On Floating Bodies

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On Floating Bodies I-II
AuthorArchimedes
LanguageAncient Greek
GenreHydrostatics

On Floating Bodies (Greek: Περὶ τῶν ἐπιπλεόντων σωμάτων) is a work, originally in two books, by Archimedes, one of the most important mathematicians, physicists, and engineers of antiquity. Thought to have been written towards the end of Archimedes' life, On Floating Bodies I-II survives only partly in Greek and in a medieval Latin translation from the Greek. It is the first known work on hydrostatics, of which Archimedes is recognized as the founder.[1]

The purpose of On Floating Bodies I-II was to determine the positions that various solids will assume when floating in a fluid, according to their form and the variation in their specific gravities. The work is known for containing the first statement of what is now known as Archimedes' principle.

Archimedes lived in the Greek city-state of Syracuse, Sicily, where he was known as a mathematician and as a designer of machines, some of which might have helped keeping Roman armies at bay during the Second Punic War.[2] Archimedes' interests in the conditions of stability for solid bodies are found both here and in his studies of the lever and centre of gravity in On the Equilibrium of Planes I-II.

Book one of On Floating Bodies begins with a derivation of the Law of Buoyancy and ends with a proof that a floating segment of a homogeneous solid sphere is always in stable equilibrium when its base is parallel to the surface of a fluid. Book two extends Archimedes' study from the segment of a sphere to the case of a right paraboloid and contains many sophisticated results.

Although the work is extant in Latin translation, the only known copy of On Floating Bodies I-II in Greek comes from the Archimedes Palimpsest.[3]

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