Eureka in Greek is, "I have found it".These are the words excitedly cried out by Archimedes, an ancient Greek scientist and mathematician, as he left his bathtub and ran down the street having discovered the riddle of the crown. Archimedes had been summoned by King Hiero of Syracuse, Sicily to examine a crown made for the king by a goldsmith. The King was suspicious that the goldsmith had deceived him in some way. The King felt that the goldsmith may not have made the crown totally out of the pure gold originally provided. Archimedes tried without success to find a solution to the King's concerns. But, one day, as he sat in his bathtub, he noticed how the water level rose as more of his body was submerged. This is when he realized he had discovered a method of providing an answer to the King. Was the crown made of pure gold, or was some other metal substituted? The ancient
scientist decided to conduct an experiment comparing the volume of the crown
and a piece of pure gold having the same weight as the crown. Since more water was displaced when the crown was submerged, this indicated that the goldsmith had indeed been deceitful. He had substituted some silver for the gold when making the crown. Archimedes had discovered the solution. EUREKA! |
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RIBERA,
Jusepe de 1630 Oil on canvas, 125 x 81 cm Museo del Prado, Madrid |
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