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History of trigonometry

Early study of triangles can be traced to the 2nd millennium BC, in Egyptian mathematics (Rhind Mathematical Papyrus) and Babylonian mathematics. Trigonometry was also prevalent in Kushite mathematics.[1] Systematic study of trigonometric functions began in Hellenistic mathematics, reaching India as part of Hellenistic astronomy.[2] In Indian astronomy, the study of trigonometric functions flourished in the Gupta period, especially due to Aryabhata (sixth century CE), who discovered the sine function. During the Middle Ages, the study of trigonometry continued in Islamic mathematics, by mathematicians such as Al-Khwarizmi and Abu al-Wafa. It became an independent discipline in the Islamic world, where all six trigonometric functions were known. Translations of Arabic and Greek texts led to trigonometry being adopted as a subject in the Latin West beginning in the Renaissance with Regiomontanus. The development of modern trigonometry shifted during the western Age of Enlightenment, beginning with 17th-century mathematics (Isaac Newton and James Stirling) and reaching its modern form with Leonhard Euler (1748).

Etymology edit

The term "trigonometry" was derived from Greek τρίγωνον trigōnon, "triangle" and μέτρον metron, "measure".[3]

The modern words "sine" and "cosine" are derived from the Latin word sinus via mistranslation from Arabic (see Sine and cosine#Etymology). Particularly Fibonacci's sinus rectus arcus proved influential in establishing the term.[4]

The word tangent comes from Latin tangens meaning "touching", since the line touches the circle of unit radius, whereas secant stems from Latin secans "cutting" since the line cuts the circle.[5]

The prefix "co-" (in "cosine", "cotangent", "cosecant") is found in Edmund Gunter's Canon triangulorum (1620), which defines the cosinus as an abbreviation for the sinus complementi (sine of the complementary angle) and proceeds to define the cotangens similarly.[6][7]

The words "minute" and "second" are derived from the Latin phrases partes minutae primae and partes minutae secundae.[8] These roughly translate to "first small parts" and "second small parts".

Development edit

Ancient Near East edit

The ancient Egyptians and Babylonians had known of theorems on the ratios of the sides of similar triangles for many centuries. However, as pre-Hellenic societies lacked the concept of an angle measure, they were limited to studying the sides of triangles instead.[9]

The Babylonian astronomers kept detailed records on the rising and setting of stars, the motion of the planets, and the solar and lunar eclipses, all of which required familiarity with angular distances measured on the celestial sphere.[10] Based on one interpretation of the Plimpton 322 cuneiform tablet (c. 1900 BC), some have even asserted that the ancient Babylonians had a table of secants but does not work in this context as without using circles and angles in the situation modern trigonometric notations won't apply.[11] There is, however, much debate as to whether it is a table of Pythagorean triples, a solution of quadratic equations, or a trigonometric table.

The Egyptians, on the other hand, used a primitive form of trigonometry for building pyramids in the 2nd millennium BC.[10] The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, written by the Egyptian scribe Ahmes (c. 1680–1620 BC), contains the following problem related to trigonometry:[10]

"If a pyramid is 250 cubits high and the side of its base 360 cubits long, what is its seked?"

Ahmes' solution to the problem is the ratio of half the side of the base of the pyramid to its height, or the run-to-rise ratio of its face. In other words, the quantity he found for the seked is the cotangent of the angle to the base of the pyramid and its face.[10]

Classical antiquity edit

 
The chord of an angle subtends the arc of the angle.

Ancient Greek and Hellenistic mathematicians made use of the chord. Given a circle and an arc on the circle, the chord is the line that subtends the arc. A chord's perpendicular bisector passes through the center of the circle and bisects the angle. One half of the bisected chord is the sine of one half the bisected angle, that is,[12]

 

and consequently the sine function is also known as the half-chord. Due to this relationship, a number of trigonometric identities and theorems that are known today were also known to Hellenistic mathematicians, but in their equivalent chord form.[13][14]

Although there is no trigonometry in the works of Euclid and Archimedes, in the strict sense of the word, there are theorems presented in a geometric way (rather than a trigonometric way) that are equivalent to specific trigonometric laws or formulas.[9] For instance, propositions twelve and thirteen of book two of the Elements are the laws of cosines for obtuse and acute angles, respectively. Theorems on the lengths of chords are applications of the law of sines. And Archimedes' theorem on broken chords is equivalent to formulas for sines of sums and differences of angles.[9] To compensate for the lack of a table of chords, mathematicians of Aristarchus' time would sometimes use the statement that, in modern notation, sin α/sin β < α/β < tan α/tan β whenever 0° < β < α < 90°, now known as Aristarchus's inequality.[15]

The first trigonometric table was apparently compiled by Hipparchus of Nicaea (180 – 125 BCE), who is now consequently known as "the father of trigonometry."[16] Hipparchus was the first to tabulate the corresponding values of arc and chord for a series of angles.[4][16]

Although it is not known when the systematic use of the 360° circle came into mathematics, it is known that the systematic introduction of the 360° circle came a little after Aristarchus of Samos composed On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon (ca. 260 BC), since he measured an angle in terms of a fraction of a quadrant.[15] It seems that the systematic use of the 360° circle is largely due to Hipparchus and his table of chords. Hipparchus may have taken the idea of this division from Hypsicles who had earlier divided the day into 360 parts, a division of the day that may have been suggested by Babylonian astronomy.[17] In ancient astronomy, the zodiac had been divided into twelve "signs" or thirty-six "decans". A seasonal cycle of roughly 360 days could have corresponded to the signs and decans of the zodiac by dividing each sign into thirty parts and each decan into ten parts.[8] It is due to the Babylonian sexagesimal numeral system that each degree is divided into sixty minutes and each minute is divided into sixty seconds.[8]

 
Menelaus' theorem

Menelaus of Alexandria (ca. 100 AD) wrote in three books his Sphaerica. In Book I, he established a basis for spherical triangles analogous to the Euclidean basis for plane triangles.[14] He established a theorem that is without Euclidean analogue, that two spherical triangles are congruent if corresponding angles are equal, but he did not distinguish between congruent and symmetric spherical triangles.[14] Another theorem that he establishes is that the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than 180°.[14] Book II of Sphaerica applies spherical geometry to astronomy. And Book III contains the "theorem of Menelaus".[14] He further gave his famous "rule of six quantities".[18]

Later, Claudius Ptolemy (ca. 90 – ca. 168 AD) expanded upon Hipparchus' Chords in a Circle in his Almagest, or the Mathematical Syntaxis. The Almagest is primarily a work on astronomy, and astronomy relies on trigonometry. Ptolemy's table of chords gives the lengths of chords of a circle of diameter 120 as a function of the number of degrees n in the corresponding arc of the circle, for n ranging from 1/2 to 180 by increments of 1/2.[19] The thirteen books of the Almagest are the most influential and significant trigonometric work of all antiquity.[20] A theorem that was central to Ptolemy's calculation of chords was what is still known today as Ptolemy's theorem, that the sum of the products of the opposite sides of a cyclic quadrilateral is equal to the product of the diagonals. A special case of Ptolemy's theorem appeared as proposition 93 in Euclid's Data. Ptolemy's theorem leads to the equivalent of the four sum-and-difference formulas for sine and cosine that are today known as Ptolemy's formulas, although Ptolemy himself used chords instead of sine and cosine.[20] Ptolemy further derived the equivalent of the half-angle formula

 [20]

Ptolemy used these results to create his trigonometric tables, but whether these tables were derived from Hipparchus' work cannot be determined.[20]

Neither the tables of Hipparchus nor those of Ptolemy have survived to the present day, although descriptions by other ancient authors leave little doubt that they once existed.[21]

Indian mathematics edit

Some of the early and very significant developments of trigonometry were in India. Influential works from the 4th–5th century AD, known as the Siddhantas (of which there were five, the most important of which is the Surya Siddhanta[22]) first defined the sine as the modern relationship between half an angle and half a chord, while also defining the cosine, versine, and inverse sine.[23] Soon afterwards, another Indian mathematician and astronomer, Aryabhata (476–550 AD), collected and expanded upon the developments of the Siddhantas in an important work called the Aryabhatiya.[24] The Siddhantas and the Aryabhatiya contain the earliest surviving tables of sine values and versine (1 − cosine) values, in 3.75° intervals from 0° to 90°, to an accuracy of 4 decimal places.[25] They used the words jya for sine, kojya for cosine, utkrama-jya for versine, and otkram jya for inverse sine. The words jya and kojya eventually became sine and cosine respectively after a mistranslation described above.

