Robert Adrain
b.
30 September 1775, Carrickfergus, Ireland.
d. 10 August 1843, New
Brunswick, New Jersey
Adrain founded the short-lived journal Analyst or Mathematical Museum
in 1808. In this he published an article in which for the first time is deduced
the normal law of errors. Cleveland Abbe credits him with the independent
invention of the method of least squares. Merriman suggests that Nathaniel
Bowditch's solution to a question may have prompted Adrain to write his 1808
article.
- [1808] "Research concerning the
probabilities of the errors which happen in making observations, &."
The
Analyst or Math. Museum 1. pp. 93-109. This paper is difficult to
locate, but was partially reprinted by Cleveland Abbe in the
American Journal of Science (1871), Vol. 101, pp. 411-415 and in
Mansfield Merriman
A List of Writings Relating to the Method of Least Squares (1877),
pp. 163-165.
This latter is an extract from
The Transactions of the Connecticut Academy, Vol. IV, 1877.
- [1818] "Investigation of the Figure of the Earth and of the Gravity in different Latitudes,"
Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., Vol. 1, pp. 119-135.
This includes an application of the method of least squares to find a
formula for the length of the seconds pendulum.
- [1818] "Research concerning the mean diameter of the Earth,"
Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc., Vol. 1, pp. 353-336.