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SCHEUTZ DIFFERENCE ENGINE
The Scheutz difference engine was a pioneering effort at automating
scientific computation. It was built by George Scheutz, a craftsman in
Stockholm, Sweden, in 1853, based on the ideas of British computing pioneer
Charles Babbage. It is a difference engine, a device that uses a geared
mechanical drive to compute the value of polynomial functions. It was on display
in Paris in 1855 when noticed by Benjamin A. Gould, who urged its purchase for the
Dudley Observatory, which was made possible thorough the generosity of John
Rathbone, an Albany stove manufacturer. It saw limited used at the observatory
over the next few decades, principally for the production of tables to be used
in astronomical calculations, such as tables of the refraction of light by the
atmosphere, an important influence on astronomical observation. It was given to
a private museum by the Dudley Observatory in about 1900, and currently resides
in the Smithsonian Institution.
Information about the engine and a few pages of calculations made using the
engine can be found in the Dudley Observatory Archives.
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