Today is Aryabhatta's birthday.
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Aryabhatta (476-550 A.D.), one of the world’s greatest
mathematician-astronomer, was born in Patliputra in Magadha, modern
Patna in Bihar. Many are of the view that he was born in the south of
India especially Kerala and lived in Magadha at the time of the Gupta
rulers. However, there exists no documentation to ascertain his exact
birthplace. Whatever this origin, it cannot be argued that he lived in
Patliputra where he wrote his famous treatise the "Aryabhatta-siddhanta"
but more famously the "Aryabhatiya", the only work to have survived.
The mathematical part of the Aryabhatiya covers arithmetic, algebra,
plane trigonometry and spherical trigonometry. It also contains
continued fractions, quadratic equations, sums of power series and a
table of sines. This work is the first we are aware of which examines
integer solutions to equations of the form by = ax + c and by = ax - c,
where a, b, c are integers. Aryabhatta was an author of at least three
astronomical texts and wrote some free stanzas as well.
He wrote that if 4 is added to 100 and then multiplied by 8 then added
to 62,000 then divided by 20,000 the answer will be equal to the
circumference of a circle of diameter twenty thousand. This calculates
to 3.1416 close to the actual value Pi (3.14159).
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But
his greatest contribution has to be ZERO, for which he became immortal.
He certainly did not use the symbol, but the French mathematician
Georges Ifrah argues that knowledge of zero was implicit in Aryabhata's
place-value system as a place holder for the powers of ten with null
coefficients. The supposition is based on the following two facts:
first, the invention of his alphabetical counting system would have been
impossible without zero or the place-value system; secondly, he carries
out calculations on square and cubic roots which are impossible if the
numbers in question are not written according to the place-value system
and zero.
He already knew that the earth spins on its axis, the earth moves round
the sun and the moon rotates round the earth. He talks about the
position of the planets in relation to its movement around the sun. He
refers to the light of the planets and the moon as reflection from the
sun. Aryabhatta gives the radius of the planetary orbits in terms of the
radius of the Earth/Sun orbit as essentially their periods of rotation
around the Sun. He believes that the Moon and planets shine by reflected
sunlight, incredibly he believes that the orbits of the planets are
ellipses. He correctly explains the causes of eclipses of the Sun and
the Moon.
This remarkable man was a genius and continues to baffle many
mathematicians of today. His works was then later adopted by the Greeks
and then the Arabs.
Bhaskara I who wrote a commentary on the Aryabhatiya about 100 years later wrote of Aryabhatta:-
"Aryabhatta is the master who, after reaching the furthest shores and
plumbing the inmost depths of the sea of ultimate knowledge of
mathematics, kinematics and spherics, handed over the three sciences to
the learned world."