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Henry Darcy

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Nationality
  
French

Education
  
Ecole Polytechnique

Known for
  
Fields
  
Hydraulics

Name
  
Henry Darcy

Notable awards
  
Legion of Honour

Role
  
Engineer


Henry Darcy Henry Darcy Wikiwand

Born
  
June 10, 1803Dijon (
1803-06-10
)

Alma mater
  
Ecole PolytechniqueEcole des Ponts et Chaussees

Died
  
January 3, 1858, Dijon, France

Books
  
The Public Fountains of the City of Dijon: Exposition and Application of Principles to Follow and Formulas to Use in Questions of Water Distribution : the Book Ends with an Appendix on Water Supplies of Several Cities' Water Filtration and the Manufacture of Cast Iron, Lead, and Sheet Metal and Bitumen Pipes

2012 henry darcy lecture series


Henry Philibert Gaspard Darcy ([ɑ̃ʁi daʁsi], 10 June 1803 – 3 January 1858) was a French engineer who made several important contributions to hydraulics including Darcy’s law for flow in porous media.

Contents

Henry Darcy Panoramio Photo of Henry Darcy

Henry darcy the man who saved dijon


Early life

Henry Darcy Determination of the Law The Henry Darcy Home Page

Darcy was born in Dijon, France. Despite his father's death in 1817 when he was 14, his mother was able to borrow money to pay for his tutors. In 1821 he enrolled at the École Polytechnique (Polytechnic School) in Paris, and transferred two years later to the School of Bridges and Roads, which led to employment in the Corps of Bridges and Roads.

Henry Darcy Henry Darcy 18031858 Immortalised by his scientific

Henry met an English woman, Henriette Carey, whose family had been living in Dijon, and married her in 1828.

Engineering career

Henry Darcy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

As a member of the Corps, he built an impressive pressurized water distribution system in Dijon following the failure of attempts to supply adequate fresh water by drilling wells. The system carried water from Rosoir Spring 12.7 kilometres (7.9 mi) away through a covered aqueduct (watercourse) to reservoirs near the city, which then fed into a network of 28,000 meters of pressurized pipes delivering water to much of the city. The system was fully closed and driven by gravity, and thus required no pumps with just sand acting as a filter. He was also involved in many other public works in and around Dijon, as well as in the politics of the Dijon city government.

Henry Darcy Henry Darcy ingnieur hydraulicien dijonnais

During this period he modified the Prony equation for calculating head loss due to friction, which after further modification by Julius Weisbach would become the well-known Darcy–Weisbach equation still in use today.

In 1848 he became Chief Engineer for the département of which Dijon is the capital. Soon thereafter he left Dijon due to political pressure, but was promoted to Chief Director for Water and Pavements and took up office in Paris. While in that position, he was able to focus more on his hydraulics research, especially on flow and friction losses in pipes. During this period he improved the design of the Pitot tube, into essentially the form used today.

He resigned his post in 1855 due to poor health, but was permitted to continue his research in Dijon. In 1855 and 1856 he conducted column experiments that established what has become known as Darcy's law; initially developed to describe flow through sands, it has since been generalized to a variety of situations and is in widespread use today. The unit of measure of fluid permeability, the darcy is named in his honour.

He died of pneumonia while on a trip to Paris in 1858, and is buried in Cimetière de Dijon (formerly known as Péjoces) in Dijon.

Publications

  • Les fontaines publiques de la ville de Dijon: exposition et application ... Victor Dalmont. 1856. 
  • Darcy, Henry-Philibert-Gaspard (1857). Recherches expérimentales relatives au mouvement de l'eau dans les tuyaux. Impr. Impériale. 
  • Darcy, Henri; Bazin, Henry (1865). Recherches hydrauliques: Recherches expérimentales sur l'écoulement de l'eau dans les canaux découverts (1ère partie ed.). Dunod. 
  • Darcy, Henri; Bazin, Henry (1865). Recherches hydrauliques entreprises par M. Henry Darcy continuées par M. Henri Bazin (Deuxième partie. Recherches expérimentales relatives au remous et à la propagation des ondes ed.). Paris,: Imprimerie impériale. 
  • References

    Henry Darcy Wikipedia