Awards & Winners

Michel Chasles

Date of Birth 15-November-1793
Place of Birth Épernon
(Eure-et-Loir)
Nationality France
Profession Mathematician
Michel Floréal Chasles was a French mathematician. He was born at Épernon in France and studied at the École Polytechnique in Paris under Siméon Denis Poisson. In the War of the Sixth Coalition he was drafted to fight in the defence of Paris in 1814. After the war, he gave up on a career as an engineer or stockbroker in order to pursue his mathematical studies. In 1837 he published his Historical view of the origin and development of methods in geometry, a study of the method of reciprocal polars in projective geometry. The work gained him considerable fame and respect and he was appointed Professor at the École Polytechnique in 1841, then he was awarded a chair at the Sorbonne in 1846. A second edition of his book was published in 1875, and Leonhard Sohncke translated the work into German. Jakob Steiner had proposed the problem of enumerating the number of conic sections tangent to each of five given conics, and had answered it incorrectly. Chasles developed a theory of characteristics that enabled the correct enumeration of the conics. He established several important theorems. That on solid body kinematics was seminal for understanding their motions, and hence to the development of the theories of dynamics of rigid bodies.

Awards by Michel Chasles

Check all the awards nominated and won by Michel Chasles.

1865


Copley Medal
(For his historical and original researches in pure geometry.)