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Samuel Earnshaw

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Name
  
Samuel Earnshaw


Role
  
Mathematician

Samuel Earnshaw httpswebspaceyaleeduchem125levitronEarnsha

Born
  
1 February 1805 Sheffield, Yorkshire, England (
1805-02-01
)

Died
  
December 6, 1888, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Education
  
St John's College, Cambridge

Books
  
Partial Differential Equations: An Essay Towards an Entirely New Method of Integrating Them

Earnshaw defeated


Samuel Earnshaw (1 February 1805, Sheffield, Yorkshire – 6 December 1888, Sheffield, Yorkshire) was an English clergyman and mathematician and physicist, noted for his contributions to theoretical physics, especially "Earnshaw's Theorem".

Earnshaw was born in Sheffield and entered St John's College, Cambridge, graduating Senior Wrangler and Smith's Prizeman in 1831.

From 1831 to 1847 Earnshaw worked in Cambridge as tripos coach, and in 1846 was appointed to the parish church St. Michael, Cambridge. For a time he acted as curate to the Revd Charles Simeon. In 1847 his health broke down and he returned to Sheffield working as a chaplain and teacher.

Earnshaw published several mathematical and physical articles and books. His most famous contribution, "Earnshaw's Theorem", shows the impossibility of stable levitating permanent magnets: other topics included optics, waves, dynamics and acoustics in physics, calculus, trigonometry and partial differential equations in mathematics. As a clergyman, he published several sermons and treatises.

References

Samuel Earnshaw Wikipedia