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EDMUND See also: English mathematician, of Welsh extraction, was See also: born in See also: Hertfordshire in 1581
.
He was educated at See also: Westminster school, and in 1599 was elected a student of Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford
.
He took orders, became a preacher in 1614, and in 1615 proceeded to the degree of bachelor in divinity
.
See also: Mathematics, however, which had been his favourite study in youth, continued to engross his See also: attention, and on the 6th of See also: March 1619 he was appointed professor of astronomy in Gresham
See also: College, See also: London
.
This See also: post he held till his See also: death on the loth of See also: December 1626
.
With See also: Gunter's name are associated several useful inventions, descriptions of which are given in his See also: treatises on the Sector, See also: Cross-staff, See also: Bow, Quadrant and other See also: Instruments
.
He contrived his sector about the See also: year 16o6, and wrote a description of it in Latin, but it was more than sixteen years afterwards before he allowed the See also: book to appear in English
.
In 162o he published his See also: Canon triangulorum (see LOGARITHMS)
.
There is reason to believe that Gunter was the first to discover (in 1622 or 1625) that the magnetic needle does not retain the same declination in the same place at all times
.
By See also: desire of
See also: James I. he published in 1624 The Description and Use of His Majestie's Dials in
See also: Whitehall Garden, the only one of his See also: works which has not been reprinted
.
He introduced the words cosine and cotangent, and he suggested to See also: Henry Briggs, his friend and colleague, the use of the arithmetical complement (see Brigg's Arithmetica Logarithmica, cap. xv.)
.
His
See also: practical inventions are briefly noticed below:
Gunter's Chain, the chain in See also: common use for See also: surveying, is 22 yds. long and is divided into too links
.
Its usefulness arises from its decimal or centesimal division, and the fact that 10 square chains make anSee also: acre
.
Gunter's See also: Line, a logarithmic line, usually laid down upon scales, sectors, &c
.
It is also called the line of lines and the line of numbers, being only the logarithms graduated upon a ruler, which therefore serves to solve problems instrumentally in the same manner as logarithms do arithmetically
.
Gunter's Quadrant, an instrument made of See also: wood, See also: brass or other substance, containing a kind of stereographic See also: projection of the sphere on the See also: plane of the equinoctial, the See also: eye being supposed to be placed in one of the poles, so that the tropic, See also: ecliptic, and See also: horizon See also: form the arcs of circles, but the See also: hour circles are other curves, See also: drawn by means of several altitudes of the See also: sun for some particular latitude every year
.
This instrument is used to find the hour of the See also: day, the sun's See also: azimuth, &c., and other common problems of the sphere or globe, and also to take the altitude of an See also: object in degrees
.
Gunter's See also: Scale (generally called by See also: seamen the Gunter) is a large plane scale, usually 2 ft. long by about 12 in. broad, and engraved with various lines of numbers
.
On one See also: side are placed the natural lines (as the line of chords, the line of sines, tangents, rhumbs, &c.), and on the other side the corresponding artificial or logarithmic ones
.
By means of this instrument questions in navigation, trigonometry, &c., are solved with the aid of a pair of compasses
.
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