Timeline of mathematics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A timeline of pure and applied mathematics

Contents

[edit] Before 1000 BC

[edit] 1st millennium BC

[edit] 1st millennium

[edit] 1000 - 1499

[edit] 16th century

  • 1501 - Nilakantha Somayaji writes the "Tantra Samgraha", which lays the foundation for a complete system of fluxions (derivatives), and expands on concepts from his previous text, the "Aryabhatiya Bhasya"
  • 1520 - Scipione dal Ferro develops a method for solving "depressed" cubic equations (cubic equations without an x2 term), but does not publish,
  • 1535 - Niccolo Tartaglia independently develops a method for solving depressed cubic equations but also does not publish,
  • 1539 - Gerolamo Cardano learns Tartaglia's method for solving depressed cubics and discovers a method for depressing cubics, thereby creating a method for solving all cubics,
  • 1540 - Lodovico Ferrari solves the quartic equation,
  • 1544 - Michael Stifel publishes "Arithmetica integra",
  • 1550 - Jyeshtadeva, a Kerala school mathematician, writes the "Yuktibhasa", the world's first calculus text, which gives detailed derivations of many calculus theorems and formulae
  • 1596 - Ludolf van Ceulen computes π to twenty decimal places using inscribed and circumscribed polygons,

[edit] 17th century

[edit] 18th century

[edit] 19th century

[edit] 20th century

[edit] 21st century

[edit] Notes

  1. This article is based on a timeline developed by Niel Brandt (1994) who has given permission for its use in Wikipedia. (See Talk:Timeline of mathematics.)
  2. In 1966 IBM printed a famous timeline poster called Men of Modern Mathematics for the years 1000 AD to 1950 AD. It was based on personal stories about (mainly Western) mathematicians and their mathematical achievements. The poster was designed by the famous Charles Eames, with the content concerning mathematicians contributed by Professor Raymond Redheffer of UCLA.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Elizabeth A. Thompson, MIT News Office, Math research team maps E8 http://www.huliq.com/15695/mathematicians-map-e8

[edit] External links