Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- MEMOIR OF SIR GEORGE DARWIN BY HIS BROTHER SIR FRANCIS DARWIN
- THE SCIENTIFIC WORK OF SIR GEORGE DARWIN BY PROFESSOR E. W. BROWN
- INAUGURAL LECTURE (DELIVERED AT CAMBRIDGE, IN 1883, ON ELECTION TO THE PLUMIAN PROFESSORSHIP)
- INTRODUCTION TO DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY
- LECTURES ON HILL'S LUNAR THEORY
- ON LIBRATING PLANETS AND ON A NEW FAMILY OF PERIODIC ORBITS
- ADDRESS TO THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF MATHEMATICIANS AT CAMBRIDGE IN 1912
- INDEX
THE SCIENTIFIC WORK OF SIR GEORGE DARWIN BY PROFESSOR E. W. BROWN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- MEMOIR OF SIR GEORGE DARWIN BY HIS BROTHER SIR FRANCIS DARWIN
- THE SCIENTIFIC WORK OF SIR GEORGE DARWIN BY PROFESSOR E. W. BROWN
- INAUGURAL LECTURE (DELIVERED AT CAMBRIDGE, IN 1883, ON ELECTION TO THE PLUMIAN PROFESSORSHIP)
- INTRODUCTION TO DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY
- LECTURES ON HILL'S LUNAR THEORY
- ON LIBRATING PLANETS AND ON A NEW FAMILY OF PERIODIC ORBITS
- ADDRESS TO THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF MATHEMATICIANS AT CAMBRIDGE IN 1912
- INDEX
Summary
The scientific work of Darwin possesses two characteristics which cannot fail to strike the reader who glances over the titles of the eighty odd papers which are gathered together in the four volumes which contain most of his publications. The first of these characteristics is the homogeneous nature of his investigations. After some early brief notes, on a variety of subjects, he seems to have set himself definitely to the task of applying the tests of mathematics to theories of cosmogony, and to have only departed from it when pressed to undertake the solution of practical problems for which there was an immediate need. His various papers on viscous spheroids concluding with the effects of tidal friction, the series on rotating masses of fluids, even those on periodic orbits, all have the idea, generally in the foreground, of developing the consequences of old and new assumptions concerning the past history of planetary and satellite systems. That he achieved so much, in spite of indifferent health which did not permit long hours of work at his desk, must have been largely due to this single aim.
The second characteristic is the absence of investigations undertaken for their mathematical interest alone; he was an applied mathematician in the strict and older sense of the word. In the last few decades another school of applied mathematicians, founded mainly by Poincaré, has arisen, but it differs essentially from the older school. Its votaries have less interest in the phenomena than in the mathematical processes which are used by the student of the phenomena.
- Type
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- Information
- The Scientific Papers of Sir George DarwinSupplementary Volume, pp. xxxiv - lviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1916