no historical likeness exists
c. 276 – c. 194 BCEAlexandria, Egypt (born Cyrene)
Eratosthenes of Cyrene
A simple, systematic procedure can reveal the primes hidden in the integers.
A short story
The librarian of Alexandria twenty-two centuries ago. He measured the circumference of the Earth using only shadow lengths in two cities and some careful geometry, and got within a few percent of the modern value. He also invented the sieve that bears his name, the simplest efficient way to find every prime number up to any given limit. The technique still works today, unchanged.
In their own words
I have invented a method by which all the prime numbers may be found.
Paraphrased: attributed to Eratosthenes in Nicomachus of Gerasa's Introduction to Arithmetic, 1st c. CE.
The lab their idea turned into
Sieve Lab
Find the atoms of arithmetic, and watch them wrap around a clock.
Open Sieve Lab →