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Guillaume Amontons

French physicist
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Born:
Aug. 31, 1663, Paris, France
Died:
Oct. 11, 1705, Paris (aged 42)
Subjects Of Study:
static friction
temperature
thermometry
measurement

Guillaume Amontons (born Aug. 31, 1663, Paris, France—died Oct. 11, 1705, Paris) was a French physicist and inventor of scientific instruments, best known for his work on friction and temperature measurement.

Amontons is often credited with having discovered the laws of friction (1699), though in fact his work dealt solely with static friction—i.e., the friction of objects at rest. It was only after the English physicist Sir Isaac Newton formulated his laws of motion that the friction of moving bodies was analyzed.

Italian-born physicist Dr. Enrico Fermi draws a diagram at a blackboard with mathematical equations. circa 1950.
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Physics and Natural Law

Amontons also developed an air-pressure thermometer (1702) and published two notable papers on thermometry (1702–03). He devised a method of measuring a change in temperature in terms of a proportional change in pressure of a constant mass and volume of air. This method eventually led to the concept of the absolute zero of temperature in the 19th century.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.