Null Jean-Baptiste BIOT (1774-1862) mathematician, physicist and astronomer. Par…
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Jean-Baptiste BIOT (1774-1862) mathematician, physicist and astronomer. Partially autograph manuscript, La Mola de Formentera, [1807]; 8pages in-fol. Working manuscript of this study on the measurement of the arc of the meridian, during his mission with Arago on a Balearic island.Between 1806 and 1808, two French astronomers, Jean-Baptiste Biot and François Arago, were sent to Spain to complete the measurements of the arc of the terrestrial meridian begun by Delambre and Méchain. After triangulating the Spanish coastline, they continued their work on the island of Formentera, one of the four main Balearic islands, located 6 km south of Ibiza. The present manuscript details their observations; mainly in Biot's hand, it contains erasures and corrections."Formentera is a small isle about twenty-five minutes south of the isle of Yvice [Ibiza]. At first, we didn't think of pushing the end of the arc that far, and we couldn't even have done it directly, if we had left the Yvice station on the Los Masons mountain, where Méchain had planned to place it. Formentera is not visible from this mountain. But those of us who went to prepare the signals on the isle of Yvice soon recognized the possibility of joining this isle to Formentera by a triangle whose third vertex would be at Mongo on the Spanish coast, and it was this consideration, as much as the advantage of choosing a higher mountain in Yvice, that determined us to substitute the mountain of Campvey for Los Masons. The Formentera station was established on a plateau about two hundred meters high"... Once the station was set up, the two astronomers began their observations, which lasted from April 19 to 28, 1807. The text contains zenith distances (based on the Campvey and Mongo lampposts) and position angles between the lampposts. Comments explain the observation conditions: reception of light signals, clouds, fog, temperature, atmospheric pressure....Text published in BIOT (J.-B.) and ARAGO (F.), Recueil d'observations géodésiques, astronomiques et physiques (Paris, Ve Courcier, 1821, pp. 170 -177).

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Jean-Baptiste BIOT (1774-1862) mathematician, physicist and astronomer. Partially autograph manuscript, La Mola de Formentera, [1807]; 8pages in-fol. Working manuscript of this study on the measurement of the arc of the meridian, during his mission with Arago on a Balearic island.Between 1806 and 1808, two French astronomers, Jean-Baptiste Biot and François Arago, were sent to Spain to complete the measurements of the arc of the terrestrial meridian begun by Delambre and Méchain. After triangulating the Spanish coastline, they continued their work on the island of Formentera, one of the four main Balearic islands, located 6 km south of Ibiza. The present manuscript details their observations; mainly in Biot's hand, it contains erasures and corrections."Formentera is a small isle about twenty-five minutes south of the isle of Yvice [Ibiza]. At first, we didn't think of pushing the end of the arc that far, and we couldn't even have done it directly, if we had left the Yvice station on the Los Masons mountain, where Méchain had planned to place it. Formentera is not visible from this mountain. But those of us who went to prepare the signals on the isle of Yvice soon recognized the possibility of joining this isle to Formentera by a triangle whose third vertex would be at Mongo on the Spanish coast, and it was this consideration, as much as the advantage of choosing a higher mountain in Yvice, that determined us to substitute the mountain of Campvey for Los Masons. The Formentera station was established on a plateau about two hundred meters high"... Once the station was set up, the two astronomers began their observations, which lasted from April 19 to 28, 1807. The text contains zenith distances (based on the Campvey and Mongo lampposts) and position angles between the lampposts. Comments explain the observation conditions: reception of light signals, clouds, fog, temperature, atmospheric pressure....Text published in BIOT (J.-B.) and ARAGO (F.), Recueil d'observations géodésiques, astronomiques et physiques (Paris, Ve Courcier, 1821, pp. 170 -177).

