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Francesco Maria Grimaldi

 
Scientist: Francesco Maria Grimaldi

Italian physicist (1618–1663)

Grimaldi was born at Bologna, Italy, and became a Jesuit. In 1648 he became professor of mathematics at his order's college in his native city, where he acted as assistant to Giovanni Riccioli. His discovery of the phenomenon that he named the diffraction of light was reported in his posthumous work Physico-mathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride (1665; Physicomathematical Studies of Light, Colors, and the Rainbow). He showed that when a beam of light passed through two successive narrow apertures, the pattern of light produced was a little bigger than it should have been if the light had traveled in an absolutely straight line. Grimaldi considered that the beam had bent outward very slightly, indicating that light must have a wave nature. The result presented difficulties to all 17th-century corpuscular theories of light.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Francesco Maria Grimaldi
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Grimaldi, Francesco Maria (fränchās'kō märē'ä grēmäl'), 1618?-1663, Italian physicist and mathematician. A Jesuit and professor at Bologna, he studied in detail and named the dark areas on the moon. Noted for his discoveries in the field of optics, he was the first to describe the diffraction of light (in a posthumous work published 1665) and the first to attempt a wave theory of light.
Wikipedia: Francesco Maria Grimaldi
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Francesco Maria Grimaldi

Francesco Maria Grimaldi
Born April 2, 1618
Bologna
Died December 28, 1663
Bologna
Nationality Italian
Fields mathematics, physics
Known for free fall, diffraction

Francesco Maria Grimaldi, born April 2, 1618 in Bologna (Italy) and dead on December 28, 1663 in Bologna, was an Italian Jesuit priest, mathematician and physicist who taught at the Jesuit college in Bologna.

Between 1640 and 1650, working with Riccioli, he investigated the free fall of objects, confirming that the distance of fall was proportional to the square of the time taken.

In astronomy, he built and used instruments to measure geological features on the Moon, and drew an accurate map or selenograph which was published by Riccioli.

He was the first to make accurate observations on the diffraction of light[1][2] (although by some accounts Leonardo da Vinci had earlier noted it[3]), and coined the word 'diffraction'. Later physicists used his work as evidence that light was a wave, and Isaac Newton used it to arrive at his more comprehensive theory of light.

The crater Grimaldi on the Moon is named after him.

Publications

  • Physicomathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride, aliisque annexis (published 1665)

References

  1. ^ Francesco Maria Grimaldi, Physico mathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride, aliisque annexis libri duo (Bologna ("Bonomia"), Italy: Vittorio Bonati, 1665), pages 1-11. Available on-line (in Latin) at: http://fermi.imss.fi.it/rd/bdv?/bdviewer/bid=300682# .
  2. ^ Cajori, Florian "A History of Physics in its Elementary Branches, including the evolution of physical laboratories." MacMillan Company, New York 1899. Available online at: http://books.google.com/books?id=KZ4C-1CRtYQC&ots=c_YpkkbTpT&dq=Florian%20Cajori%20history%20of%20physics&pg=PA88#v=onepage&q=grimaldi&f=false
  3. ^ Guglielmo Libri, Histoire des sciences mathematiques en Italie (1840) [1]

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Scientist. A Dictionary of Scientists. Copyright © Market House Books Ltd 1993, 1999, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
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