André-Marie Ampère

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André-Marie Ampère

Ampere1.jpg
André-Marie Ampère (1775-1836)
Born

January 22 1775
Polémieux, Lyon, France

Died June 10, 1836

Marseille, France

Residence Flag of France.svg France
Nationality Flag of France.svg French
Field Physicist
Institutions Bourg-en-Bresse
École Polytechnique
Known for Ampere's Law

André-Marie Ampère (January 20 1775 – June 10 1836), was a French physicist who is generally credited as one of the main discoverers of electromagnetism. The SI unit of measurement of electric current, the ampere, is named after him.

Early days

Ampère was born near Lyon, France, and lived from 1782 to 1797 in the nearby burg of Poleymieux-lès-Monts-d'Or. As a child prodigy, he took a passionate delight in the pursuit of knowledge from his very infancy, and is reported to have worked out long arithmetical sums by means of pebbles and biscuit crumbs before he knew the figures. It is also said that he read the entire contents of an encyclopedia at a very early age. His father began to teach him Latin, but ceased on discovering the boy's greater inclination and aptitude for mathematical studies. The young Ampère, however, soon resumed his Latin lessons, to enable him to master the works of Euler and Bernoulli.

In later life he was accustomed to say that he knew as much about mathematics when he was eighteen as ever he knew; but, a polymath, his reading embraced nearly the whole round of knowledge — history, travels, poetry, philosophy and the natural sciences. His father was executed during the French Revolution, and this had a deeply disturbing, if temporary, effect on Ampere.

In 1796 he met Julie Carron, and an attachment sprang up between them. In 1799 they were married. From about 1796 Ampère gave private lessons at Lyons in mathematics, chemistry and languages; and in 1801 he removed to Bourg, as professor of physics and chemistry, leaving his ailing wife and infant son (Jean Jacques Ampère) at Lyon. In 1802, Ampere published his first paper on probability theory. She died in 1804, and he never recovered from her death. In the same year he was appointed professor of mathematics at the lycée of Lyon.

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, Ampere used to say that "at eighteen years he found three culminating points in his life, his First Communion, the reading of Thomas's "Eulogy of Descartes," and the taking of the Bastille... On the day of his wife's death he wrote two verses from the Psalms, and the prayer, 'O Lord, God of Mercy, unite me in Heaven with those whom you have permitted me to love on earth.' Serious doubts harassed him at times, and made him very unhappy. Then he would take refuge in the reading of the Bible and the Fathers of the Church." [1]

Contributions to physics and further studies

Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre's work on probability attracted the attention of some of the important mathematicians of the day, and through it he obtained recommendations for the Lyon appointment, and afterwards (1804) a subordinate position as lecturer on mathematical anaysis in the polytechnic school at Paris. He was appointed professor of mathematics in 1809. Here he continued to pursue his scientific research and his diverse studies with unabated diligence. He was admitted as a member of the Institute in 1814.

Ampère's fame mainly rests on the service that he rendered to science in establishing the relations between electricity and magnetism, and in developing the science of electromagnetism, or, as he called it, electrodynamics. On September 11, 1820 he heard of H. C. Ørsted's discovery that a magnetic needle is acted on by a voltaic current. Only a week later, on September 18, he presented a paper to the Academy containing a far more complete exposition of that and kindred phenomena.

Legacy and final days

The whole field thus opened up he explored with characteristic industry and care, and developed a mathematical theory which not only explained the electromagnetic phenomena already observed but also predicted many new ones.

He died at Marseille and is buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre, Paris. The great amiability and childlike simplicity of Ampère's character are well brought out in his Journal et correspondence (Paris, 1872). Forty-five years later, mathematicians recognised him.

See also

Notes

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

References
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  • Williams, L. Pearce. (1970). "Ampère, André-Marie". Dictionary of Scientific Biography 1: 139-147. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.

External links

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