In the 7th century, Bhaskara I produced a formula for calculating the sine of an acute angle without the use of a table. He also gave the following approximation formula for sin(x), which had a relative error of less than 1.9%:

 

Later in the 7th century, Brahmagupta redeveloped the formula

 

(also derived earlier, as mentioned above) and the Brahmagupta interpolation formula for computing sine values.[11]

Another later Indian author on trigonometry was Bhaskara II in the 12th century. Bhaskara II developed spherical trigonometry, and discovered many trigonometric results.

Bhaskara II was the one of the first to discover   and   trigonometric results like:

  •  

Madhava (c. 1400) made early strides in the analysis of trigonometric functions and their infinite series expansions. He developed the concepts of the power series and Taylor series, and produced the power series expansions of sine, cosine, tangent, and arctangent.[26][27] Using the Taylor series approximations of sine and cosine, he produced a sine table to 12 decimal places of accuracy and a cosine table to 9 decimal places of accuracy. He also gave the power series of π and the angle, radius, diameter, and circumference of a circle in terms of trigonometric functions. His works were expanded by his followers at the Kerala School up to the 16th century.[26][27]

No. Series Name Western discoverers of the series
and approximate dates of discovery[28]
  1 sin x  =  xx3 / 3! + x5 / 5! − x7 / 7! + ...      Madhava's sine series     Isaac Newton (1670) and Wilhelm Leibniz (1676)  
  2   cos x  = 1 − x2 / 2! + x4 / 4! − x6 / 6! + ...     Madhava's cosine series     Isaac Newton (1670) and Wilhelm Leibniz (1676)  
  3   tan−1x  =  xx3 / 3 + x5 / 5 − x7 / 7 + ...     Madhava's arctangent series     James Gregory (1671) and Wilhelm Leibniz (1676)   

The Indian text the Yuktibhāṣā contains proof for the expansion of the sine and cosine functions and the derivation and proof of the power series for inverse tangent, discovered by Madhava. The Yuktibhāṣā also contains rules for finding the sines and the cosines of the sum and difference of two angles.

Chinese mathematics edit

 
Guo Shoujing (1231–1316)

In China, Aryabhata's table of sines were translated into the Chinese mathematical book of the Kaiyuan Zhanjing, compiled in 718 AD during the Tang Dynasty.[29] Although the Chinese excelled in other fields of mathematics such as solid geometry, binomial theorem, and complex algebraic formulas, early forms of trigonometry were not as widely appreciated as in the earlier Greek, Hellenistic, Indian and Islamic worlds.[30] Instead, the early Chinese used an empirical substitute known as chong cha, while practical use of plane trigonometry in using the sine, the tangent, and the secant were known.[29] However, this embryonic state of trigonometry in China slowly began to change and advance during the Song Dynasty (960–1279), where Chinese mathematicians began to express greater emphasis for the need of spherical trigonometry in calendrical science and astronomical calculations.[29] The polymath Chinese scientist, mathematician and official Shen Kuo (1031–1095) used trigonometric functions to solve mathematical problems of chords and arcs.[29] Victor J. Katz writes that in Shen's formula "technique of intersecting circles", he created an approximation of the arc s of a circle given the diameter d, sagitta v, and length c of the chord subtending the arc, the length of which he approximated as[31]

 

Sal Restivo writes that Shen's work in the lengths of arcs of circles provided the basis for spherical trigonometry developed in the 13th century by the mathematician and astronomer Guo Shoujing (1231–1316).[32] As the historians L. Gauchet and Joseph Needham state, Guo Shoujing used spherical trigonometry in his calculations to improve the calendar system and Chinese astronomy.[29][33] Along with a later 17th-century Chinese illustration of Guo's mathematical proofs, Needham states that:

Guo used a quadrangular spherical pyramid, the basal quadrilateral of which consisted of one equatorial and one ecliptic arc, together with two meridian arcs, one of which passed through the summer solstice point...By such methods he was able to obtain the du lü (degrees of equator corresponding to degrees of ecliptic), the ji cha (values of chords for given ecliptic arcs), and the cha lü (difference between chords of arcs differing by 1 degree).[34]

Despite the achievements of Shen and Guo's work in trigonometry, another substantial work in Chinese trigonometry would not be published again until 1607, with the dual publication of Euclid's Elements by Chinese official and astronomer Xu Guangqi (1562–1633) and the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci (1552–1610).[35]

Medieval Islamic world edit

 
Page from The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing by Muhammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī (c. AD 820)

Previous works were later translated and expanded in the medieval Islamic world by Muslim mathematicians of mostly Persian and Arab descent, who enunciated a large number of theorems which freed the subject of trigonometry from dependence upon the complete quadrilateral, as was the case in Hellenistic mathematics due to the application of Menelaus' theorem. According to E. S. Kennedy, it was after this development in Islamic mathematics that "the first real trigonometry emerged, in the sense that only then did the object of study become the spherical or plane triangle, its sides and angles."[36]

Methods dealing with spherical triangles were also known, particularly the method of Menelaus of Alexandria, who developed "Menelaus' theorem" to deal with spherical problems.[14][37] However, E. S. Kennedy points out that while it was possible in pre-Islamic mathematics to compute the magnitudes of a spherical figure, in principle, by use of the table of chords and Menelaus' theorem, the application of the theorem to spherical problems was very difficult in practice.[38] In order to observe holy days on the Islamic calendar in which timings were determined by phases of the moon, astronomers initially used Menelaus' method to calculate the place of the moon and stars, though this method proved to be clumsy and difficult. It involved setting up two intersecting right triangles; by applying Menelaus' theorem it was possible to solve one of the six sides, but only if the other five sides were known. To tell the time from the sun's altitude, for instance, repeated applications of Menelaus' theorem were required. For medieval Islamic astronomers, there was an obvious challenge to find a simpler trigonometric method.[39]

In the early 9th century AD, Muhammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī produced accurate sine and cosine tables, and the first table of tangents. He was also a pioneer in spherical trigonometry. In 830 AD, Habash al-Hasib al-Marwazi produced the first table of cotangents.[40][41] Muhammad ibn Jābir al-Harrānī al-Battānī (Albatenius) (853-929 AD) discovered the reciprocal functions of secant and cosecant, and produced the first table of cosecants for each degree from 1° to 90°.[41]

By the 10th century AD, in the work of Abū al-Wafā' al-Būzjānī, all six trigonometric functions were used.[42] Abu al-Wafa had sine tables in 0.25° increments, to 8 decimal places of accuracy, and accurate tables of tangent values.[42] He also developed the following trigonometric formula:[43]

  (a special case of Ptolemy's angle-addition formula; see above)

In his original text, Abū al-Wafā' states: "If we want that, we multiply the given sine by the cosine minutes, and the result is half the sine of the double".[43] Abū al-Wafā also established the angle addition and difference identities presented with complete proofs:[43]

 
 

For the second one, the text states: "We multiply the sine of each of the two arcs by the cosine of the other minutes. If we want the sine of the sum, we add the products, if we want the sine of the difference, we take their difference".[43]

He also discovered the law of sines for spherical trigonometry:[40]

 

Also in the late 10th and early 11th centuries AD, the Egyptian astronomer Ibn Yunus performed many careful trigonometric calculations and demonstrated the following trigonometric identity:[44]

 

Al-Jayyani (989–1079) of al-Andalus wrote The book of unknown arcs of a sphere, which is considered "the first treatise on spherical trigonometry".[45] It "contains formulae for right-handed triangles, the general law of sines, and the solution of a spherical triangle by means of the polar triangle." This treatise later had a "strong influence on European mathematics", and his "definition of ratios as numbers" and "method of solving a spherical triangle when all sides are unknown" are likely to have influenced Regiomontanus.[45]

The method of triangulation was first developed by Muslim mathematicians, who applied it to practical uses such as surveying[46] and Islamic geography, as described by Abu Rayhan Biruni in the early 11th century. Biruni himself introduced triangulation techniques to measure the size of the Earth and the distances between various places.[47] In the late 11th century, Omar Khayyám (1048–1131) solved cubic equations using approximate numerical solutions found by interpolation in trigonometric tables. In the 13th century, Nasīr al-Dīn al-Tūsī was the first to treat trigonometry as a mathematical discipline independent from astronomy, and he developed spherical trigonometry into its present form.[41] He listed the six distinct cases of a right-angled triangle in spherical trigonometry, and in his On the Sector Figure, he stated the law of sines for plane and spherical triangles, discovered the law of tangents for spherical triangles, and provided proofs for both these laws.[48] Nasir al-Din al-Tusi has been described as the creator of trigonometry as a mathematical discipline in its own right.[49][50][51]

In the 15th century, Jamshīd al-Kāshī provided the first explicit statement of the law of cosines in a form suitable for triangulation.[citation needed] In France, the law of cosines is still referred to as the theorem of Al-Kashi. He also gave trigonometric tables of values of the sine function to four sexagesimal digits (equivalent to 8 decimal places) for each 1° of argument with differences to be added for each 1/60 of 1°.[citation needed] Ulugh Beg also gives accurate tables of sines and tangents correct to 8 decimal places around the same time.[citation needed]

European renaissance and afterwards edit

In 1342, Levi ben Gershon, known as Gersonides, wrote On Sines, Chords and Arcs, in particular proving the sine law for plane triangles and giving five-figure sine tables.[52]

A simplified trigonometric table, the "toleta de marteloio", was used by sailors in the Mediterranean Sea during the 14th-15th Centuries to calculate navigation courses. It is described by Ramon Llull of Majorca in 1295, and laid out in the 1436 atlas of Venetian captain Andrea Bianco.

