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Willebrord Snell

Willebrord Snell (15911626), also known as Snellitjs or Snellitis, was a Dutch astronomer and mathematician, most famous for the law of refraction now known as Snell's law.

Snell was born at Leiden in 1591. In 1613 he succeeded his father Rudolph Snell (15461613) as professor of mathematics in the University of Leiden. In 1615 he planned and carried into practice a new method of finding the radius of the earth, by determining the distance of one point on its surface from the parallel of latitude of another, by means of triangulation. His work Eratosthenes Batavus, published in 1617, describes the method and gives as the result of his operations between Alkmaar and Bergen—two towns separated by one degree of the meridian, which he measured to be equal to 117,449 yds (107.395 km). The currently accepted value is approximately 111 km. Snell was also a distiguished mathematician, producing a new method for calculating π -- the first such improvement since ancient times. He discovered the law of refraction, in 1621. He died at Leiden on the October 30, 1626.

In addition to the Eratosthenes Batavus he published Cyclometria sive de circuli dimensione (1621), and Tiphys Batavus (1624). He also edited Coeli et siderum in eo errantium observationes Hassiacae (1618), containing the astronomical observations of Landgrave William IV of Hesse. A trigonometry (Doctrina triangulorum) by him was published a year after his death.


The original text for this article was based on the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica.



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