Victor Mayer Amédée Mannheim


Quick Info

Born
17 July 1831
Paris, France
Died
11 December 1906
Paris, France

Summary
Amédée Mannheim was a French mathematician and the inventor of the modern slide rule.

Biography

Amédée Mannheim's parents were Sigismond Mannheim and his wife Marianne Speyer. They were of Jewish descent. From an early age Amédée showed a very strong aptitude for the exact sciences. From the age of ten years, despite being the youngest in his class, he was the only one who could solve the difficult geometry problems proposed by his teacher. After completing the course of study at the Institution Martelet, at the age of sixteen he was admitted to École centrale. Now although the Institution Martelet was the standard route for pupils going on to the École centrale, nevertheless, Mannheim quickly left the École and, instead, prepared for entering the Grand Écoles at the Collège de Charlemagne. Now going to this College proved to be a very good move since at the Collège de Charlemagne he was taught mathematics by Eugène Catalan. The excellent teaching, guidance and support that Catalan provided for his young student was an important factor in his mathematical career. In fact it was during this year at the Collège de Charlemagne that he undertook research on geometry and began publishing papers based on his research.

The summer of 1848 between Mannheim completing his studies at the Collège de Charlemagne and entering university, was a time of revolution in Paris. This revolution materialised without any very definite cause, although food shortages from 1846 onwards had caused much economic trouble and discontent of which the Republicans took advantage. The trigger appears to have been the cancellation by the government of a major banquet arranged for February 1848 by the Republicans. There followed a brief civil war in June 1848 when students and workers built barricades and, attacked by artillery, saw around 1500 of them killed and around 12000 arrested. These must have been extremely difficult time for the young Mannheim, particularly since his teacher Catalan was involved in the revolution.

Mannheim entered the École Polytechnique in Paris in 1848 at the age of 17, again the youngest student in the course. As we mentioned above, he was already publishing papers in the year he began his university studies, with Théorème sur les axes de l'ellipse et de l'hyperbole and Solution géométrique du problème sur l'axe radical both appearing the Nouvelles annales de mathématiques in 1848. While he was at the École Polytechnique he got to know his fellow student Charles Nicolas Peaucellier (1832-1919) who later invented mathematical instruments inspired by Mannheim. One of their teachers was Michel Chasles whose lectures on geometry had a major influence on the young student Mannheim. The director of the École Polytechnique for the two years that Mannheim studied there was Jean-Victor Poncelet who, like Chasles, was to have a major influence on Mannheim. Poncelet retired in the year that Mannheim graduated but the two collaborated some years later. After two years studying at the École Polytechnique, Mannheim went to Metz where he attended the École d'Application. Now Poncelet had taught at Metz twenty years earlier, spending ten years as Captain of Engineers and another ten as Professor of Mechanics there.

Although slide rules existed before Mannheim's time, invented by William Oughtred and Edmund Gunter and others, it was Mannheim who standardised the modern version of the slide rule which was in common use until pocket calculators took over a few years ago. It was around 1850, while he was a student at Metz, that the ideas for this slide rule came to Mannheim. The components are described in the 19th century book by W M Cox written at a time when Mannheim's version of the slide rule was being imported from France into other countries [1]:-
The Slide Rule, as recently perfected by Mannheim, an officer of the Artillery at Metz, is generally made of well-seasoned box-wood, and is about 10 inches long, 1121\large\frac{1}{2}\normalsize inches broad and 14\large\frac{1}{4}\normalsize to 38\large\frac{3}{8}\normalsize inches thick. ... Along the centre of a slip of the same material slides easily from left to right and right to left, in a groove to which it is accurately fitted, its face being perfectly level with the Rule. This is the Slide. On the Rule will be seen, along its whole length, and close to the upper edge of the groove, a series of graduations, with an identically similar series along the upper edge of the Slide. These form the upper scales ... Another series of graduations will also be seen on the Rule along the lower edge of the groove, with a corresponding series on the Slide. These ... are the lower scales. ... Each instrument is provided with a brass or glass Runner, which enables coinciding points to be found on any of the scales, and also permits the extensive calculations being worked out without the necessity of "reading off" the intermediate results, thus securing a greater degree of accuracy in the final one. Such is the Mannheim Slide Rule. Its successful use lies largely in the ability to read the graduations rapidly and correctly.
The glass Runner that Cox mentions was a clever idea by Mannheim and it is more often today called a cursor or indicator. Allow me a little personal note. I [EFR] purchased a slide rule of the Mannheim type when I was at school and my parents paid 5 pounds for it. That would be the equivalent of perhaps 100 pounds today so the calculator has not only given us a better calculating tool but also a much cheaper one. However, I still have the slide rule and treasure it, while I have thrown out all my early calculators.