Regiomontanus was perhaps the first mathematician in Europe to treat trigonometry as a distinct mathematical discipline,[53] in his De triangulis omnimodis written in 1464, as well as his later Tabulae directionum which included the tangent function, unnamed. The Opus palatinum de triangulis of Georg Joachim Rheticus, a student of Copernicus, was probably the first in Europe to define trigonometric functions directly in terms of right triangles instead of circles, with tables for all six trigonometric functions; this work was finished by Rheticus' student Valentin Otho in 1596.

In the 17th century, Isaac Newton and James Stirling developed the general Newton–Stirling interpolation formula for trigonometric functions.

In the 18th century, Leonhard Euler's Introduction in analysin infinitorum (1748) was mostly responsible for establishing the analytic treatment of trigonometric functions in Europe, deriving their infinite series and presenting "Euler's formulaeix = cos x + i sin x. Euler used the near-modern abbreviations sin., cos., tang., cot., sec., and cosec. Prior to this, Roger Cotes had computed the derivative of sine in his Harmonia Mensurarum (1722).[54] Also in the 18th century, Brook Taylor defined the general Taylor series and gave the series expansions and approximations for all six trigonometric functions. The works of James Gregory in the 17th century and Colin Maclaurin in the 18th century were also very influential in the development of trigonometric series.

