For those who get into this kind of stuff.

  

http://www.gizmag.com/antikythera-mechanism-date/35016/


World's oldest computer may be older than previously thought


By  <http://www.gizmag.com/author/david-szondy/> David Szondy

December 4, 2014

 
<http://www.gizmag.com/antikythera-mechanism-date/35016/antikythera-mechanism-date#comments>
 3 Comments

 <http://www.gizmag.com/antikythera-mechanism-date/35016/pictures> The 
Antikythera Mechanism is the world's oldest computer (Photo: Giovanni Dall Orto)

The Antikythera Mechanism is the world's oldest computer (Photo: Giovanni Dall 
Orto)

Since its discovery over a century ago, the Antikythera Mechanism has had 
scholars scratching their heads over how the Greeks managed to build a 
mechanical computer a hundred years before the birth of Christ and thousands of 
years before anything similar. But now things have become even stranger as 
researchers claim that it's over a hundred years older than previously believed 
and may have been built by a famous hand.

The Antikythera Mechanism was discovered in 1901 by sponge divers off the Greek 
island of Antikythera. At first, not much was made of it, but after the 
coral-encrusted, corroded mass of bronze gears was later studied using x-rays, 
gamma rays, and neutrons, and then reconstructed, it turned out to be something 
astonishing.

The device at first was thought to be some sort of surprisingly early clock, 
but then it turned out to be the oldest computer known. In fact it was an 
analog astronomical computer based on the principle of the differential 
calculator that uses gear trains as a way of performing complex calculations. 
On further study, the device proved capable of calculating, among other things, 
the position of the planets,  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sidereal_time> 
sidereal time, and eclipses.

And all of this by using technology that was never realized to exist in the 
ancient world and after it vanished, didn't reappear until the 14th century. 
Even today the device sparks interest as the design is adapted to not only 
museum exhibits, but also  
<http://www.gizmag.com/hublot-antikythera-mechanism-first-computer-watch/20517/>
 watches.

First reported in the New York Times, the new date for the Antikythera 
Mechanism is the result of work by James Evans, professor of physics at 
University of Puget Sound, and Christián Carman, history of science professor 
at University of Quilmes, Argentina.

The new date is based on a reconstruction of the device made by John Steele of 
Brown University in 2008. This involved matching the calculations against 
Babylonian eclipse records and applying an analysis that took into account 
lunar and solar anomalies, solar eclipses, and lunar and solar eclipse­s cycles 
that might have been missing and other inaccuracies – not the least of which 
might have been caused by the fact that much of the device was never salvaged.

By a process of elimination, Evans and Carman eliminated hundreds of eclipse 
patterns until a match was found that placed the earliest eclipse on the device 
matching the year 205 BC. According to the researchers, such a date not only 
places the manufacturing date perhaps a hundred years earlier than the previous 
date of about 100 BC, but also indicates that the mathematics used to design 
the device were derived from Babylonian methods rather than Greek trigonometry, 
which did not exist at that time.

The researchers also put forward another tantalizing possibility opened by the 
new date. According to Cicero, there was a story that a device much like the 
one found at Antikythera was made by Archimedes and captured by the Roman 
general Marcellus after the sack of Syracuse and the death of Archimedes in 212 
BC. It is remotely possible that it and the Antikythera Mechanism may be one 
and the same. The researchers emphasize that the correlation is conjectural, 
but it does suggest that the age of the device is not only now known, but that 
a famous name can be given to its maker.

The results were published in the  
<http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00407-014-0145-5> Archive for 
History of Exact Science.

Source:  <http://www.pugetsound.edu/news-and-events/campus-news/details/1345/> 
University of Puget Sound

 

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