Alexis Thérèse Petit: Difference between revisions
Numericana (talk | contribs) Second professor at Polytechnique |
Numericana (talk | contribs) Suceeded by Dulong as professor of physics at Polytechnique |
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He first collaborated with [[Pierre Louis Dulong]] for the competition of the [[French Academy of Sciences|Académie des sciences]] about refrigeration (1815). Alexis Petit is now probably best known for the surprising [[Dulong-Petit law]] concerning the [[specific heat capacity]] of [[metal]]s, which both men formulated together in 1819. Petit also designed a special thermometer (using weights) to determine the thermal dilatation coefficients of several metals. |
He first collaborated with [[Pierre Louis Dulong]] for the competition of the [[French Academy of Sciences|Académie des sciences]] about refrigeration (1815). Alexis Petit is now probably best known for the surprising [[Dulong-Petit law]] concerning the [[specific heat capacity]] of [[metal]]s, which both men formulated together in 1819. Petit also designed a special thermometer (using weights) to determine the thermal dilatation coefficients of several metals. |
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Alexis Petit passed away at the age of 29, shortly after the death of his wife. |
Alexis Petit passed away at the age of 29, shortly after the death of his wife. He was suceeded by [[Pierre Louis Dulong|Dulong]] as professor of physics at Polytechnique (1820). |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 21:48, 3 July 2012
Alexis Thérèse Petit (2 October 1791, Vesoul, Haute-Saône - 21 June 1820 in Paris) was a French physicist.
Petit is known for his work on the efficiencies of air- and steam-engines, published in 1818 ("Mémoire sur l’emploi du principe des forces vives dans le calcul des machines"). His well-known discussions with the French physicist Sadi Carnot, founder of thermodynamics, may have stimulated Carnot in his reflexions on heat engines and thermodynamic efficiency.
Petit was born in Vesoul, Haute-Saône. At the age of 10, he proved that he was already capable of taking the difficult entrance exam to France's most prestigious scientific school of the time, the École Polytechnique of Paris. He was then placed in a prepatory school where he actually served as a "répétiteur" to help his own classmates digest the course material. He duly entered Polytechnique at the lowest permissible age, in 1807, and graduated "hors-rang" in 1809 (which is to say that he clearly outranked all of his classmates).
After graduation, Petit stayed at Polytechnique as a faculty member, first as "répétiteur" in.Analysis and Mechanics (1809) then in Physics (1810). He taught for some time at Lycée Bonaparte. At Polytechnique, he served as a substitute (1814) for Hassenfratz whom he would replace in 1815. He thus became the second professor of physics at Polytechnique and the youngest person ever to hold that position, at the ripe old age of 23.
In 1814, Petit collaborated with his brother-in-law François Arago on a paper entitled "Mémoire sur les variations que le pouvoir réfringent d’une même substance éprouve par l’effet gradué de la chaleur".
He first collaborated with Pierre Louis Dulong for the competition of the Académie des sciences about refrigeration (1815). Alexis Petit is now probably best known for the surprising Dulong-Petit law concerning the specific heat capacity of metals, which both men formulated together in 1819. Petit also designed a special thermometer (using weights) to determine the thermal dilatation coefficients of several metals.
Alexis Petit passed away at the age of 29, shortly after the death of his wife. He was suceeded by Dulong as professor of physics at Polytechnique (1820).
References
- R Fox, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
- J B Biot, Aléxis Thérèse Petit, Annales de chimie et de physique 16 (1821), 327-335.
- R Fox, The background to the discovery of Dulong and Petit's law, British J. His. Sci. 4 (1968–69), 1-22.
- J Jamin, Etudes sur la chaleur statique : Dulong et Petit, Revue des deux mondes 11 (1855), 375-412.
- J W van Spronsen, The history and prehistory of the law of Dulong and Petit as applied to the determination of atomic weights, Chymia 12 (1967), 157-169.