Eduard Lill

Eduard Lill (1830–1900) was an Austrian engineer and officer.

Lill was born 20 October, 1930 in Brüx (Bohemia). From 1848 to 1849 he studied mathematics at the Czech Technical University in Prague and in 1850 he joined the military engineering corps of the Austrian Empire. From 1852 to 1856 he continued his education at military engineering academy at Klosterbruck near Znaim. Later he was stationed in Esseg, Kronstadt and Spalato until he retired from his military career in 1868 with the rank of captain (Hauptmann) of the engineering corps. In the same year he became an engineer for the Austrian Northwestern Railway and oversaw the railroad construction at Trautenau (Trutnov). A severe accident however restricted him soon to office work. From 1872-1875 he worked as a secretary for the director of construction of the railway company. Later he became a technical consultant for company's headquarters and in 1885 the head of its statistics department. He retired in 1894 with the title of a chief inspector.[1]

Lill is best remembered for a contribution in mathematics and his traffic and transportation research. In mathematics he devised graphic procedure to determine the roots of polynomials, which in essence is clever graphical representation of Horner's scheme. Lill published his invention in 1867 in the French math journal Nouvelles Annales de Mathématiques and Charles Hermite provided a description of it for the Comptes rendus of the same year. Later it became known as Lill's method.[2] Lill's transportation research led to what is now called Lill's law of travel (Reisegesetz von Lill). It was one of the first attempts to model the quantity of travellers, in particular railroad passengers, between two locations.[3] However while being used in civilian engineering, in particular city planning, through much of 20th century, it is now considered somewhat obsolete and replaced by more complex models.[4]

Works

Notes

  1. Lill, Eduard. In Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon 1815–1950
  2. Dan Kalman: Uncommon Mathematical Excursions: Polynomia and Related Realms. AMS, 2009, ISBN 978-0-88385-341-2, pp. 13–22
  3. Hermann Knoflacher: Grundlagen der Verkehrs- und Siedlungsplanung: Verkehrsplanung. Böhlau Verlag, Wien, 2007, ISBN 9783205776260, pp. 20-21, 124, 240
  4. Springer Gabler Verlag (Herausgeber), Gabler Wirtschaftslexikon, Stichwort: Lillsches Reisegesetz, online im Internet: http://wirtschaftslexikon.gabler.de/Archiv/90283/lillsches-reisegesetz-v7.html
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