THE SAND-KECKONEK. " THERE are some, king Gelon, who think that the number of the sand is infinite in multitude; and I mean by the sand not only that which exists about Syracuse and the rest of Sicily but also that which is found in every region whether inhabited or uninhabited. Again there are some who, without regarding it as infinite, yet think that no number has been named which is great enough to exceed its multitude. And it is clear that they who hold this view, if they imagined a mass made up of sand in other respects as large as the mass of the earth, including in it all the seas and the hollows of the earth filled up to a height equal to that of the highest of the mountains, would be many times further still from recognising that any number could be expressed which exceeded the multitude of the sand so taken. But I will try to show you by means of geometrical proofs, which you will be able to follow, that, of the numbers named by me and given in the work which I sent to Zeuxippus, some exceed not only the number of the mass of sand equal in magnitude to the earth filled up in the way described, but also that of a mass equal in magnitude to the universe. Now you are aware that 'universe' is the name given by most astronomers to the sphere whose centre is the centre of the earth and whose radius is equal to the straight line between the centre of the sun and the centre of the earth. This is the common account (ra ypatf>6/ieva), as you have heard from astronomers. But Aristarchus of Samos brought out a 222 ARCHIMEDES book consisting of some hypotheses, in which the premisses lead to the result that the universe is many times greater than that now so called. His hypotheses are that the fixed stars and the sun remain unmoved, that the earth revolves about the sun in the circumference of a circle, the sun lying in the middle of the orbit, and that the sphere of the fixed stars, situated about the same centre as the sun, is so great that the circle in which he supposes the earth to revolve bears such a proportion to the distance of the fixed stars as the centre of the sphere bears to its surface. Now it is easy to see that this is impossible; for, since the centre of the sphere has no magnitude, we cannot conceive it to bear any ratio whatever to the surface of the sphere. We must however take Aristarchus to mean this: since we conceive the earth to be, as it were, the centre of the universe, the ratio which the earth bears to what we describe as the ' universe' is the same as the ratio which the sphere containing the circle in which he supposes the earth to revolve bears to the sphere of the fixed stars. For he adapts the proofs of his results to a hypothesis of this kind, and in particular he appears to suppose the magnitude of the sphere in which he represents the earth as moving to be equal to what we call the ' universe.' I say then that, even if a sphere were made up of the sand, as great as Aristarchus supposes the sphere of the fixed stars to be, I shall still prove that, of the numbers named in the Principles*, some exceed in multitude the number of the sand which is equal in magnitude to the sphere referred to, provided that the following assumptions be made. 1. The perimeter of the earth is about 3,000,000 stadia and not greater. It is true that some have tried, as you are of course aware, to prove that the said perimeter is about 300,000 stadia. But I go further and, putting the magnitude of the earth at ten times the size that my predecessors thought it, I suppose its perimeter to be about 3,000,000 stadia and not greater. * 'Apxal was apparently the title of the work sent to Zeuxippus. Cf. the note attached to the enumeration of lost works of Archimedes in the Introduction, Chapter II., ad fin. THE SAND-RECKONER. 223 2. The diameter of the earth is greater than the diameter of the moon, and tloe diameter of the sun is greater than the diameter of ilve earth. In this assumption I follow most of the earlier astronomers. 3. The diameter of the sun is about 30 times the diameter of the moon and not greater. It is true that, of the earlier astronomers, Eudoxus declared it to be about nine times as great, and Pheidias my father* twelve times, while Aristarchus tried to prove that the diameter of the sun is greater than 18 times but less than 20 times the diameter of the moon. But I go even further than Aristarchus, in order that the truth of my proposition may be established beyond dispute, and I suppose the diameter of the sun to be about 30 times that of the moon and not greater. 4. The diameter of the sun is greater than the side of the chiliagon inscribed in the greatest circle in the {sphere of the) universe. I make this assumption^ because Aristarchus discovered that the sun appeared to be about ^^jth part of the circle of the zodiac, and I myself tried, by a method which I will now describe, to find experimentally (6p^aviKco<;) the angle subtended by the sun and having its vertex at the eye {rct,v ^wviav, eh av 6 fi\tos ivapfio^et tcLv icopvav t'xpvaav ttotI to, otyet)." [Up to this point the treatise has been literally translated because of the historical interest attaching to the ipsissima verba of Archimedes on such a subject. The rest of the work can now be more freely reproduced, and, before proceeding to the mathematical contents of it, it is only necessary to remark that Archimedes next describes how he arrived at a higher and a lower limit for the angle subtended by the sun. This he did * rod dfiov irarpbs is the correction of Blass for rod 'Axofararpos {Jahrb. f. Philol. cxxvii. 