généralement toutes mesures visibles, et ce sans règle d'arithmétique... . A Paris, chez ledict Danfrie, 1597.



Images


Author of the entry: Filippo Camerota

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