الجمعة، 19 نوفمبر 2010

Al'Khwarizmi



Al-Khowârizmi (aka Mahomet ibn Moses) was a Persian who worked as a mathematician, astronomer and geographer early in the Golden Age of Islamic science. He introduced the Hindu decimal system to the Islamic world and Europe; invented the horary quadrant; improved the sundial; developed trigonometry tables; and improved on Ptolemy's astronomy and geography. He wrote the book Al-Jabr, which demonstrated simple algebra and geometry, and several other influential books. Unlike Diophantes' work, which dealt in specific examples, Al-Khowârizmi presented general methods. The word algorithm is borrowed from Al-Khowârizmi's name. There were several Muslim mathematicians who contributed to the development of Islamic science, and indirectly to Europe's later Renaissance, but Al-Khowârizmi was one of the earliest and most influential. 

Has a lot of literature has served as the first building blocks based upon many of the scholars of the modern era, and most important of these works is the plummet in the first, and the plummet in the second known as India's support, marble book, book work astrolabe, algebra book and the interview which is one of the most important math books which included everything need people, especially in this period of business operations and accounts of inheritances, bequests, and all aspects of the transactions that were permeating public life, and even became the basis has upon science, in addition to laying the foundations of the measurements and areas of some surfaces of area of a circle, sectors and account objects cube and cone and pyramid, triple and quad



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