1883). t This is not, strictly speaking, an assumption; it is a proposition proved later (pp. 224—6) by means of the result of an experiment about to be described. 224 ARCHIMEDES by taking a long rod or ruler (/caveov), fastening on the end of it a small cylinder or disc, pointing the rod in the direction of the sun just after its rising (so that it was possible to look directly at it), then putting the cylinder at such a distance that it just concealed, and just failed to conceal, the sun, and lastly measuring the angles subtended by the cylinder. He explains also the correction which he thought it necessary to make because " the eye does not see from one point but from a certain area " (eVet at dilute? ovk d EO, since the sun is just above the horizon. Therefore Z PEQ > z FCQ. THE SAND-RECKONER. 225 Thus £ FOG < jfaR, a fortiori, and the chord AB subtends an arc of the great circle which is less than ^^th of the circumference of that circle, Le. AB < (side of 656-sided polygon inscribed in the circle). Now the perimeter of any polygon inscribed in the great circle is less than tyCO. [Cf. Measurement of a circle, Prop. 3.] Therefore AB : GO < 11:1148, and, a fortiori, AB < ^foCO........................(a). Again, since GA = G0, and AM is perpendicular to GO, while OF is perpendicular to GA, AM= OF. Therefore AB — 2AM = (diameter of sun). Thus (diameter of sun) < -ffoCO, by (a), and, a fortiori, (diameter of earth) < -faGO. [Assumption 2] h. a. 15 226 ARCHIMEDES Hence CH+OKk^CO, so that MK > ffoCO, or GO : HK< 100 : 99. And GO > GF, while HK GO : EO, but < GF : EQ*. Doubling the angles, ZPEQ: LAGB ffasR, by hypothesis. Therefore Z A GB > R It follows that the arc AB is greater than s^th of the circumference of the great circle AOB. Hence, a fortiori, AB > (side of chiliagon inscribed in great circle), and AB is equal to the diameter of the sun, as proved above. The following results can now be proved: (diameter of' universe') < 10,000 (diameter of earth), and (diameter of' universe') < 10,000,000,000 stadia. * The proposition here assumed is of course equivalent to the trigonometrical formula which states that, if a, /3 are the circular measures of two angles, each less than a right angle, of which a is the greater, then tan a a sin a tan /3 fi > sin/5 * THE SAND-RECKONER. 227 (1) Suppose, for brevity, that du represents the diameter of the ' universe,' d„ that of the sun, de that of the earth, and dm that of the moon. By hypothesis, ds if 30dm, [Assumption 3] and de > dm; [Assumption 2] therefore d, < 30de. Now, by the last proposition, d„ > (side of chiliagon inscribed in great circle), so that (perimeter of chiliagon) < lOOOd, < 30,000de. But the perimeter of any regular polygon with more sides than 6 inscribed in a circle is greater than that of the inscribed regular hexagon, and therefore greater than three times the diameter. Hence (perimeter of chiliagon) > 3du. It follows that du < 10,000de. (2) (Perimeter of earth) £ 3,000,000 stadia. [Assumption 1] and (perimeter of earth) > 3de. Therefore de < 1,000,000 stadia, whence du < 10,000,000,000 stadia. Assumption 5. Suppose a quantity of sand taken not greater than a poppy-seed, and suppose that it contains not more than 10,000 grains. Next suppose the diameter of the poppy-seed to be not less than ^th of a finger-breadth. Orders and periods of numbers. I. We have traditional names for numbers up to a myriad (10,000); we can therefore express numbers up to a myriad myriads (100,000,000). Let these numbers be called numbers of the first order. Suppose the 100,000,000 to be the unit of the second order, and let the second order consist of the numbers from that unit up to (100,000,000)*. 15—2 228 ARCHIMEDES Let this again be the unit of the third order of numbers ending with (100,000,000)8; and so on, until we reach the 100,000,000$ order of numbers ending with (lOO.OOO.OOO)100-000-000, which we will call P. II. Suppose the numbers from 1 to P just described to form the first period. Let P be the unit of the first order of the second period, and let this consist of the numbers from P up to 100,000,000P. Let the last number be the unit of the second order of the second period, and let this end with (100,000,000)* P. We can go on in this way till we reach the 100,000,000$ order of the second period ending with (lOO.OOO.OOO)100'000'000 P, or P». III. Taking Ps as the unit of the first order of the third period, we proceed in the same way till we reach the 100,000,000$ order of the third period ending with P*. IV. Taking P* as the unit of the first order of the fourth period, we continue the same process until we arrive at the 100,000,000tA order of the 100,000,000$ period ending with pioo,ooo,ooo fjjjg number is expressed by Archimedes as " a myriad-myriad units of the myriad-myriad-th order of the myriad-myriad-th period (at fivpiaicicrfivpiocna*; irepioZov fivpia-Kit io*.po8-!) tol08-lo8(P,say). THE SAND-RECKONER. 229 SECOND PERIOD. First order. Numbers from P. 1 to P. 108. /Second order. „ „ P. 10" to P. 10». (10*)th order. „ „ P.W-^to P.IO810" (or P"). (lO^TH PERIOD. First order. „ „ P1"8-1.1 to P1"8-1.10«. /Second order. „ „ P^MO8 to P1"8"1.1018. (10*)th order. „ „ P1"8"1 . 