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Poncelet took part in Napoleon's 1812 Russian campaign as an engineer. He was left for dead at Krasnoy and imprisoned until 1814 when he returned to France. During his imprisonment he studied projective geometry. He also wrote a treatise on analytic geometry Applications d'analyse et de géométrie based on what he had learnt at the Ecole Polytechnique but it was only published 50 years later.
From 1815 to 1825 he was a military engineer at Metz and from 1825 to 1835 professor of mechanics there. He applied mechanics to improve turbines and waterwheels more than doubling the efficiency of the waterwheel.
Poncelet was one of the founders of modern projective geometry simultaneously discovered by Joseph Gergonne and Poncelet. His development of the pole and polar lines associated with conics led to the principle of duality. He also discovered circular points at infinity.
He published Traité des propriétés projectives des figures in 1822 which is a study of those properties which remain invariant under projection. This work contains fundamental ideas of projective geometry such as the cross-ratio, perspective, involution and the circular points at infinity. While writing this book he consulted with Servois.
Poncelet published Applications d'analyse et de géométrie in two volumes: 1862 and 1864.
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
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List
of References (9 books/articles)
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A
Poster of Jean-Victor Poncelet
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Mathematicians
born in the same country
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Some pages from publications | Part of the Introduction of Traitè des propriés projectives de figures (1822) |
Cross-references to History Topics | Abstract linear spaces |
Honours awarded
to Jean-Victor Poncelet
(Click a link below for the full list of mathematicians honoured in this way) |
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Fellow of the Royal Society | Elected 1842 |
Lunar features | Crater Poncelet |
Paris street names | Passage Poncelet and Rue Poncelet (17th Arrondissement) |
Other Web sites | Encyclopaedia Britannica |
JOC/EFR December 1996
The URL of this page is: |
School_of_Mathematics_and_Statistics
University_of_St_Andrews,_Scotland |
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http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Poncelet.html |