Monday, April 20, 2020

The Antikythera Mechanism - 2D

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More than 21 centuries earlier, a mechanism of magnificent ingenuity was developed in Greece, a device efficient in indicating exactly how the sky would look for years to come– the position of the moon and sun, lunar phases and even eclipses. But this unbelievable innovation would be drowned in the sea and its secret forgotten for 2 thousand years.

This video is a homage from Swiss clock-maker Hublot and film-maker Philippe Nicolet to this device, referred to as the Antikythera Mechanism, or the world’s “first computer system”. The pieces of the Mechanism were discovered in 1901 by sponge divers near the island of Antikythera. It is kept ever since at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, Greece.

For more than a century, scientists were trying to comprehend its functions. Given That 2005, a pluridisciplinary research team, the “Antikythera Mechanism Research Study Job”, is studying the Mechanism with the latest high tech available.

The results of this continuous research study has allowed the construction of many designs. Among them, the distinct system of a watch, designed by Hublot as a homage to the System, is integrating the known functions of this mystical and fascinating ancient Mechanism.

A design of the Antikythera System, built by the Aristotle University in Greece, together with the system of the watch and this film in 3D are including in an exhibition about the Mechanism that is happening in Paris, at the Musée des Arts et Métiers.

The initial pieces of the Mechanism, its main models and the watch designed by Hublot are on display screen at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, Greece.

https://xraytechniciancertification.org/the-antikythera-mechanism-2d/

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