108-1108"1) to Pio'-MO8-148 (i.e. P148). The prodigious extent of this scheme will be appreciated when it is considered that the last number in the first period would be represented now by 1 followed by 800,000,000 ciphers, while the last number of the (108)iA period would require 100,000,000 times as many ciphers, i.e. 80,000 million millions of ciphers.] Octads. Consider the series of terms in continued proportion of which the first is 1 and the second 10 [i.e. the geometrical progression 1,101, 10s, 10", ...]. The first octad of these terms [i.e. 1, 101, 10s,... 107] fall accordingly under the first order of the first period above described, the second octad [Le. 10s, 10»,... 101S] under the second order of the first period, the first term of the octad being the unit of the corresponding order in each case. Similarly for the third octad, and so on. We can, in the same way, place any number of octads. Theorem. If there be any number of terms of a series in continued proportion, say Au Aa, As,... Am,... An,... Am+n-i>- ■ ■ of which Ax = 1, At = 10 [so that the series forms the geometrical progression 1, 10\ 102,...10™-1,...10n-1,...10m+n-a,...], and if any two terms as Am, An be taken and multiplied, the product 230 ARCHIMEDES Am. An will be a term in the same series and mil be as many terms distant from An as Am is distant from At; also it will be distant from AY by a number of terms less by one than the sum of the nv/mbers of terms by which Am and An respectively are distant from Ax. Take the term which is distant from An by the same number of terms as Am is distant from Ax. This number of terms is m (the first and last being both counted). Thus the term to be taken is m terms distant from An, and is therefore the term Am+n-i. We have therefore to prove that Am. An — Am+n—i. Now terms equally distant from other terms in the continued proportion are proportional. Thus ■Am ■^■m+n—i A1 An But Am = Am.Ax, since Ax = 1. Therefore = Am. An........................(1). The second result is now obvious, since Am is m terms distant from Au An is n terms distant from Alt and Am+n-i is (m + n — 1) terms distant from Ax. Application to the number of the sand. By Assumption 5 [p. 227], (diam. of poppy-seed) Jf. ^ (finger-breadth); and, since spheres are to one another in the triplicate ratio of their diameters, it follows that (sphere of diam. 1 finger-breadth) ^ 64,000 poppy-seeds *• 64,000 x 10,000 * 640,000,000 ^ 6 units of second grains order + 40,000,000 > of units of first order sand. (a fortiori) < 10 units of second order of numbers. THE SAND-BECKONEB. 231 We now gradually increase the diameter of the supposed sphere, multiplying it by 100 each time. Thus, remembering that the sphere is thereby multiplied by 100' or 1,000,000, the number of grains of sand which would be contained in a sphere with each successive diameter may be arrived at as follows. Diameter of sphere. (1) 100 finger-breadths (2) 10,000 finger-breadths (3) 1 stadium (< 10,000 finger-breadths) (4) 100 stadia (5) 10,000 stadia (6) 1,000,000 stadia (7) 100,000,000 stadia (8) 10,000,000,000 stadia Corresponding number of grains of sand. < 1,000,000 x 10 units of second order < (7th term of series) x (10th term of series) < 16th term of series [i.e. 1016] < [107 or] 10,000,000 units of the second order. < 1,000,000 x (last number) < (7th term of series) x (16th term) < 22nd term of series [i.e. 1021] < [105 or] 100,000 units of third order. < 100,000 units of third order. < 1,000,000 x (last number) < (7th term of series) x (22nd term) < 28th term of series [1027] < [103 or] 1,000 units of fourth order. < 1,000,000 x (last number) < (7th term of series) x (28th term) < 34th term of series [1033] < 10 units of fifth order. < (7th term of series) x (34th term) < 40th term [1039] < [107 or] 10,000,000 units of fifth order. < (7th term of series) x (40th term) < 46th term [1045] < [105 or] 100,000 units of sixth order. < (7th term of series) x (46th term) < 52nd term of series [1051] < [103 or] 1,000 units of seventh order. But, by the proposition above [p. 227], (diameter of' universe') < 10,000,000,000 stadia. Hence ike number of grains of sand which could be contained in a sphere of the size of our ' universe' is less than 1,000 units of the seventh order of numbers [or 1051]. 232 ARCHIMEDES From this we can prove further that a sphere of the size attributed by Aristarchua to the sphere of the fixed stars would contain a number of grains of sand less than 10,000,000 units of the eighth order of numbers [or lO58"1"7 = 108*]. For, by hypothesis, (earth) : (' universe') = (' universe') : (sphere of fixed stars). And [p. 227] (diameter of' universe') < 10,000 (diam. of earth); whence (diam. of sphere of fixed stars) < 10,000 (diam. of' universe'). Therefore (sphere of fixed stars) < (10,000)8. (' universe'). It follows that the number of grains of sand which would be contained in a sphere equal to the sphere of the fixed stars < (10,000)s x 1,000 units of seventh order < (13th term of series) x (52nd term of series) < 64th term of series [i.e. lO"3] < [107 or] 10,000,000 units of eighth order of numbers. Conclusion. "I conceive that these things, king Gelon, will appear incredible to the great majority of people who have not studied mathematics, but that to those who are conversant therewith and have given thought to the qjuestion of the distances and sizes of the earth the sun and moon and the whole universe the proof will carry conviction. And it was for this reason that I thought the subject would be not inappropriate for your consideration."