The History and Development of Nomography


H.A. Evesham


About the Author

Dr. Evesham’s research and writing on the history and mathematics of nomography is widely cited in the history of mathematics literature. He was the Assistant Dean of the Department of Science at The University of Luton when he retired.

Reviews

Nomography is a valuable computational tool in many geometrical or algebraic contexts, much appreciated by its practitioners but insufficiently known outside, even among mathematicians. However, it received a most capable historical study in the doctoral thesis of Dr. Ainsley Evesham, which now sees the public light of day in this welcome publication.

Ivor Grattan-Guinness
Emeritus Professor of the History of Mathematics and Logic, Middlesex University

Nomograms are one of the forgotten technologies of computing, neglected even by historians. A nomogram consisted of a printed graphical chart that was easy to use and inexpensive to replicate, which facilitated almost instant, specialized calculations. A mainstream calculating method from the 1890s until the 1950s, nomograms were widely used in areas as diverse as military engineering, ballistics, astronomy, navigation, and surveying. This important book is the first modern treatment of nomograms and is a most welcome addition to the literature of the history of computing.

Martin Campbell-Kelly
Emeritus Professor, Warwick University

Through a long period in the history of mathematics, geometry was an important auxiliary to perform numerical calculations. In the nineteenth century geometry was used, again, for calculations connected with structural engineering through a body of procedures generically known as Graphical Statics. Toward the end of that century an older idea, of calculation cleverly combining scales displayed on lines, was developed into a new branch of mathematics known as Nomography. Through the work of a brilliant group of mathematicians, of which Maurice D’Ocagne is the best known, this discipline advanced developing means of performing quickly and simply sophisticated calculations required by engineering and science. A theoretical structure was later developed for it, which posed new and deep mathematical problems. In the first third of the twentieth century, with the advent of cheap, reliable mechanical calculating machines-and later with electro-mechanical and electronic ones- the discipline began to loose momentum. Its fascinating story is related for the first time by Dr H. A. Evesham in this valuable and well researched work.

...

Professor Emeritus Eduardo L. Ortiz
Imperial College, London

Mr. Evesham’s study of the origins and development of nomography is a real treasure for those wishing to explore nomography beyond the usual elementary treatments. With exceptional clarity he traces the mathematical threads of graphical computation through the earliest work of Lalanne and his “Universal Calculator,” Lallemand and his hexagonal chart concept, Massau’s introduction of determinants as a design tool, and then our modern concept of nomography developed by d’Ocagne, Soreau and others. Perhaps most importantly, this book describes in detail the advanced mathematical efforts by Saint-Robert, Lecornu, Clark, Grönwall, Kellogg and Warmus to identify functional forms that can be constructed as nomograms, a surprisingly difficult task. The original references are generally in languages other than English and published in obscure journals, and Mr. Evesham does a great service in making these advancements available to the modern reader. I can’t express enough my pleasure in reading through this unique and wonderful work.

...

Ron Doerfler
Author, Dead Reckoning: Calculating Without Instruments

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Publication Date: Dec 26, 2010

ISBN/EAN13: 1456479628 / 9781456479626

Page Count: 278

Binding Type: US Trade Paper

Trim Size: 6" x 9"

Language: English

Color: Black & White

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 The Origins of Geometric Computation
Chapter 2 The Development of a Distinct Discipline
Lalanne and Anamorphosis
Saint-Robert’s Criterion
The Contribution of Junius Massau
The First Papers of Maurice d’Ocagne
Lallemand’s Hexagonal Nomogram
Two Early Attempts to Solve a Problem of Anamorphosis
D’Ocagne’s Nomographie
The State of Nomography in 1893
A Theoretical Problem of Alignment Nomograms
The Lives of Lalanne, Lallemand and d’Ocagne
Léon Lalanne
Charles Lallemand
Maurice d’Ocagne
The End of the Century
Chapter 3 Development in the Early Part of the 20th Century
D’Ocagne’s Traité de Nomographie
Hilbert’s Thirteenth Problem
The Spread of Nomographic Ideas
The Contribution of Dr. J. Clark
Further Theoretical Developments of Alignment Nomograms
Crunodal Form
Cuspidal Form
Acnodal Form
The Period of Consolidation
Chapter 4 Anamorphosis and Alignment Nomograms
The Problem
Grönwall’s Approach
Kellogg’s Approach
Warmus and Nomographic Functions
The Practical Approach of Dzems-Levi
Conclusion
Chapter 5 Later Developments
Russian Advances
Theoretical Considerations
Some Recent Nomograms
Chapter 6 Conclusions
Appendix A Massau’s and Lecornu’s Conditions
Massau’s Conditions
Lecornu’s Conditions
Appendix B Elements from Kellogg’s Work on Anamorphosis
Appendix C Best Functional Scale is Logarithmic
Appendix D Equivalence of Results of Steyskalova and Buck
Bibliography
Index