After graduating from the École d'Application in Metz, Mannheim became an officer of the French artillery. He continued to undertake research in mathematics particularly on the polar reciprocal transformation. He wrote two books at this stage in his career, namely Théorie des polaires réciproques (1851) and Transformation de propriétés métriques des figures à l'aide de la théorie des polaires réciproques (1857). After several years in the military, Mannheim was appointed to the École Polytechnique in Paris, while continuing his army career. He also published further papers on geometry. His first appointment at the École Polytechnique was as a répétiteur in 1859, then in 1863 he was appointed as an examiner. In the following year Mannheim was appointed as Professor of Descriptive Geometry at the École Polytechnique. Koppelman writes in [1]:-
He was a dedicated and popular teacher, strongly devoted to the École Polytechnique, and was one of the founders of the Société Amicale des Anciens Elèves de l'École.
He continued to publish papers; see the list we have compiled of around 240 publications by Mannheim at THIS LINK.

On 12 August 1868 Mannheim married Eugénie Adèle Mathilde Oulif (1838-1906). Michel Chasles, described as a friend of the groom, was one of the witnesses. Another witness was Jules Emile Oulif (born 1829), an elder brother of the bridegroom. They had two children (and perhaps more), namely Nelly Mannheim (28 September 1869-4 December 1941) and Charles Amédée Mannheim (18 March 1872-31 October 1943). Charles "residing at 21 Boulevard Beausjour, Paris, France, invented new and useful Improvements in a Progressive Change-Speed Gear".

We mentioned above that Charles Nicolas Peaucellier was a fellow student of Mannheim's at the École Polytechnique. Like Mannheim, he made a career in the French army. Inspired by Mannheim, in 1864 he reported on his invention of a mechanism to convert rectilinear motion into circular motion. He described his invention in 1868 and gave a public demonstration in 1873. It found rapid application in the design of steam locomotives.

The French Mathematical Society was founded in 1872 and it began publishing the Bulletin de Société Mathématique de France in the following year. Mannheim was involved with the Society from its foundation and published Sur les trajectoires des points d'une droite mobile dans l'espace (1873) in the first volume of the Bulletin. He was elected as president of the Society and served in that role in 1877-78.

In 1880 Mannheim published the book Cours de géométrie descriptive de l'École Polytechnique comprenant les éléments de la géométrie cinématique . He begins the Preface by writing:-
After fifteen years of teaching, during which I tried constantly to improve and complete my education, I decided to publish this book. It contains lessons that I delivered at the École Polytechnique in winter of 1878-1879. By replicating them, virtually without modification, I hope to give them a more lively form than if I had tried to produce concise writing.
In the Preface he explains how he came to give a course on Kinematic Geometry:-
[In this work] the components of the Kinematic Geometry, are didactically presented for the first time. Here is how I was led to enter this new field. In 1867, the Development Council of the École Polytechnique enacted the enlightened and liberal proposal of General Favé, then commander of the school, which gave teachers the right to modify their teaching. Taking advantage of this latitude, I began from that time, to make use of several properties related to the movement of figures; I successively added others. It is properties of this kind that I have grouped together to form my course of Kinematic Geometry. In various memoirs and numerous notes, presented to the Academy of Sciences, I had prepared long ago, materials of this particular branch of geometry. Most of these works are coordinated in this work; and together they form, strictly speaking, the body of a doctrine. While Kinematics is the study of motion regardless of forces, Kinematic Geometry relates to the study of movement independently of forces and of time.
Mannheim retired from his army post in 1890, having attained the rank of colonel in the engineering corps. He continued teaching at the École Polytechnique until he retired in 1901 at the age of 70.