See also edit

Citations and footnotes edit

  1. ^ Otto Neugebauer (1975). A history of ancient mathematical astronomy. 1. Springer-Verlag. p. 744. ISBN 978-3-540-06995-9.
  2. ^ Katz 1998, p. 212.
  3. ^ "trigonometry". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  4. ^ a b O'Connor, J.J.; Robertson, E.F. (1996). . MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive. Archived from the original on 2007-06-04.
  5. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  6. ^ Gunter, Edmund (1620). Canon triangulorum.
  7. ^ Roegel, Denis, ed. (6 December 2010). "A reconstruction of Gunter's Canon triangulorum (1620)" (Research report). HAL. inria-00543938. from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  8. ^ a b c Boyer 1991, pp. 166–167, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "It should be recalled that form the days of Hipparchus until modern times there were no such things as trigonometric ratios. The Greeks, and after them the Hindus and the Arabs, used trigonometric lines. These at first took the form, as we have seen, of chords in a circle, and it became incumbent upon Ptolemy to associate numerical values (or approximations) with the chords. [...] It is not unlikely that the 260-degree measure was carried over from astronomy, where the zodiac had been divided into twelve "signs" or 36 "decans". A cycle of the seasons of roughly 360 days could readily be made to correspond to the system of zodiacal signs and decans by subdividing each sign into thirty parts and each decan into ten parts. Our common system of angle measure may stem from this correspondence. Moreover since the Babylonian position system for fractions was so obviously superior to the Egyptians unit fractions and the Greek common fractions, it was natural for Ptolemy to subdivide his degrees into sixty partes minutae primae, each of these latter into sixty partes minutae secundae, and so on. It is from the Latin phrases that translators used in this connection that our words "minute" and "second" have been derived. It undoubtedly was the sexagesimal system that led Ptolemy to subdivide the diameter of his trigonometric circle into 120 parts; each of these he further subdivided into sixty minutes and each minute of length sixty seconds."
  9. ^ a b c Boyer 1991, pp. 158–159, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "Trigonometry, like other branches of mathematics, was not the work of any one man, or nation. Theorems on ratios of the sides of similar triangles had been known to, and used by, the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians. In view of the pre-Hellenic lack of the concept of angle measure, such a study might better be called "trilaterometry", or the measure of three sided polygons (trilaterals), than "trigonometry", the measure of parts of a triangle. With the Greeks we first find a systematic study of relationships between angles (or arcs) in a circle and the lengths of chords subtending these. Properties of chords, as measures of central and inscribed angles in circles, were familiar to the Greeks of Hippocrates' day, and it is likely that Eudoxus had used ratios and angle measures in determining the size of the earth and the relative distances of the sun and the moon. In the works of Euclid there is no trigonometry in the strict sense of the word, but there are theorems equivalent to specific trigonometric laws or formulas. Propositions II.12 and 13 of the Elements, for example, are the laws of cosines for obtuse and acute angles respectively, stated in geometric rather than trigonometric language and proved by a method similar to that used by Euclid in connection with the Pythagorean theorem. Theorems on the lengths of chords are essentially applications of the modern law of sines. We have seen that Archimedes' theorem on the broken chord can readily be translated into trigonometric language analogous to formulas for sines of sums and differences of angles."
  10. ^ a b c d Maor, Eli (1998). Trigonometric Delights. Princeton University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-691-09541-7.
  11. ^ a b Joseph 2000, pp. 383–384.
  12. ^ Katz 1998, p. 143.
  13. ^ As these historical calculations did not make use of a unit circle, the length of the radius was needed in the formula. Contrast this with the modern use of the crd function that assumes a unit circle in its definition.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Boyer 1991, p. 163, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "In Book I of this treatise Menelaus establishes a basis for spherical triangles analogous to that of Euclid I for plane triangles. Included is a theorem without Euclidean analogue – that two spherical triangles are congruent if corresponding angles are equal (Menelaus did not distinguish between congruent and symmetric spherical triangles); and the theorem A + B + C > 180° is established. The second book of the Sphaerica describes the application of spherical geometry to astronomical phenomena and is of little mathematical interest. Book III, the last, contains the well known "theorem of Menelaus" as part of what is essentially spherical trigonometry in the typical Greek form – a geometry or trigonometry of chords in a circle. In the circle in Fig. 10.4 we should write that chord AB is twice the sine of half the central angle AOB (multiplied by the radius of the circle). Menelaus and his Greek successors instead referred to AB simply as the chord corresponding to the arc AB. If BOB' is a diameter of the circle, then chord A' is twice the cosine of half the angle AOB (multiplied by the radius of the circle)."
  15. ^ a b Boyer 1991, p. 159, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "Instead we have an treatise, perhaps composed earlier (ca. 260 BC), On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon, which assumes a geocentric universe. In this work Aristarchus made the observation that when the moon is just half-full, the angle between the lines of sight to the sun and the moon is less than a right angle by one thirtieth of a quadrant. (The systematic introduction of the 360° circle came a little later. In trigonometric language of today this would mean that the ratio of the distance of the moon to that of the sun (the ration ME to SE in Fig. 10.1) is sin(3°). Trigonometric tables not having been developed yet, Aristarchus fell back upon a well-known geometric theorem of the time which now would be expressed in the inequalities sin α/ sin β < α/β < tan α/ tan β, for 0° < β < α < 90°.)"
  16. ^ a b Boyer 1991, p. 162, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "For some two and a half centuries, from Hippocrates to Eratosthenes, Greek mathematicians had studied relationships between lines and circles and had applied these in a variety of astronomical problems, but no systematic trigonometry had resulted. Then, presumably during the second half of the 2nd century BC, the first trigonometric table apparently was compiled by the astronomer Hipparchus of Nicaea (ca. 180–ca. 125 BC), who thus earned the right to be known as "the father of trigonometry". Aristarchus had known that in a given circle the ratio of arc to chord decreases as the arc decreases from 180° to 0°, tending toward a limit of 1. However, it appears that not until Hipparchus undertook the task had anyone tabulated corresponding values of arc and chord for a whole series of angles."
  17. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 162, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "It is not known just when the systematic use of the 360° circle came into mathematics, but it seems to be due largely to Hipparchus in connection with his table of chords. It is possible that he took over from Hypsicles, who earlier had divided the day into parts, a subdivision that may have been suggested by Babylonian astronomy."
  18. ^ Needham 1986, p. 108.
  19. ^ Toomer, Gerald J. (1998). Ptolemy's Almagest. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00260-6.
  20. ^ a b c d Boyer 1991, pp. 164–166, Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration: "The theorem of Menelaus played a fundamental role in spherical trigonometry and astronomy, but by far the most influential and significant trigonometric work of all antiquity was composed by Ptolemy of Alexandria about half a century after Menelaus. [...] Of the life of the author we are as little informed as we are of that of the author of the Elements. We do not know when or where Euclid and Ptolemy were born. We know that Ptolemy made observations at Alexandria from AD. 127 to 151 and, therefore, assume that he was born at the end of the 1st century. Suidas, a writer who lived in the 10th century, reported that Ptolemy was alive under Marcus Aurelius (emperor from AD 161 to 180).
    Ptolemy's Almagest is presumed to be heavily indebted for its methods to the Chords in a Circle of Hipparchus, but the extent of the indebtedness cannot be reliably assessed. It is clear that in astronomy Ptolemy made use of the catalog of star positions bequeathed by Hipparchus, but whether or not Ptolemy's trigonometric tables were derived in large part from his distinguished predecessor cannot be determined. [...] Central to the calculation of Ptolemy's chords was a geometric proposition still known as "Ptolemy's theorem": [...] that is, the sum of the products of the opposite sides of a cyclic quadrilateral is equal to the product of the diagonals. [...] A special case of Ptolemy's theorem had appeared in Euclid's Data (Proposition 93): [...] Ptolemy's theorem, therefore, leads to the result sin(α − β) = sin α cos β − cos α sin Β. Similar reasoning leads to the formula [...] These four sum-and-difference formulas consequently are often known today as Ptolemy's formulas.
    It was the formula for sine of the difference – or, more accurately, chord of the difference – that Ptolemy found especially useful in building up his tables. Another formula that served him effectively was the equivalent of our half-angle formula."
  21. ^ Boyer 1991, pp. 158–168.
  22. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 208.
  23. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 209.
  24. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 210.
  25. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 215.
  26. ^ a b O'Connor, J.J.; Robertson, E.F. (2000). "Madhava of Sangamagramma". MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive.
  27. ^ a b Pearce, Ian G. (2002). "Madhava of Sangamagramma". MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive.
  28. ^ Charles Henry Edwards (1994). The historical development of the calculus. Springer Study Edition Series (3 ed.). Springer. p. 205. ISBN 978-0-387-94313-8.
  29. ^ a b c d e Needham 1986, p. 109.
  30. ^ Needham 1986, pp. 108–109.
  31. ^ Katz 2007, p. 308.
  32. ^ Restivo 1992, p. 32.
  33. ^ Gauchet, L. (1917). Note Sur La Trigonométrie Sphérique de Kouo Cheou-King. p. 151.
  34. ^ Needham 1986, pp. 109–110.
  35. ^ Needham 1986, p. 110.
  36. ^ Kennedy, E. S. (1969). "The History of Trigonometry". 31st Yearbook. Washington DC: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. (cf. Haq, Syed Nomanul (1996). "The Indian and Persian background". In Seyyed Hossein Nasr; Oliver Leaman (eds.). History of Islamic Philosophy. Routledge. pp. 52–70 [60–63]. ISBN 978-0-415-13159-9.)
  37. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Menelaus of Alexandria", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews "Book 3 deals with spherical trigonometry and includes Menelaus's theorem".
  38. ^ Kennedy, E. S. (1969). "The History of Trigonometry". 31st Yearbook. Washington DC: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics: 337. (cf. Haq, Syed Nomanul (1996). "The Indian and Persian background". In Seyyed Hossein Nasr; Oliver Leaman (eds.). History of Islamic Philosophy. Routledge. pp. 52–70 [68]. ISBN 978-0-415-13159-9.)
  39. ^ Gingerich, Owen (April 1986). . Scientific American. 254 (10): 74. Bibcode:1986SciAm.254d..74G. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0486-74. Archived from the original on 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  40. ^ a b Jacques Sesiano, "Islamic mathematics", p. 157, in Selin, Helaine; D'Ambrosio, Ubiratan, eds. (2000). Mathematics Across Cultures: The History of Non-western Mathematics. Springer Science+Business Media. ISBN 978-1-4020-0260-1.
  41. ^ a b c "trigonometry". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2008-07-21.
  42. ^ a b Boyer 1991, p. 238.
  43. ^ a b c d Moussa, Ali (2011). "Mathematical Methods in Abū al-Wafāʾ's Almagest and the Qibla Determinations". Arabic Sciences and Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. 21 (1): 1–56. doi:10.1017/S095742391000007X. S2CID 171015175.
  44. ^ William Charles Brice, 'An Historical atlas of Islam', p.413
  45. ^ a b O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muadh Al-Jayyani", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  46. ^ Donald Routledge Hill (1996), "Engineering", in Roshdi Rashed, Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science, Vol. 3, p. 751–795 [769].
  47. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Abu Arrayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Biruni", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
  48. ^ Berggren, J. Lennart (2007). "Mathematics in Medieval Islam". The Mathematics of Egypt, Mesopotamia, China, India, and Islam: A Sourcebook. Princeton University Press. p. 518. ISBN 978-0-691-11485-9.
  49. ^ "Al-Tusi_Nasir biography". www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-08-05. One of al-Tusi's most important mathematical contributions was the creation of trigonometry as a mathematical discipline in its own right rather than as just a tool for astronomical applications. In Treatise on the quadrilateral al-Tusi gave the first extant exposition of the whole system of plane and spherical trigonometry. This work is really the first in history on trigonometry as an independent branch of pure mathematics and the first in which all six cases for a right-angled spherical triangle are set forth.
  50. ^ Berggren, J. L. (October 2013). "Islamic Mathematics". The Cambridge History of Science. Cambridge University Press. pp. 62–83. doi:10.1017/CHO9780511974007.004. ISBN 978-0-511-97400-7.
  51. ^ electricpulp.com. "ṬUSI, NAṢIR-AL-DIN i. Biography – Encyclopaedia Iranica". www.iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2018-08-05. His major contribution in mathematics (Nasr, 1996, pp. 208-214) is said to be in trigonometry, which for the first time was compiled by him as a new discipline in its own right. Spherical trigonometry also owes its development to his efforts, and this includes the concept of the six fundamental formulas for the solution of spherical right-angled triangles.
  52. ^ Charles G. Simonson (Winter 2000). "The Mathematics of Levi ben Gershon, the Ralbag" (PDF). Bekhol Derakhekha Daehu. Bar-Ilan University Press. 10: 5–21.
  53. ^ Boyer 1991, p. 274.
  54. ^ Katz, Victor J. (November 1987). "The calculus of the trigonometric functions". Historia Mathematica. 14 (4): 311–324. doi:10.1016/0315-0860(87)90064-4.. The proof of Cotes is mentioned on p. 315.

References edit

  • Boyer, Carl Benjamin (1991). A History of Mathematics (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 978-0-471-54397-8.
  • Joseph, George G. (2000). The Crest of the Peacock: Non-European Roots of Mathematics (2nd ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-691-00659-8.
  • Katz, Victor J. (1998). A History of Mathematics / An Introduction (2nd ed.). Addison Wesley. ISBN 978-0-321-01618-8.
  • Katz, Victor J. (2007). The Mathematics of Egypt, Mesopotamia, China, India, and Islam: A Sourcebook. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11485-9.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 3, Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  • Restivo, Sal (1992). Mathematics in Society and History: Sociological Inquiries. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 1-4020-0039-1.

