Gustav Ritter Von Escherich
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Gustav Ritter von Escherich (1 June 1849 – 28 January 1935) was an Austrian mathematician.


Biography

Born in Mantua, he studied mathematics and physics at the University of Vienna. From 1876 to 1879 he was professor at the University of Graz. In 1882 he went to the Graz University of Technology and in 1884 he went to the University of Vienna, where he also was president of the university in 1903/04. Together with
Emil Weyr Emil Weyr (31 August / 1 September 1848 – 25 January 1894) was an Austrian-Czech mathematician, known for his numerous publications on geometry. Born in Prague, Weyr attended the Prague Polytechnic, where he was taught by Heinrich Durège and ...
he founded the journal '' Monatshefte für Mathematik und Physik'' and together with Ludwig Boltzmann and
Emil Müller Emil Muller or Emil Müller may refer to: * Emil Müller (mathematician) (1861–1927), Austrian mathematician * Emil Müller (German officer), an officer in the World War I Imperial German Army charged with war crimes at the Leipzig War Crimes Tri ...
he founded the Austrian Mathematical Society. Escherich died in Vienna.


Work on hyperbolic geometry

Following Eugenio Beltrami's (1868) discussion of hyperbolic geometry, Escherich in 1874 published a paper named "The geometry on surfaces of constant negative curvature". He used coordinates initially introduced by Christoph Gudermann (1830) for spherical geometry, which were adapted by Escherich using hyperbolic functions. For the case of translation of points on this surface of negative curvature, Escherich gave the following transformation on page 510: :x=\frac and y=\frac which is identical with the relativistic
velocity addition formula In relativistic physics, a velocity-addition formula is a three-dimensional equation that relates the velocities of objects in different reference frames. Such formulas apply to successive Lorentz transformations, so they also relate different fra ...
by interpreting the coordinates as velocities and by using the
rapidity In relativity, rapidity is commonly used as a measure for relativistic velocity. Mathematically, rapidity can be defined as the hyperbolic angle that differentiates two frames of reference in relative motion, each frame being associated with di ...
: :\frac=\tanh\frac=\frac or with a Lorentz boost by using homogeneous coordinates: :(x,\ y,\ x',\ y')=\left(\frac,\ \frac,\ \frac,\ \frac\right) These are in fact the relations between the coordinates of Gudermann/Escherich in terms of the Beltrami–Klein model and the Weierstrass coordinates of the hyperboloid model - this relation was pointed out by Homersham Cox (1882, p. 186),.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Escherich, Gustav von 1849 births 1935 deaths 19th-century Austrian mathematicians 20th-century Austrian mathematicians Austrian knights Scientists from Mantua University of Vienna alumni Academic staff of the University of Vienna Academic staff of the University of Graz Academic staff of Chernivtsi University Austro-Hungarian mathematicians