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Jules Andrade
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jules Frédéric Charles Andrade (4 September 1857, Paris – 25 February 1933, Brighton near Cayeux-sur-Mer) was a French physicist, mathematician and horologist. He won the Poncelet Prize for 1917.[1]

Career
After graduation from l’École polytechnique and military service in the artillery, he became a professor at the University of Rennes and later at the University of Montpellier.[2] On 3 June 1899 he was an expert witness for Alfred Dreyfus in the famous trial during the Dreyfus Affair. He was a professor for 26 years at the Institut de Chronométrie at the University of Besançon. Andrade did research related to mechanical clocks.[3][4]
Andrade was an Invited Speaker of the ICM in 1897 at Zürich, in 1904 at Heidelberg, in 1908 at Rome,[5] and in 1924 at Toronto.
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Works
- Chronométrie (1908)
- Le mouvement, les mesures du temps et de l'étendue (1911)
- Les organes réglants des chronomètres (1920)
- Horlogerie et chronométrie (1924)
- Mécanique Physique, Nabu Press, Reprint 2010, ISBN 978-1148526980
- Leçons de Mécanique Physique, Nabu Press, Reprint 2010, ISBN 978-1142270735
- La géometrie naturelle en deux livres
References
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