Further reading edit

  • Braunmühl, Anton von (1900–1903). Vorlesungen über Geschichte der Trigonometrie [Lectures on the History of Trigonometry] (in German). B. G. Teubner.
  • Kennedy, Edward S. (1969). "The History of Trigonometry". Historical Topics for the Mathematics Classroom. NCTM Yearbooks. Vol. 31. National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. pp. 333–375.
  • Maor, Eli (1998). . Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9780691202204. ISBN 0691057540. Archived from the original on 2003-07-11.
  • Ostermann, Alexander; Wanner, Gerhard (2012). "Trigonometry". Geometry by Its History. Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics. Springer. pp. 113–155. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-29163-0. ISBN 978-3-642-29162-3.
  • Van Brummelen, Glen (2009). The Mathematics of the Heavens and the Earth: The Early History of Trigonometry. Princeton University Press.
  • Van Brummelen, Glen (2021). The Doctrine of Triangles: A History of Modern Trigonometry. Princeton University Press.


history, trigonometry, early, study, triangles, traced, millennium, egyptian, mathematics, rhind, mathematical, papyrus, babylonian, mathematics, trigonometry, also, prevalent, kushite, mathematics, systematic, study, trigonometric, functions, began, hellenist. Early study of triangles can be traced to the 2nd millennium BC in Egyptian mathematics Rhind Mathematical Papyrus and Babylonian mathematics Trigonometry was also prevalent in Kushite mathematics 1 Systematic study of trigonometric functions began in Hellenistic mathematics reaching India as part of Hellenistic astronomy 2 In Indian astronomy the study of trigonometric functions flourished in the Gupta period especially due to Aryabhata sixth century CE who discovered the sine function During the Middle Ages the study of trigonometry continued in Islamic mathematics by mathematicians such as Al Khwarizmi and Abu al Wafa It became an independent discipline in the Islamic world where all six trigonometric functions were known Translations of Arabic and Greek texts led to trigonometry being adopted as a subject in the Latin West beginning in the Renaissance with Regiomontanus The development of modern trigonometry shifted during the western Age of Enlightenment beginning with 17th century mathematics Isaac Newton and James Stirling and reaching its modern form with Leonhard Euler 1748 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Development 2 1 Ancient Near East 2 2 Classical antiquity 2 3 Indian mathematics 2 4 Chinese mathematics 2 5 Medieval Islamic world 2 6 European renaissance and afterwards 3 See also 4 Citations and footnotes 5 References 6 Further readingEtymology editThe term trigonometry was derived from Greek trigwnon trigōnon triangle and metron metron measure 3 The modern words sine and cosine are derived from the Latin word sinus via mistranslation from Arabic see Sine and cosine Etymology Particularly Fibonacci s sinus rectus arcus proved influential in establishing the term 4 The word tangent comes from Latin tangens meaning touching since the line touches the circle of unit radius whereas secant stems from Latin secans cutting since the line cuts the circle 5 The prefix co in cosine cotangent cosecant is found in Edmund Gunter s Canon triangulorum 1620 which defines the cosinus as an abbreviation for the sinus complementi sine of the complementary angle and proceeds to define the cotangens similarly 6 7 The words minute and second are derived from the Latin phrases partes minutae primae and partes minutae secundae 8 These roughly translate to first small parts and second small parts Development editAncient Near East edit The ancient Egyptians and Babylonians had known of theorems on the ratios of the sides of similar triangles for many centuries However as pre Hellenic societies lacked the concept of an angle measure they were limited to studying the sides of triangles instead 9 The Babylonian astronomers kept detailed records on the rising and setting of stars the motion of the planets and the solar and lunar eclipses all of which required familiarity with angular distances measured on the celestial sphere 10 Based on one interpretation of the Plimpton 322 cuneiform tablet c 1900 BC some have even asserted that the ancient Babylonians had a table of secants but does not work in this context as without using circles and angles in the situation modern trigonometric notations won t apply 11 There is however much debate as to whether it is a table of Pythagorean triples a solution of quadratic equations or a trigonometric table The Egyptians on the other hand used a primitive form of trigonometry for building pyramids in the 2nd millennium BC 10 The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus written by the Egyptian scribe Ahmes c 1680 1620 BC contains the following problem related to trigonometry 10 If a pyramid is 250 cubits high and the side of its base 360 cubits long what is its seked Ahmes solution to the problem is the ratio of half the side of the base of the pyramid to its height or the run to rise ratio of its face In other words the quantity he found for the seked is the cotangent of the angle to the base of the pyramid and its face 10 Classical antiquity edit nbsp The chord of an angle subtends the arc of the angle Ancient Greek and Hellenistic mathematicians made use of the chord Given a circle and an arc on the circle the chord is the line that subtends the arc A chord s perpendicular bisector passes through the center of the circle and bisects the angle One half of the bisected chord is the sine of one half the bisected angle that is 12 c h o r d 8 2 r sin 8 2 displaystyle mathrm chord theta 2r sin frac theta 2 nbsp and consequently the sine function is also known as the half chord Due to this relationship a number of trigonometric identities and theorems that are known today were also known to Hellenistic mathematicians but in their equivalent chord form 13 14 Although there is no trigonometry in the works of Euclid and Archimedes in the strict sense of the word there are theorems presented in a geometric way rather than a trigonometric way that are equivalent to specific trigonometric laws or formulas 9 For instance propositions twelve and thirteen of book two of the Elements are the laws of cosines for obtuse and acute angles respectively Theorems on the lengths of chords are applications of the law of sines And Archimedes theorem on broken chords is equivalent to formulas for sines of sums and differences of angles 9 To compensate for the lack of a table of chords mathematicians of Aristarchus time would sometimes use the statement that in modern notation sin a sin b lt a b lt tan a tan b whenever 0 lt b lt a lt 90 now known as Aristarchus s inequality 15 The first trigonometric table was apparently compiled by Hipparchus of Nicaea 180 125 BCE who is now consequently known as the father of trigonometry 16 Hipparchus was the first to tabulate the corresponding values of arc and chord for a series of angles 4 16 Although it is not known when the systematic use of the 360 circle came into mathematics it is known that the systematic introduction of the 360 circle came a little after Aristarchus of Samos composed On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon ca 260 BC since he measured an angle in terms of a fraction of a quadrant 15 It seems that the systematic use of the 360 circle is largely due to Hipparchus and his table of chords Hipparchus may have taken the idea of this division from Hypsicles who had earlier divided the day into 360 parts a division of the day that may have been suggested by Babylonian astronomy 17 In ancient astronomy the zodiac had been divided into twelve signs or thirty six decans A seasonal cycle of roughly 360 days could have corresponded to the signs and decans of the zodiac by dividing each sign into thirty parts and each decan into ten parts 8 It is due to the Babylonian sexagesimal numeral system that each degree is divided into sixty minutes and each minute is divided into sixty seconds 8 nbsp Menelaus theoremMenelaus of Alexandria ca 100 AD wrote in three books his Sphaerica In Book I he established a basis for spherical triangles analogous to the Euclidean basis for plane triangles 14 He established a theorem that is without Euclidean analogue that two spherical triangles are congruent if corresponding angles are equal but he did not distinguish between congruent and symmetric spherical triangles 14 Another theorem that he establishes is that the sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than 180 14 Book II of Sphaerica applies spherical geometry to astronomy And Book III contains the theorem of Menelaus 14 He further gave his famous rule of six quantities 18 Later Claudius Ptolemy ca 90 ca 168 AD expanded upon Hipparchus Chords in a Circle in his Almagest or the Mathematical Syntaxis The Almagest is primarily a work on astronomy and astronomy relies on trigonometry Ptolemy s table of chords gives the lengths of chords of a circle of diameter 120 as a function of the number of degrees n in the corresponding arc of the circle for n ranging from 1 2 to 180 by increments of 1 2 19 The thirteen books of the Almagest are the most influential and significant trigonometric work of all antiquity 20 A theorem that was central to Ptolemy s calculation of chords was what is still known today as Ptolemy s theorem that the sum of the products of the opposite sides of a cyclic quadrilateral is equal to the product of the diagonals A special case of Ptolemy s theorem appeared as proposition 93 in Euclid s Data Ptolemy s theorem leads to the equivalent of the four sum and difference formulas for sine and cosine that are today known as Ptolemy s formulas although Ptolemy himself used chords instead of sine and cosine 20 Ptolemy further derived the equivalent of the half angle formula sin 2 x 2 1 cos x 2 displaystyle sin 2 left frac x 2 right frac 1 cos x 2 nbsp 20 Ptolemy used these results to create his trigonometric tables but whether these tables were derived from Hipparchus work