Pierre Prevost (physicist)

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Scientist Pierre Prevost in the Journal Officiel Illustré De L'Exposition Nationale, Suisse Genève 1896

Pierre Prevost (French:

radiate heat, no matter how hot or cold they are.[1]

Life

Son of a

Jean Jacques Rousseau and, a little later, with Dugald Stewart, having previously distinguished himself as a translator of and commentator on Euripides
.

physical science
.

After some years spent on political economy and on the principles of the fine arts (in connection with which he wrote, for the Berlin Memoirs, a remarkable dissertation on poetry) he returned to Geneva and began his work on magnetism and on heat. Interrupted occasionally in his studies by political duties in which he was often called to the front, he remained professor of philosophy at Geneva until he was called in 1810 to the chair of physics.

He died at Geneva in 1839.

Work

Prévost published much on philology, philosophy, and political economy, but he will be remembered mainly for having published, with additions of his own, the Traité de physique by Georges-Louis Le Sage, and for his enunciation of the law of exchange in radiation.

His scientific publications included De l'Origine des forces magnetiques,[2] Mémoire sur l'Equilibre du feu,[1] Recherches physico-mecaniques sur la chaleur,[3] and Essai sur le calorique rayonnant.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Prevost, Pierre (April 1791). "Mémoire sur l'équilibre du feu". Observations Sur la Physique (in French). XXXVIII (1): 314–323.
  2. ^ Prevost, Pierre (1788). De l'origine de forces magnétiques. Chez Barde, Manget.
  3. ^ Prevost, Pierre (1792). Recherches physico-mécaniques sur la chaleur (in French). Aux dépens de l'auteur. Chez Barde, Manget & Compagnie, chez Mérichot le jeune, Librairie, quai des Augufins.
  4. ^ Prevost, Pierre (1809). Du calorique rayonnant (in French). Paris: J.J. Paschoud. Pierre Prévost.