Italian mathematician (1862–1943)
Roberto Marcolongo (August 28, 1862 in Rome – May 16, 1943 in Rome) was an Italian mathematician , known for his research in vector calculus and theoretical physics .
Biography
Marcolongo graduated in 1886, and later he was an assistant of Valentino Cerruti in Rome. In 1895 he became professor of rational mechanics at the University of Messina . In 1908 he moved to the University of Naples , where he remained until retirement in 1935.
He worked on vector calculus together with Cesare Burali-Forti , which was then known as "Italian notation". In 1906 he wrote an early work which used the four-dimensional formalism to account for relativistic invariance under Lorentz transformations .
In 1921 he published to Messina one of the first treaties on the special relativity and general, where he used the absolute differential calculus without coordinates, developed with Burali-Forti, as opposed to the absolute differential calculus with coordinates of Tullio Levi-Civita and Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro .
He was a member of the Accademia dei Lincei and other Italian academies.
Works
Teoria matematica dello equilibrio dei corpi elastici (Milano: U. Hoepli, 1904)
Meccanica razionale (Milano: U. Hoepli, 1905)
Elementi di Calcolo vettoriale con numerose Applicazioni (with Burali-Forti) (Bologna, Nicola Zanichelli, 1909)[ 1] [ 2] 2nd ed . 1920.
Omografie vettoriali con Applicazioni (with Burali-Forti) (Torino, G. B. Petrini, 1909)[ 1]
Analyse vectorielle générale: Transformations linéaires (with Cesare Burali-Forti , translated into French by Paul Baridon) (Pavia: Mattei & C., 1913)
Analyse vectorielle générale: Applications à la mécanique et à la physique (in French, with Cesare Burali-Forti and Tommaso Boggio ) (Pavia:Mattei & C., 1913)
Il Problema dei Tre Corpi da Newton ai Nostri Giorni (Milano, Ulrico Hoepli, 1919)[ 3]
Relatività (Messina, G. Principato, 1921)
Literature
References
International National Academics People Other