Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS CONSULTED
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- THE WORKS OF ARCHIMEDES
- ON THE SPHERE AND CYLINDER, BOOK I
- ON THE SPHERE AND CYLINDER, BOOK II
- MEASUREMENT OF A CIRCLE
- ON CONOIDS AND SPHEROIDS
- ON SPIRALS
- ON THE EQUILIBRIUM OF PLANES, BOOK I
- ON THE EQUILIBRIUM OF PLANES, BOOK II
- THE SAND-RECKONER
- QUADRATURE OF THE PARABOLA
- ON FLOATING BODIES, BOOK I
- ON FLOATING BODIES, BOOK II
- BOOK OF LEMMAS
ON THE SPHERE AND CYLINDER, BOOK II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS CONSULTED
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- THE WORKS OF ARCHIMEDES
- ON THE SPHERE AND CYLINDER, BOOK I
- ON THE SPHERE AND CYLINDER, BOOK II
- MEASUREMENT OF A CIRCLE
- ON CONOIDS AND SPHEROIDS
- ON SPIRALS
- ON THE EQUILIBRIUM OF PLANES, BOOK I
- ON THE EQUILIBRIUM OF PLANES, BOOK II
- THE SAND-RECKONER
- QUADRATURE OF THE PARABOLA
- ON FLOATING BODIES, BOOK I
- ON FLOATING BODIES, BOOK II
- BOOK OF LEMMAS
Summary
“Archimedes to Dositheus greeting.
On a former occasion you asked me to write out the proofs of the problems the enunciations of which I had myself sent to Conon. In point of fact they depend for the most part on the theorems of which I have already sent you the demonstrations, namely (1) that the surface of any sphere is four times the greatest circle in the sphere, (2) that the surface of any segment of a sphere is equal to a circle whose radius is equal to the straight line drawn from the vertex of the segment to the circumference of its base, (3) that the cylinder whose base is the greatest circle in any sphere and whose height is equal to the diameter of the sphere is itself in magnitude half as large again as the sphere, while its surface [including the two bases] is half as large again as the surface of the sphere, and (4) that any solid sector is equal to a cone whose base is the circle which is equal to the surface of the segment of the sphere included in the sector, and whose height is equal to the radius of the sphere.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of ArchimedesEdited in Modern Notation with Introductory Chapters, pp. 56 - 90Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1897