cannot be determined 20 Neither the tables of Hipparchus nor those of Ptolemy have survived to the present day although descriptions by other ancient authors leave little doubt that they once existed 21 Indian mathematics edit See also Indian Mathematics and Indian astronomy Some of the early and very significant developments of trigonometry were in India Influential works from the 4th 5th century AD known as the Siddhantas of which there were five the most important of which is the Surya Siddhanta 22 first defined the sine as the modern relationship between half an angle and half a chord while also defining the cosine versine and inverse sine 23 Soon afterwards another Indian mathematician and astronomer Aryabhata 476 550 AD collected and expanded upon the developments of the Siddhantas in an important work called the Aryabhatiya 24 The Siddhantas and the Aryabhatiya contain the earliest surviving tables of sine values and versine 1 cosine values in 3 75 intervals from 0 to 90 to an accuracy of 4 decimal places 25 They used the words jya for sine kojya for cosine utkrama jya for versine and otkram jya for inverse sine The words jya and kojya eventually became sine and cosine respectively after a mistranslation described above In the 7th century Bhaskara I produced a formula for calculating the sine of an acute angle without the use of a table He also gave the following approximation formula for sin x which had a relative error of less than 1 9 sin x 16 x p x 5 p 2 4 x p x 0 x p displaystyle sin x approx frac 16x pi x 5 pi 2 4x pi x qquad left 0 leq x leq pi right nbsp Later in the 7th century Brahmagupta redeveloped the formula 1 sin 2 x cos 2 x sin 2 p 2 x displaystyle 1 sin 2 x cos 2 x sin 2 left frac pi 2 x right nbsp also derived earlier as mentioned above and the Brahmagupta interpolation formula for computing sine values 11 Another later Indian author on trigonometry was Bhaskara II in the 12th century Bhaskara II developed spherical trigonometry and discovered many trigonometric results Bhaskara II was the one of the first to discover sin a b displaystyle sin left a b right nbsp and sin a b displaystyle sin left a b right nbsp trigonometric results like sin a b sin a cos b cos a sin b displaystyle sin left a b right sin a cos b cos a sin b nbsp Madhava c 1400 made early strides in the analysis of trigonometric functions and their infinite series expansions He developed the concepts of the power series and Taylor series and produced the power series expansions of sine cosine tangent and arctangent 26 27 Using the Taylor series approximations of sine and cosine he produced a sine table to 12 decimal places of accuracy and a cosine table to 9 decimal places of accuracy He also gave the power series of p and the angle radius diameter and circumference of a circle in terms of trigonometric functions His works were expanded by his followers at the Kerala School up to the 16th century 26 27 No Series Name Western discoverers of the seriesand approximate dates of discovery 28 1 sin x x x3 3 x5 5 x7 7 Madhava s sine series Isaac Newton 1670 and Wilhelm Leibniz 1676 2 cos x 1 x2 2 x4 4 x6 6 Madhava s cosine series Isaac Newton 1670 and Wilhelm Leibniz 1676 3 tan 1x x x3 3 x5 5 x7 7 Madhava s arctangent series James Gregory 1671 and Wilhelm Leibniz 1676 The Indian text the Yuktibhaṣa contains proof for the expansion of the sine and cosine functions and the derivation and proof of the power series for inverse tangent discovered by Madhava The Yuktibhaṣa also contains rules for finding the sines and the cosines of the sum and difference of two angles Chinese mathematics edit nbsp Guo Shoujing 1231 1316 In China Aryabhata s table of sines were translated into the Chinese mathematical book of the Kaiyuan Zhanjing compiled in 718 AD during the Tang Dynasty 29 Although the Chinese excelled in other fields of mathematics such as solid geometry binomial theorem and complex algebraic formulas early forms of trigonometry were not as widely appreciated as in the earlier Greek Hellenistic Indian and Islamic worlds 30 Instead the early Chinese used an empirical substitute known as chong cha while practical use of plane trigonometry in using the sine the tangent and the secant were known 29 However this embryonic state of trigonometry in China slowly began to change and advance during the Song Dynasty 960 1279 where Chinese mathematicians began to express greater emphasis for the need of spherical trigonometry in calendrical science and astronomical calculations 29 The polymath Chinese scientist mathematician and official Shen Kuo 1031 1095 used trigonometric functions to solve mathematical problems of chords and arcs 29 Victor J Katz writes that in Shen s formula technique of intersecting circles he created an approximation of the arc s of a circle given the diameter d sagitta v and length c of the chord subtending the arc the length of which he approximated as 31 s c 2 v 2 d displaystyle s c frac 2v 2 d nbsp Sal Restivo writes that Shen s work in the lengths of arcs of circles provided the basis for spherical trigonometry developed in the 13th century by the mathematician and astronomer Guo Shoujing 1231 1316 32 As the historians L Gauchet and Joseph Needham state Guo Shoujing used spherical trigonometry in his calculations to improve the calendar system and Chinese astronomy 29 33 Along with a later 17th century Chinese illustration of Guo s mathematical proofs Needham states that Guo used a quadrangular spherical pyramid the basal quadrilateral of which consisted of one equatorial and one ecliptic arc together with two meridian arcs one of which passed through the summer solstice point By such methods he was able to obtain the du lu degrees of equator corresponding to degrees of ecliptic the ji cha values of chords for given ecliptic arcs and the cha lu difference between chords of arcs differing by 1 degree 34 Despite the achievements of Shen and Guo s work in trigonometry another substantial work in Chinese trigonometry would not be published again until 1607 with the dual publication of Euclid s Elements by Chinese official and astronomer Xu Guangqi 1562 1633 and the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci 1552 1610 35 Medieval Islamic world edit nbsp Page from The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing by Muhammad ibn Musa al Khwarizmi c AD 820 Previous works were later translated and expanded in the medieval Islamic world by Muslim mathematicians of mostly Persian and Arab descent who enunciated a large number of theorems which freed the subject of trigonometry from dependence upon the complete quadrilateral as was the case in Hellenistic mathematics due to the application of Menelaus theorem According to E S Kennedy it was after this development in Islamic mathematics that the first real trigonometry emerged in the sense that only then did the object of study become the spherical or plane triangle its sides and angles 36 Methods dealing with spherical triangles were also known particularly the method of Menelaus of Alexandria who developed Menelaus theorem to deal with spherical problems 14 37 However E S Kennedy points out that while it was possible in pre Islamic mathematics to compute the magnitudes of a spherical figure in principle by use of the table of chords and Menelaus theorem the application of the theorem to spherical problems was very difficult in practice 38 In order to observe holy days on the Islamic calendar in which timings were determined by phases of the moon astronomers initially used Menelaus method to calculate the place of the moon and stars though this method proved to be clumsy and difficult It involved setting up two intersecting right triangles by applying Menelaus theorem it was possible to solve one of the six sides but only if the other five sides were known To tell the time from the sun s altitude for instance repeated applications of Menelaus theorem were required For medieval Islamic astronomers there was an obvious challenge to find a simpler trigonometric method 39 In the early 9th century AD Muhammad ibn Musa al Khwarizmi produced accurate sine and cosine tables and the first table of tangents He was also a pioneer in spherical trigonometry In 830 AD Habash al Hasib al Marwazi produced the first table of cotangents 40 41 Muhammad ibn Jabir al Harrani al Battani Albatenius 853 929 AD discovered the reciprocal functions of secant and cosecant and produced the first table of cosecants for each degree from 1 to 90 41 By the 10th century AD in the work of Abu al Wafa al Buzjani all six trigonometric functions were used 42 Abu al Wafa had sine tables in 0 25 increments to 8 decimal places of accuracy and accurate tables of tangent values 42 He also developed the following trigonometric formula 43 sin 2 x 2 sin x cos x displaystyle sin 2x 2 sin x cos x nbsp a special case of Ptolemy s angle addition formula see above In his original text Abu al Wafa states If we want that we multiply the given sine by the cosine minutes and the result is half the sine of the double 43 Abu al Wafa also established the angle addition and difference identities presented with complete proofs 43 sin a b sin 2 a sin a sin b 2 sin 2 b sin a sin b 2 displaystyle sin alpha pm beta sqrt sin 2 alpha sin alpha sin beta 2 pm sqrt sin 2 beta sin alpha sin beta 2 nbsp sin a b sin a cos b cos a sin b displaystyle sin alpha pm beta sin alpha cos beta pm cos alpha sin beta nbsp For the second one the text states We multiply the sine of each of the two arcs by the cosine of the other minutes If we want the sine of the sum we add the products if we want the sine of the difference we take their difference 43 He also discovered the law of sines for spherical trigonometry 40 sin A sin a sin B sin b sin C sin c displaystyle frac sin A sin a frac sin B sin b frac sin C sin c nbsp Also in the late 10th and early 11th centuries AD the Egyptian astronomer Ibn Yunus performed many careful trigonometric calculations and demonstrated the following trigonometric identity 44 cos a cos b cos a b cos a b 2 displaystyle cos a cos b frac cos a b cos a b 2 nbsp Al Jayyani 