Amsler's integrator; in case with rail.

Made:
1856-1890 in Zurich
maker:
Jakob Amsler

Amsler's integrator; in case with rail.

Invented by Swiss mathematician Jakob Amsler in 1856, this instrument can measure larger areas than a polar planimeter, the most famous and commercially successful of Amsler’s inventions that can also measure an area on a surface. This integrator is carried by a pair of wheels moving in a straight groove in a long steel bar and a counterbalance weight is provided. When the pointer is guided to completely describe the outline of a plane figure, the graduated roller attached to the swinging art registers the area of the figure.

Details

Category:
Mathematics
Object Number:
1890-25
Materials:
brass (copper, zinc alloy) and steel (metal)
type:
integrator
credit:
Royal College of Science, London (Mechanical Laboratory)

Parts

Amsler's integrator with rail, with case

Amsler's integrator with rail, with case

Amsler's integrator with rail.


Invented by Swiss mathematician Jakob Amsler in 1856, this instrument can measure larger areas than a polar planimeter, the most famous and commercially successful of Amsler’s inventions that can also measure an area on a surface. This integrator is carried by a pair of wheels moving in a straight groove in a long steel bar and a counterbalance weight is provided. When the pointer is guided to completely describe the outline of a plane figure, the graduated roller attached to the swinging art registers the area of the figure.

Object Number:
1890-25 Pt2
type:
integrator