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[Autographs]. [Savants, sciences]. Important collection of signed letters, documents and papers, almost all autographed. XVIIe-XIX centuries, by forty-six scientists (moderate usage defects, the most serious are noted). This collection was mainly built up by Antoine Boutron (1796-1879), pharmacist and chemist, and autograph collector. It contains notes written by Boutron himself, as well as letters he received from colleagues and friends, and others he collected. There are also items addressed to or collected by his son-in-law Edmond (Edme, dit) Frémy (1814-1894); Frémy was also an eminent chemist: as professor at the Ecole Polytechnique, he succeeded Théophile-Jules Pelouze, who at the start of his career had received the support of Antoine Boutron. He was a member of the Académie des Sciences and Director of the Muséum d'Histoire naturelle. - ARAGO, François (1786-1853). Astronomer and physicist. 1 autograph draft in which he praises Lakanal. 1 p. and 2 lines in-folio + 1 autograph envelope addressed to Boutron + 1 printed notice + 1 lithograph portrait (freckles) ? - ADANSON, Michel (1727-1806). French naturalist of Scottish origin. 1 L.A.S. to Bélanger (v°: "à l'ami bienfaisant, au philosophe"). Paris, Feb. 4, 1796. 3 p. in-4. Interesting letter on his work, particularly on unknown species; at the end, he complains of his destitution. - AYEN, J.-L.-P.-F. de Noailles, Duc d' (1739-1824). Military and chemist, member of the Acad. des Sciences. 1 fragment of a handwritten bill signed "Le Duc d'Ayen" + 1 presumably autograph text to the Comte d'Angiviller concerning a memoir on a water pipe, ½ p. small in-4, March 31, 1780. - BAUDELOCQUE, Jean Louis (1746-1810). Obstetrician. 1 L.A.S. to Fougeron, pharmacy student. Paris, Nov. 21, 1806. 1 p. in-8 about the support he intends to provide. - BECQUEREL, [probably Antoine (1788-1878). Physicist]. 4 L.A.S. [to Edmond Frémy]. S.l., s.d. 5 p. in-8. - BERGMAN, Torbern Olof (1735-1784). Swedish chemist and mineralogist. 1 L.A.S., to Jean Le Roy, of the Académie des Sciences in Paris. Upsala, Oct. 18, 1763. 3 folio pages in Latin. - BIOT, Jean-Baptiste (1774-1862). Physicist and astronomer. Manuscript signed and most probably autograph, concerning Volta. Version with numerous corrections. Circa 1801. 10 pages in-4. Biot presented a report on Volta's experiments to the Académie des Sciences on Frimaire 11, Year X (Dec. 2, 1801). - BOULLIAU, Ismaël (1605-1694). Astronomer. Manuscript copy of a Latin dedication (perhaps autograph draft?). 1 p. ¾ in-4 + 1 engraved portrait dated 1697. - BOYER, Alexis (1757-1833). Anatomist, first surgeon to Napoleon 1st, then consultant to Louis XVIII, Charles X and Louis-Philippe. 1 A.S. certificate + 1 A.S. prescription + 1 lith. portrait after J. Boilly. - BRONGNIART, Alexandre (1770-1847). Mineralogist. 1 L.A.S, to Mr. Webb, January 7, 1839. 2 p. in-12 (light wetness, one corner mq. in margin). About rock samples, Berthellot and a post in Toulouse, and thanks his addressee for his fine work. - CAILLAUD Frédéric (1787-1869). French explorer of Upper Egypt and Ethiopia. 1 L.A.S. addressed to the booksellers Treuttel et Würtz. Paris, July 8, 1826. 1 p. in-4, about the publication of a book. - CHASLES, Michel (1793-1880). Mathematician. 4 L.A.S. [to Edmond Frémy]. Two from 1859 (?), one from 1872 and one undated. 4 p. in-8. - CUVIER, Georges (1769-1832). Naturalist. Autograph bill signed, to a police commissioner. Au jardin du roi, September 3, 1824. ½ page in-4. Request for certificates to obtain a passport for Mme Cuvier and her daughters to go to the waters of Plombières (a ballpoint pen stroke not serious, freckles). + 1 lithograph portrait. - DAUBRÉE, Gabriel-Auguste (1814-1896). Geologist. 1 L.A.S, to "mon cher confrère" [i.e. Frémy]. December 19. "Enclosed are samples of manganese ore from [Romorantin?] with the quartz and spathfluor that serve as its gangue...". 1 p. ½ in-8. - DEMACHY, Jacques-François (1728-1803). Chemist. 1 autograph piece (end missing) about experiments on saltpeter and alkali. 2 p. folio. - DEPRETZ, César-Mansuète (1792?-1863). French physicist of Belgian origin. 6 L.A.S. [to Edmond Frémy]. 1859-1861. 5 p. ½ in-8. - DU HAMEL, Jean-Baptiste (1624-1706). Member of the Académie des Sciences. Programme des matières à traiter à l'Académie des sciences, manuscript (secretary), 2 pieces in-4 of 2 p. and 2 p. ½, the second devoted to physics enriched with a signed autograph paragraph + 1 small notebook of autograph notes on sessions, 6 p. in-8. - ERMAN, Georg Adolphe (1806-1877). German physicist. Handwritten copy (translation?) of one of his memoirs, published in Berlin, on conduction.