Pierre Simon de Laplace was born on 28 March 1749 at Beaumont-en-Auge,
in Normandy, France. Born in a wealthy family, Laplace first studied
at a Benedictine College in his home town,
after which he matriculated at the University of Caen in 1766. He left
Caen in 1768 without obtaining a degree, moving
to Paris to work with famed mathematician Jean d'Alembert (1717-1773).
Laplace was immediately employed at the Ecole Militaire, and
was elected to the Académie des Sciences in 1773.
He later became head mathematician there.
Laplace's achievements in applied mathematics and astronomy
are many and far reaching. Starting in 1773, be applied his
mathematical skills to problems in celestial mechanics.
He carried out groundbreaking work on the orbital interaction
between Saturn and Jupiter, Lunar orbital motion and circularization,
the shape of planetary bodies, tides, and stability of the solar system.
His work marked the
triumph of Newtonian Mechanics, and together with the work of
his fellow countryman Joseph Louis Lagrange (1736-1813),
established new standards of
rigor and accuracy in positional astronomy. His Tables of planetary
positions remained in use well into the nineteenth century.
Laplace's researches in celestial mechanics
culminated in the publication, between 1799 and 1825, of his
five-volume Traité de Mécanique Céleste.
In 1796 Laplace published his
Exposition du système du Monde, a popular work aimed
at describing the current state of cosmological thought. It it in
this book that Laplace introduced his nebular hypothesis,
according to which the solar system formed from the gravitationally-induced
contraction of an initially large, diffuse and slowly-rotating cloud
of interstellar gas.
Laplace was evidently as cunning in politics as in
mathematics, as he managed to retain the favors of rulers
through the French Revolution, the Napoleonic era, and the return
of the French Monarchy. In addition to his purely scientific honors,
In 1799 Laplace was appointed to the French Senate by Napoleon,
and, following the emperor's fall,
was given the rank of Marquis by the returning French Monarchy.
His staunch loyalty to the latter made Laplace somewhat unpopular
in the last decade of his life.
Bibliography:
Porter, R. (ed.) 1994, The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists,
Oxford University Press.
Hoskin, M. (ed.) 1997, The Cambridge illustrated History of Astronomy
Kepler
Descartes
Newton
Cassini
Herschel
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