56
ARCHIMEDES
case of all, where we are told that OD 2 : A D 2 > 349450:23409
and then that 0D:DA > 591^:153. At the points marked
* and f in the table Archimedes simplifies the ratio <x 2 : c and
a 3 : c before calculating b 2 , b s respectively, by multiplying each
term in the first case by T 4j and in the second case by |q .
He gives no explanation of the exact figure taken as the
approximation to the square root in each case, or of the
method by which he obtained it. We may, however, be sure
that the method amounted to the use of the formula (a±b) 2
= a 2 ±2ab + b 2 , much as our method of extracting the square
root also depends upon it.
We have already seen (vol. i, p. 232) that, according to
Heron, Archimedes made a still closer approximation to the
value of 77.
On Conoids and Spheroids.
The main problems attacked in this treatise are, in Archi
medes’s manner, stated in his preface addressed to Dositheus,
which also sets out the premisses with regard to the solid
figures in question. These premisses consist of definitions and
obvious inferences from them. The figures are (1) the right-
angled conoid (paraboloid of revolution), (2) the obtuse-angled
conoid (hyperboloid of revolution), and (3) the spheroids
(a) the oblong, described by the revolution of an ellipse about
its ‘ greater diameter ’ (major axis), (b) the flat, described by
the revolution of an ellipse about its ‘ lesser diameter ’ (minor
axis). Other definitions are those of the vertex and axis of the
figures or segments thereof, the vertex of a segment being
the point of contact of the tangent plane to the solid which
is parallel to the base of the segment. The centre is only
recognized in the case of the spheroid; what corresponds to
the centre in the case of the hyperboloid is the ‘ vertex of
the enveloping cone’ (described by the revolution of what
Archimedes calls the ‘nearest lines to the section of the
obtuse-angled cone’, i.e. the asymptotes of the hyperbola),
and the line between this point and the vertex of the hyper
boloid or segment is called, not the axis or diameter, but (the
line) ‘adjacent to the axis’. The axis of the segment is in
the case of the paraboloid the line through the vertex of the
segment parallel to the axis of the paraboloid, in the case