989 1079 of al Andalus wrote The book of unknown arcs of a sphere which is considered the first treatise on spherical trigonometry 45 It contains formulae for right handed triangles the general law of sines and the solution of a spherical triangle by means of the polar triangle This treatise later had a strong influence on European mathematics and his definition of ratios as numbers and method of solving a spherical triangle when all sides are unknown are likely to have influenced Regiomontanus 45 The method of triangulation was first developed by Muslim mathematicians who applied it to practical uses such as surveying 46 and Islamic geography as described by Abu Rayhan Biruni in the early 11th century Biruni himself introduced triangulation techniques to measure the size of the Earth and the distances between various places 47 In the late 11th century Omar Khayyam 1048 1131 solved cubic equations using approximate numerical solutions found by interpolation in trigonometric tables In the 13th century Nasir al Din al Tusi was the first to treat trigonometry as a mathematical discipline independent from astronomy and he developed spherical trigonometry into its present form 41 He listed the six distinct cases of a right angled triangle in spherical trigonometry and in his On the Sector Figure he stated the law of sines for plane and spherical triangles discovered the law of tangents for spherical triangles and provided proofs for both these laws 48 Nasir al Din al Tusi has been described as the creator of trigonometry as a mathematical discipline in its own right 49 50 51 In the 15th century Jamshid al Kashi provided the first explicit statement of the law of cosines in a form suitable for triangulation citation needed In France the law of cosines is still referred to as the theorem of Al Kashi He also gave trigonometric tables of values of the sine function to four sexagesimal digits equivalent to 8 decimal places for each 1 of argument with differences to be added for each 1 60 of 1 citation needed Ulugh Beg also gives accurate tables of sines and tangents correct to 8 decimal places around the same time citation needed European renaissance and afterwards edit In 1342 Levi ben Gershon known as Gersonides wrote On Sines Chords and Arcs in particular proving the sine law for plane triangles and giving five figure sine tables 52 A simplified trigonometric table the toleta de marteloio was used by sailors in the Mediterranean Sea during the 14th 15th Centuries to calculate navigation courses It is described by Ramon Llull of Majorca in 1295 and laid out in the 1436 atlas of Venetian captain Andrea Bianco Regiomontanus was perhaps the first mathematician in Europe to treat trigonometry as a distinct mathematical discipline 53 in his De triangulis omnimodis written in 1464 as well as his later Tabulae directionum which included the tangent function unnamed The Opus palatinum de triangulis of Georg Joachim Rheticus a student of Copernicus was probably the first in Europe to define trigonometric functions directly in terms of right triangles instead of circles with tables for all six trigonometric functions this work was finished by Rheticus student Valentin Otho in 1596 In the 17th century Isaac Newton and James Stirling developed the general Newton Stirling interpolation formula for trigonometric functions In the 18th century Leonhard Euler s Introduction in analysin infinitorum 1748 was mostly responsible for establishing the analytic treatment of trigonometric functions in Europe deriving their infinite series and presenting Euler s formula eix cos x i sin x Euler used the near modern abbreviations sin cos tang cot sec and cosec Prior to this Roger Cotes had computed the derivative of sine in his Harmonia Mensurarum 1722 54 Also in the 18th century Brook Taylor defined the general Taylor series and gave the series expansions and approximations for all six trigonometric functions The works of James Gregory in the 17th century and Colin Maclaurin in the 18th century were also very influential in the development of trigonometric series See also editGreek mathematics History of mathematics Trigonometric functions Trigonometry Ptolemy s table of chords Aryabhata s sine table Rational trigonometryCitations and footnotes edit Otto Neugebauer 1975 A history of ancient mathematical astronomy 1 Springer Verlag p 744 ISBN 978 3 540 06995 9 Katz 1998 p 212 trigonometry Online Etymology Dictionary a b O Connor J J Robertson E F 1996 Trigonometric functions MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive Archived from the original on 2007 06 04 Oxford English Dictionary Gunter Edmund 1620 Canon triangulorum Roegel Denis ed 6 December 2010 A reconstruction of Gunter s Canon triangulorum 1620 Research report HAL inria 00543938 Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 28 July 2017 a b c Boyer 1991 pp 166 167 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration It should be recalled that form the days of Hipparchus until modern times there were no such things as trigonometric ratios The Greeks and after them the Hindus and the Arabs used trigonometric lines These at first took the form as we have seen of chords in a circle and it became incumbent upon Ptolemy to associate numerical values or approximations with the chords It is not unlikely that the 260 degree measure was carried over from astronomy where the zodiac had been divided into twelve signs or 36 decans A cycle of the seasons of roughly 360 days could readily be made to correspond to the system of zodiacal signs and decans by subdividing each sign into thirty parts and each decan into ten parts Our common system of angle measure may stem from this correspondence Moreover since the Babylonian position system for fractions was so obviously superior to the Egyptians unit fractions and the Greek common fractions it was natural for Ptolemy to subdivide his degrees into sixty partes minutae primae each of these latter into sixty partes minutae secundae and so on It is from the Latin phrases that translators used in this connection that our words minute and second have been derived It undoubtedly was the sexagesimal system that led Ptolemy to subdivide the diameter of his trigonometric circle into 120 parts each of these he further subdivided into sixty minutes and each minute of length sixty seconds a b c Boyer 1991 pp 158 159 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration Trigonometry like other branches of mathematics was not the work of any one man or nation Theorems on ratios of the sides of similar triangles had been known to and used by the ancient Egyptians and Babylonians In view of the pre Hellenic lack of the concept of angle measure such a study might better be called trilaterometry or the measure of three sided polygons trilaterals than trigonometry the measure of parts of a triangle With the Greeks we first find a systematic study of relationships between angles or arcs in a circle and the lengths of chords subtending these Properties of chords as measures of central and inscribed angles in circles were familiar to the Greeks of Hippocrates day and it is likely that Eudoxus had used ratios and angle measures in determining the size of the earth and the relative distances of the sun and the moon In the works of Euclid there is no trigonometry in the strict sense of the word but there are theorems equivalent to specific trigonometric laws or formulas Propositions II 12 and 13 of the Elements for example are the laws of cosines for obtuse and acute angles respectively stated in geometric rather than trigonometric language and proved by a method similar to that used by Euclid in connection with the Pythagorean theorem Theorems on the lengths of chords are essentially applications of the modern law of sines We have seen that Archimedes theorem on the broken chord can readily be translated into trigonometric language analogous to formulas for sines of sums and differences of angles a b c d Maor Eli 1998 Trigonometric Delights Princeton University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 691 09541 7 a b Joseph 2000 pp 383 384 Katz 1998 p 143 As these historical calculations did not make use of a unit circle the length of the radius was needed in the formula Contrast this with the modern use of the crd function that assumes a unit circle in its definition a b c d e f Boyer 1991 p 163 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration In Book I of this treatise Menelaus establishes a basis for spherical triangles analogous to that of Euclid I for plane triangles Included is a theorem without Euclidean analogue that two spherical triangles are congruent if corresponding angles are equal Menelaus did not distinguish between congruent and symmetric spherical triangles and the theorem A B C gt 180 is established The second book of the Sphaerica describes the application of spherical geometry to astronomical phenomena and is of little mathematical interest Book III the last contains the well known theorem of Menelaus as part of what is essentially spherical trigonometry in the typical Greek form a geometry or trigonometry of chords in a circle In the circle in Fig 10 4 we should write that chord AB is twice the sine of half the central angle AOB multiplied by the radius of the circle Menelaus and his Greek successors instead referred to AB simply as the chord corresponding to the arc AB If BOB is a diameter of the circle then chord A is twice the cosine of half the angle AOB multiplied by the radius of the circle a b Boyer 1991 p 159 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration Instead we have an treatise perhaps composed earlier ca 260 BC On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon which assumes a geocentric universe In this work Aristarchus made the observation that when the moon is just half full the angle between the lines of sight to the sun and the moon is less than a right angle by one thirtieth of a quadrant The systematic introduction of the 360 circle came a little later In trigonometric language of today this would mean that the ratio