Caustics in Greek antiquity

Alain Joets

Banach Center Publications (2008)

  • Volume: 82, Issue: 1, page 157-161
  • ISSN: 0137-6934

Abstract

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The word caustic was introduced by Tschirnhausen in 1686, in the Latin expression caustica curva. We show that the study of the optical caustics goes back well before, at least to the hellenistic period. We present a small Greek text, whose author is perhaps Geminus (1st cent. B.C.), describing an optical phenomenon called achilles. We show that the term achilles, which has appeared only once, to our knowledge, in the literature, means caustics by reflection. We complete the description of the achilles thanks to another text, a passage of the poem Argonautika of Apollonius Rhodius. Finally, we attempt to explain the association between the mythical hero Achilles and the optical phenomenon called achilles.

How to cite

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Alain Joets. "Caustics in Greek antiquity." Banach Center Publications 82.1 (2008): 157-161. <http://eudml.org/doc/281798>.

@article{AlainJoets2008,
abstract = {The word caustic was introduced by Tschirnhausen in 1686, in the Latin expression caustica curva. We show that the study of the optical caustics goes back well before, at least to the hellenistic period. We present a small Greek text, whose author is perhaps Geminus (1st cent. B.C.), describing an optical phenomenon called achilles. We show that the term achilles, which has appeared only once, to our knowledge, in the literature, means caustics by reflection. We complete the description of the achilles thanks to another text, a passage of the poem Argonautika of Apollonius Rhodius. Finally, we attempt to explain the association between the mythical hero Achilles and the optical phenomenon called achilles.},
author = {Alain Joets},
journal = {Banach Center Publications},
keywords = {caustics; history},
language = {eng},
number = {1},
pages = {157-161},
title = {Caustics in Greek antiquity},
url = {http://eudml.org/doc/281798},
volume = {82},
year = {2008},
}

TY - JOUR
AU - Alain Joets
TI - Caustics in Greek antiquity
JO - Banach Center Publications
PY - 2008
VL - 82
IS - 1
SP - 157
EP - 161
AB - The word caustic was introduced by Tschirnhausen in 1686, in the Latin expression caustica curva. We show that the study of the optical caustics goes back well before, at least to the hellenistic period. We present a small Greek text, whose author is perhaps Geminus (1st cent. B.C.), describing an optical phenomenon called achilles. We show that the term achilles, which has appeared only once, to our knowledge, in the literature, means caustics by reflection. We complete the description of the achilles thanks to another text, a passage of the poem Argonautika of Apollonius Rhodius. Finally, we attempt to explain the association between the mythical hero Achilles and the optical phenomenon called achilles.
LA - eng
KW - caustics; history
UR - http://eudml.org/doc/281798
ER -

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