Accession No
3867
Brief Description
sector, by Anthony Thompson, third quarter 17th century
Origin
London; England
Maker
Thompson. Anthony
Class
calculating; mathematics
Earliest Date
1650
Latest Date
1665
Inscription Date
Material
metal (brass)
Dimensions
length closed 245mm; breadth 52mm
Special Collection
Provenance
Purchased from Sotherby’s, London, England; lot 405, 20/05/1992. Purchased with the assistance of a PRISM grant.
Inscription
‘Delineavit
Ant. Thompson:’
Description Notes
Condition good; complete
References
Events
Description
Sector
Sectors were used for calculation by navigators, surveyors, gunners and draftsmen (and, famously, by Galileo) from the about the mid 16th century to the mid 19th century. During the 16th century, they were used as general mathematical tools, but the introduction of logarithms drastically expanded their application. Usually made of brass, wood or ivory, they look like a jointed rule with scales engraved on either side.
Sectors use the principle of similar triangles (that the ratio of lengths of two sides of similar triangles will always be the same) with scales of proportion for calculating mathematical functions such as finding the line of equal parts, inscribing a rectangular polygon inside a circle of a given radius and protracting angles. This made them useful for similar calculations to a slide rule.
18/10/2002
Created by: Saffron Clackson on 18/10/2002
FM:43074
Images (Click to view full size):