of the distance of the moon to that of the sun the ration ME to SE in Fig 10 1 is sin 3 Trigonometric tables not having been developed yet Aristarchus fell back upon a well known geometric theorem of the time which now would be expressed in the inequalities sin a sin b lt a b lt tan a tan b for 0 lt b lt a lt 90 a b Boyer 1991 p 162 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration For some two and a half centuries from Hippocrates to Eratosthenes Greek mathematicians had studied relationships between lines and circles and had applied these in a variety of astronomical problems but no systematic trigonometry had resulted Then presumably during the second half of the 2nd century BC the first trigonometric table apparently was compiled by the astronomer Hipparchus of Nicaea ca 180 ca 125 BC who thus earned the right to be known as the father of trigonometry Aristarchus had known that in a given circle the ratio of arc to chord decreases as the arc decreases from 180 to 0 tending toward a limit of 1 However it appears that not until Hipparchus undertook the task had anyone tabulated corresponding values of arc and chord for a whole series of angles Boyer 1991 p 162 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration It is not known just when the systematic use of the 360 circle came into mathematics but it seems to be due largely to Hipparchus in connection with his table of chords It is possible that he took over from Hypsicles who earlier had divided the day into parts a subdivision that may have been suggested by Babylonian astronomy Needham 1986 p 108 Toomer Gerald J 1998 Ptolemy s Almagest Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00260 6 a b c d Boyer 1991 pp 164 166 Greek Trigonometry and Mensuration The theorem of Menelaus played a fundamental role in spherical trigonometry and astronomy but by far the most influential and significant trigonometric work of all antiquity was composed by Ptolemy of Alexandria about half a century after Menelaus Of the life of the author we are as little informed as we are of that of the author of the Elements We do not know when or where Euclid and Ptolemy were born We know that Ptolemy made observations at Alexandria from AD 127 to 151 and therefore assume that he was born at the end of the 1st century Suidas a writer who lived in the 10th century reported that Ptolemy was alive under Marcus Aurelius emperor from AD 161 to 180 Ptolemy s Almagest is presumed to be heavily indebted for its methods to the Chords in a Circle of Hipparchus but the extent of the indebtedness cannot be reliably assessed It is clear that in astronomy Ptolemy made use of the catalog of star positions bequeathed by Hipparchus but whether or not Ptolemy s trigonometric tables were derived in large part from his distinguished predecessor cannot be determined Central to the calculation of Ptolemy s chords was a geometric proposition still known as Ptolemy s theorem that is the sum of the products of the opposite sides of a cyclic quadrilateral is equal to the product of the diagonals A special case of Ptolemy s theorem had appeared in Euclid s Data Proposition 93 Ptolemy s theorem therefore leads to the result sin a b sin a cos b cos a sin B Similar reasoning leads to the formula These four sum and difference formulas consequently are often known today as Ptolemy s formulas It was the formula for sine of the difference or more accurately chord of the difference that Ptolemy found especially useful in building up his tables Another formula that served him effectively was the equivalent of our half angle formula Boyer 1991 pp 158 168 Boyer 1991 p 208 Boyer 1991 p 209 Boyer 1991 p 210 Boyer 1991 p 215 a b O Connor J J Robertson E F 2000 Madhava of Sangamagramma MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive a b Pearce Ian G 2002 Madhava of Sangamagramma MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive Charles Henry Edwards 1994 The historical development of the calculus Springer Study Edition Series 3 ed Springer p 205 ISBN 978 0 387 94313 8 a b c d e Needham 1986 p 109 Needham 1986 pp 108 109 Katz 2007 p 308 Restivo 1992 p 32 Gauchet L 1917 Note Sur La Trigonometrie Spherique de Kouo Cheou King p 151 Needham 1986 pp 109 110 Needham 1986 p 110 Kennedy E S 1969 The History of Trigonometry 31st Yearbook Washington DC National Council of Teachers of Mathematics cf Haq Syed Nomanul 1996 The Indian and Persian background In Seyyed Hossein Nasr Oliver Leaman eds History of Islamic Philosophy Routledge pp 52 70 60 63 ISBN 978 0 415 13159 9 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Menelaus of Alexandria MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Book 3 deals with spherical trigonometry and includes Menelaus s theorem Kennedy E S 1969 The History of Trigonometry 31st Yearbook Washington DC National Council of Teachers of Mathematics 337 cf Haq Syed Nomanul 1996 The Indian and Persian background In Seyyed Hossein Nasr Oliver Leaman eds History of Islamic Philosophy Routledge pp 52 70 68 ISBN 978 0 415 13159 9 Gingerich Owen April 1986 Islamic astronomy Scientific American 254 10 74 Bibcode 1986SciAm 254d 74G doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0486 74 Archived from the original on 2011 01 01 Retrieved 2008 05 18 a b Jacques Sesiano Islamic mathematics p 157 in Selin Helaine D Ambrosio Ubiratan eds 2000 Mathematics Across Cultures The History of Non western Mathematics Springer Science Business Media ISBN 978 1 4020 0260 1 a b c trigonometry Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2008 07 21 a b Boyer 1991 p 238 a b c d Moussa Ali 2011 Mathematical Methods in Abu al Wafaʾ s Almagest and the Qibla Determinations Arabic Sciences and Philosophy Cambridge University Press 21 1 1 56 doi 10 1017 S095742391000007X S2CID 171015175 William Charles Brice An Historical atlas of Islam p 413 a b O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Abu Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muadh Al Jayyani MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Donald Routledge Hill 1996 Engineering in Roshdi Rashed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol 3 p 751 795 769 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Abu Arrayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al Biruni MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Berggren J Lennart 2007 Mathematics in Medieval Islam The Mathematics of Egypt Mesopotamia China India and Islam A Sourcebook Princeton University Press p 518 ISBN 978 0 691 11485 9 Al Tusi Nasir biography www history mcs st andrews ac uk Retrieved 2018 08 05 One of al Tusi s most important mathematical contributions was the creation of trigonometry as a mathematical discipline in its own right rather than as just a tool for astronomical applications In Treatise on the quadrilateral al Tusi gave the first extant exposition of the whole system of plane and spherical trigonometry This work is really the first in history on trigonometry as an independent branch of pure mathematics and the first in which all six cases for a right angled spherical triangle are set forth Berggren J L October 2013 Islamic Mathematics The Cambridge History of Science Cambridge University Press pp 62 83 doi 10 1017 CHO9780511974007 004 ISBN 978 0 511 97400 7 electricpulp com ṬUSI NAṢIR AL DIN i Biography Encyclopaedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Retrieved 2018 08 05 His major contribution in mathematics Nasr 1996 pp 208 214 is said to be in trigonometry which for the first time was compiled by him as a new discipline in its own right Spherical trigonometry also owes its development to his efforts and this includes the concept of the six fundamental formulas for the solution of spherical right angled triangles Charles G Simonson Winter 2000 The Mathematics of Levi ben Gershon the Ralbag PDF Bekhol Derakhekha Daehu Bar Ilan University Press 10 5 21 Boyer 1991 p 274 Katz Victor J November 1987 The calculus of the trigonometric functions Historia Mathematica 14 4 311 324 doi 10 1016 0315 0860 87 90064 4 The proof of Cotes is mentioned on p 315 References editBoyer Carl Benjamin 1991 A History of Mathematics 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 54397 8 Joseph George G 2000 The Crest of the Peacock Non European Roots of Mathematics 2nd ed London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 691 00659 8 Katz Victor J 1998 A History of Mathematics An Introduction 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 321 01618 8 Katz Victor J 2007 The Mathematics of Egypt Mesopotamia China India and Islam A Sourcebook Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11485 9 Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 3 Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and the Earth Taipei Caves Books Ltd Restivo Sal 1992 Mathematics in Society and History Sociological Inquiries Dordrecht Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 1 4020 0039 1 Further reading editBraunmuhl Anton von 1900 1903 Vorlesungen uber Geschichte der Trigonometrie Lectures on the History of Trigonometry in German B G Teubner Kennedy Edward S 1969 The History of Trigonometry Historical Topics for the Mathematics Classroom NCTM Yearbooks Vol 31 National Council of Teachers of Mathematics pp 333 375 Maor Eli 1998 Trigonometric Delights Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9780691202204 ISBN 0691057540 Archived from the original on 2003 07 11 Ostermann Alexander Wanner Gerhard 2012 Trigonometry Geometry by Its History Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics Springer pp 113 155 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 29163 0 ISBN 978 3 642 29162 3 Van Brummelen Glen 2009 The Mathematics of the Heavens and the Earth The Early History of Trigonometry Princeton University Press Van Brummelen Glen 2021 The Doctrine of Triangles A History of Modern Trigonometry Princeton University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of trigonometry amp oldid 1174724797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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