Download - The World of τριγωνομετρία
The World of τριγωνομετρία
τριγωνομετρία(Greek)
τριγωνομετρία = trigonometria = trigonometry
τριγώνου = Trigó̱�nou = trigonon = triangle
μέτρηση = métri �si � = metria = measurement
Hence, trigonometry = triangle measurement
Where did it come from?Trigonometry was developed from the study of
RIGHT TRIANGLES! by applying the relationships between measures of its sides and angles to the study of similar triangles. However, it was not the creation of just one man or nation….
EgyptEarly Egyptians built their famous pyramids
using a primitive form of trigonometry!
GreeceHipparchus, a Greek astronomer, was considered the father of trigonometry. (2nd Century B.C.E.)
Claudius Ptolemy, another Greek scientist and philosopher, was the most influential in the development of trigonometry. His theorem written in the Almagest was similar to the present day Law of Sines.
Greece
Proof of Law of Cosines using Ptolemy’s Theorem
IndiaInfluential works from the 4th–5th century, known as the Siddhantas (5 compilations) first defined the sine as the modern relationship between half an angle and half a chord, while also defining the cosine, and inverse sine.
ARYABHATA (4th-5th C.E.)Indian mathematician and astronomer, Aryabhatta, collected and expanded upon the developments of the Siddhantas in an important work called the “Aryabhatiya”. The Siddhantas and the Aryabhatiya contain the earliest surviving tables of sine values and versine (1 − cosine) values, to an accuracy of 4 decimal places.
Persia and ArabiaThe Indian works were later translated and expanded in the medieval Islamic world by Muslim mathematicians of mostly Persian and Arab descent.
Abū al-Wafā' al-Būzjānī (10th C.E.), Persian Mathematician and Astronomer’s work had Muslim Mathematicians using all six trigonometric functions.
China
Shen Kuo or Shen Gua (1031–1095 C.E.) mathematician, astronomer, meteorologis, geologist, zoologist, botanist, pharmacologist and more…
Guo Shoujing ( 1231–1316 C.E.) Chinese astronomer, engineer, and mathematician.
Contributions in Spherical Trigonometry
EuropeIn the 17th century, Isaac Newton and James Stirling developed the general Newton–Stirling interpolation formula for trigonometric functions.
James Stirling (1692 - 1770) Scottish mathematician
Sir Isaac Newton (1642 – 1747)English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, alchemist and theologian
The World of Trigonometry TODAY
The World of Trigonometry
Watch out for the Triangles!
ResourcesAdamek T., Penkalski K., Valentine G. (2005). ”The History of Trigonometry”. Retrieved on March 10th, 2012, from http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~mjraman/History_Of_Trig.pdf
Anonymous (n.d.), “History of Trigonometry”. Retrieved on March 12th, 2012 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_trigonometry
Behera, A (2008). “The World of Trigonometry” Retrieved on from March 8th, 2012 fromhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ah9NxAGzlDc&feature=related