![[The Fibonacci Series]](../media/topLogo1.gif)
Jacques Binet
Jacques Philippe Marie Binet is the French
mathematician credited with finding the formula for finding any nth value of the Fibonacci series,
Binet's Formula. Binet enrolled in the Ecole Polytechnique of Paris
in 1804 and after graduating two years later he took a job with the Department of Bridges and Roads of
the French government. By 1807, he was a teacher at the Ecole Polytechnique, and, a year later, he
was appointed assistant to the professor of applied analysis and descriptive geometry.
By the time of the July Revolution of
1830, Binet was inspector of studies at the Ecole Polytechnique and also
chair of astronomy at the Collège de France . Revolution,
however was not a good thing for Binet. Since Binet was a great supporter of Charles X,
when Charles abdicated on August 2 and Louis-Philippe came to power a week later,
he was unfavored in the new French government. On November 13 of 1830, Binet was
dismissed as inspector of studies. He kept his chair of astronomy at the Collège de France
for a total of 30 years.
Binet's contributions to the fields of mathematics
and science are numerous. He researched the foundations of matrix theory, discovering the rule
for multiplying matricies in 1812. His other work aside, that discovery is primarily that for
which he has been and will be remembered. Binet also contributed to number theory, specifically the
theory of the Euclidean algorithm. And of course, Binet's Formula (below) is a convenient
way of finding any Fibonacci number x.
Binet was not strictly a mathematician though. He wrote
over 50 papers on topics of physics and astronomy. Binet was honored with the Chevalier
de la Légion d'Honneur in 1821 and was elected to
the Académie des Sciences in 1843.