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Holometer of Brunel

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Brunel de Varennes, Louis-Clement
Description
This instrument has a black wooden case painted to resemble a book. On the inside is a paper scale in the shape of an octant (eighth of a circle), screwed to the case, with the center of the circle at the front left corner. A metal arm that pivots on this center has a plastic indicator at the opposite end. Scales lettered from A to N that are marked near the circumference. The scales represent tangents, cotangents, sines, cosines, the division of an arc of a circle into differing numbers of equal parts, lengths of the sides and areas of inscribed polygons, areas of the faces and volumes of inscribed polyhedra, and proportions of ellipses. Across the bottom edge are two linear scales, one of centimeters divided to millimeters and one of inches divided to lines (twelve lines/inch).
The holometer was an invention of the French nobleman Louis-Clément de Brunel de Varennes who spent many of his formative years fighting Napoleon’s army. The engraving of the scales was done by Pelicier. Brunel envisioned the instrument as a replacement for the sector, particularly useful in design.
The instrument was noted in contemporary journals but does not seem to have become common.
References:
L.-C. Brunel de Varennes, Métroscopographie, ou Nouveau système de perspective, Paris: Bachelier, 1830.
J. W. Woollgar, “Description of the Holometer,” Mechanics Magazine, vol. 14, September 18, 1830, pp. 40-42.
Location
Currently not on view
ca 1830
ID Number
1987.0606.02
accession number
1987.0606
catalog number
1987.0606.02
Object Name
Calculating Instrument, Trigonometric
Physical Description
wood (case material)
paper (scale material)
metal (arm material)
plastic (indicator material)
Measurements
overall: 3.6 cm x 45.6 cm x 33.2 cm; 1 13/32 in x 17 15/16 in x 13 1/16 in
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Trigonometry
Science & Mathematics
National Museum of American History
Subject
Mathematics
Record ID
nmah_1214281
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746aa-9287-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Related Content

  • Trigonometry in the Plane

    American History Museum
Holometer of Brunel
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