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Before they could begin deciphering Archie's secrets, the Walters' conservators, led by Abigail Quandt, began the painstaking job of halting the damage. It took four years to take the book apart and clean it. Meanwhile, using ultraviolet light and various techniques to enhance images, scientists from Johns Hopkins University, the Rochester Institute of Technology and other institutions were able to reveal about 80 percent of the manuscript. According to Reviel Netz, a professor of classics at Stanford University, this work added substantially to Heiberg's efforts.
The document's most important treatise is called "The Method of Mechanical Theorems." In it, Archimedes uses the way an object can be balanced to derive its geometrical and physical properties. Even more important is the method's description of infinity, a concept long considered too problematic for ancient Greek mathematicians to grasp. Our modern understanding of it was refined by Issac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz when they independently invented calculus. From the palimpsest, scholars now know that infinity was understood by Archimedes 20 centuries earlier.
Another unique text is the "Stomachion," arguably the first treatise on combinatorics, the branch of mathematics concerned with the organization of elements within sets. In this passage, Archimedes describes a puzzle in which a square is cut into 14 irregular pieces. The puzzle's solution lies in determining the number of ways the pieces can be arranged back into a square. It is not known if Archimedes solved the puzzle—those pages have been lost—but modern mathematicians have determined the answer: 17,152.
Noel's Walters art museum team deciphered most of the palimpsest, but couldn't read through the forger's gold-leaf painting. That's where the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lab (SSRL) came into the picture. The lab generates X-rays from powerful beams of electrons that race around a 260-foot-diameter ring in the windowless, doughnut-shaped building at nearly the speed of light. A couple of years ago, while working on an unrelated Exploratorium project, I was getting a tour of the SSRL when Uwe Bergmann, a German-born physicist, stopped my group in the curved hallway. He told us he was working on an experiment that involved exposing inked parchment to the SSRL's X-ray beam. Bergmann had read about the palimpsest in a German magazine and had deduced that the SSRL would be able to image iron in the ink underneath the gold paintings. The experiment Bergmann showed me that day had convinced him that his technique could work on parchment—and he was practically jumping up and down in excitement.
To reveal the hidden ink, X-rays that form a beam no thicker than a human hair strike ink on the parchment. Their energy causes certain elements in the ink to fluoresce, or glow. Detectors pick up each element's distinctive wavelength of fluorescence, and a computer converts the data into computer images. "The X-rays just care about the element on the parchment," says Bergmann. "You can observe the iron in the ink no matter what is above or below it."
In the past two years, SSRL's imaging experiments have provided some exciting new results, including the signature of the scribe who first copied the liturgical texts and the date he did it (Ioannes Myronas, on April 29, 1229).
Now we're at the end of the ten-day run. We've been scanning one of the most difficult pages in the book, the introduction to Archimedes' "Method of Mechanical Theorems," which is covered by a gold-leaf forgery of a seated saint. A diagram on the page contains critical information about how Archimedes thought about geometric proofs, information Heiberg ignored. This is the second run of this page; to extract more faint lines from underneath the painting, the detectors have been tuned to image calcium, rather than iron.
We've already had some success. Stanford's Reviel Netz told us earlier in the week that he was able to see clearly for the first time one of the labels for a drawing that accompanies Archimedes' "Method of Mechanical Theorems." The label, Netz says, decided a long-standing dispute among scholars about what they considered an error in the diagram.


Comments
This article makes alot of since when it comes down to why mathmeticians and scientists are so prestigious when it comes down to their business. When i read the article I understood the true meaning of hoow pampliest kept so many discoverings and attraction when it came to Greek ancient findings. Simply because the fact they didn't want many theologists to look into items that just didn't mean anything.
Posted by Bernard Daniel on February 18,2008 | 06:18AM
Archimedes living more than 2200 years ago wrote down his thoughts. Some of these have reached us by multiple routes and in many forms, some via translation into Arabic and transport across northern Africa into Spain. But for Archimedes' words read by others in history, we would not have been able to recover his words today, much less read and understand them.
Posted by Arthur Strang on March 12,2008 | 01:57PM
:on pg. 62 of article, -reading between the lines mar- 7, about archimedes "method of mechanical theorums". i have something that is comparable in fashion ,to exhibiting poincares conjector that a sphere can be simpley explained, using & occums razor solution. if interested, my ph.# is 510-582-1441. thanx steve evart.
Posted by steve evart on March 21,2008 | 05:10PM
To say that Archimedes was Greek is like saying that Thomas Jefferson was English. The island of Sicily was known all over the Mediterranean Sea long before the Greeks occupied it. Archimedes spoke also Greek, as an educated man of the times, but he was Sicilian, born under the occupation/colonization of the Greeks in the island of Sicily.
Posted by olga mancuso on April 14,2008 | 09:24AM
Its all greek to me. I find it to be sad when people talk in circles. There is so much that can be learn from these writtens. That should be shared with the world
Posted by synthia on May 15,2008 | 11:12PM
To Olga Mancuso: Archimedes was Greek. Are you trying to say Sicily was not Greek? History tells us clearly that Sicily was first occupied by Greeks. Sorry, to disappoint you but Archimedes was not one of your ancestors!
Posted by John Gabriel on May 23,2008 | 03:22AM
To: John Gabriel Clarification: World history and archeological findings prove Sicily WAS NOT first occupied by Greeks We can trace our Sicilian history to Pre-Historical Period (Novara di Sicilia in the Province of Messina-my native town ---has an archeological museum with stone age artefacts; Palermo as well) Ultimately, Sicilians are Sicilians (rich cultural heritage), despite the various countries which have occupied it: From it's Prehistoric roots, to the Phoencians/Egyptian/Moslems/ Arabs/Spaniards/French you name it... no one will leave us alone due to our strategic location in the Med. .... So, let's call Archimedes Sicilian-Greek that's what he was and, at the same time, make everyone happy.. (me included) Angela Puglisi, Ph.D
Posted by Dr Angela Puglisi on September 29,2008 | 12:26PM
You can say the same about other islands such as Cyprus. It's (Cyprus) history was made by Phoenicians/Arabs/Greeks/Jews, etc. ... About the only thing we know for certain, is that Archimedes was a member of our species...
Posted by John Gabriel on October 18,2008 | 04:01AM
Therefore he wrote in Greek just to throw us off on a quest... History should be read by people that enjoy same, and by those who will connect the dots to get to the big picture. ....which brings me to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . this game was invented by Greeks as a board game... 127 yrs ago just from my family' history -
Posted by ma on February 4,2009 | 09:51AM