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Francesco Maria Grimaldi

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Nationality
  
Fields
  
Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Francesco Grimaldi

Known for
  

Francesco Maria Grimaldi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

Born
  
2 April 1618Bologna (
1618-04-02
)

Died
  
December 28, 1663, Bologna, Italy

Francesco Maria Grimaldi (2 April 1618 – 28 December 1663) was an Italian Jesuit priest, mathematician and physicist who taught at the Jesuit college in Bologna. He was born in Bologna to Paride Grimaldi and Anna Cattani.

Contents

Francesco Maria Grimaldi Francesco Maria Grimaldi Biography from Penny Cyclopdia 1845

Work

Francesco Maria Grimaldi Francesco Maria Grimaldi YouTube

Between 1640 and 1650, working with Riccioli, he investigated the free fall of objects, confirming that the distance of fall was proportional to the square of the time taken. Grimaldi and Riccioli also made a calculation of the gravitational constant by recording the oscillations of an accurate pendulum.

Francesco Maria Grimaldi Occasionally light added to itself may give obscure surfaces on a

In astronomy, he built and used instruments to measure lunar mountains as well as the height of clouds, and drew an accurate map or, selenograph, which was published by Riccioli and now adorns the entrance to the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D.C.

Francesco Maria Grimaldi Grimaldi2

He was the first to make accurate observations on the diffraction of light (although by some accounts Leonardo da Vinci had earlier noted it), and coined the word 'diffraction'. Through experimentation he was able to demonstrate that the observed passage of light could not be reconciled with the idea that it moved in a rectilinear path. Rather, the light that passed through the hole took on the shape of a cone. Later physicists used his work as evidence that light was a wave, and Isaac Newton used it to arrive at his more comprehensive theory of light. He also discovered what are known as diffraction bands.

The crater Grimaldi on the Moon is named after him.

Publications

  • Physicomathesis de lumine, coloribus, et iride, aliisque annexis (published 1665)
  • References

    Francesco Maria Grimaldi Wikipedia