He made numerous contributions to geometry and for his outstanding contributions to the subject he was awarded the Poncelet Prize of the Académie des Sciences in 1872. He published papers such as Sur les trajectoires des points d'une droite mobile dans l'espace (1872), Construire la sphère osculatrice en un point de la courbe d'intersection de deux surfaces données (1873), Nouvelles propriétés de quelques courbes (1875), Sur les surfaces dont les rayons de courbure principaux sont fonctions l'un de l'autre (1877), Sur le paraboloide des normales d'une surface réglée (1877), Nouvelle démonstration d'un théorème relatif au déplacement infiniment petit d'un dièdre et nouvelle application de ce théorème (1878), and Démonstrations géométriques d'un théorème relatif aux surfaces réglées (1878). We saw above that in the early part of his career he studied the polar reciprocal transformation introduced by Chasles and later he applied his results to kinetic geometry. For example he published the book Principes et développements de la géométrie cinématique; ouvrage contenant de nombreuses applications à la théorie des surfaces in 1894. Mannheim's own definition of kinetic geometry considered it to be the study of motion of a figure without reference to any forces, time or other properties external to the figure. In the Preface to Cours de géométrie descriptive de l'École Polytechnique comprenant les éléments de la géométrie cinématique Mannheim pays the following tribute to the founders of kinematics:-
Allow me to recall the names of three famous French mathematicians I like to quote: (i) Ampère, who has distinguished in mechanics the particular branch he named kinematics; (ii) Poncelet, who created masterfully the 'Enseignement de la Cinématique' at the Sorbonne in 1838; (iii) M Chasles, whose beautiful work on geometry has contributed significantly to the progress of kinematics. With these masters, this branch of the Science is now universally studied, special chairs have been founded, and many books have been published. Among them I merely point out the major 'Traité de Cinématique' by M Resal.
Mannheim's work on the exact synthesis of mechanisms is studied in [8].

He also studied surfaces, in particular Fresnel's wave surfaces. The paper [7] studies this aspect of his work in detail.

The list of Mannheim's publications shows that in the four years before he retired he published very little (by his standard) but after retiring he returned to his remarkable, but typical, quantity of papers right up to the time of his death.


References (show)

  1. E Koppelman, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990). See THIS LINK.
  2. W M Cox, The Mannheim Slide Rule. Complete Manuel with Table of Settings, Equivalents and Gauge Points (Keuffel & Esser Co. New York, 1891).
  3. A Loria, Il regolo calcolatore (Sistemi Mannheim e Riez) (Lattes & Co., Turin, 1911).
  4. Amédée Mannheim, Proc. London Math. Soc. 5 (1907), 13.
  5. G Loria, L'opera geometrica di A Mannheim, Rendiconti del Circolo matimatico di Palermo 26 (1908), 1-63.
  6. G Loria, A Mannheim - soldier and mathematician, Scripta Mathematica 2 (1934), 337-342.
  7. C Niven, Mannheim's researches on the wave surface, Quarterly J. Pure Appl. Math. 15 (1878), 242-257.
  8. A M Tokarenko, Development of the methods of the exact synthesis of mechanisms in England (1870s-1880s) (Russian), Studies in the history of physics and mechanics 1988 'Nauka' (Moscow, 1988), 218-232.

Additional Resources (show)


Honours (show)

Honours awarded to Amédée Mannheim

  1. LMS Honorary Member 1878

Cross-references (show)


Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update October 2016