Peter Barlow (
1776—
1862),
English writer on pure and applied
mathematics, was born at
Norwich in
1776 and died on the 1st of March
1862. In
1806 he was appointed mathematical master in the
Woolwich Academy[?], and filled that post for 41 years. In
1823 he was made a fellow of the
Royal Society, and two years later received the
Copley medal[?]. Steam locomotion received much attention at his hands, and he sat on the railway commissions of
1836,
1839,
1842,
1845.
He received many distinctions from British and foreign scientific societies. Barlow’s principal works are:
- Elementary Investigation of the Theory of Numbers (1811)
- New Mathematical and Philosophical Dictionary (1814)
- Essay on Magnetic Attractions (1820).
The investigations on magnetism led to the important practical discovery of a means of rectifying or compensating compass errors in ships. Besides compiling numerous useful tables, he contributed largely to the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana[?].
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