Nilakantha somayaji

  1. The land of mathematics: Nilakantha Somayaji
  2. Pi in Pascal's Triangle
  3. The contribution of Kelallur nilakantha somayaji to astronomy by N. K. Sundareswaran
  4. Nilakantha (1444
  5. Jyeṣṭhadeva
  6. Nilakantha Somayaji
  7. The land of mathematics: Nilakantha Somayaji
  8. The contribution of Kelallur nilakantha somayaji to astronomy by N. K. Sundareswaran
  9. Jyeṣṭhadeva
  10. Nilakantha (1444


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The land of mathematics: Nilakantha Somayaji

Nilakantha Somayaji (1444-1544), from Kerala, was a major Indian mathematician and astronomer of the Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics and was a student of Damodara. Later, he lived in Tryambakeshwar. Among his many influential books, he wrote the comprehensive astronomical treatise Tantrasamgraha in 1501. He also wrote the Aryabhatiya Bhasya, which contains work on infinite series expansions, problems of algebra, spherical geometry, and many results of calculus. Grahapareeksakrama is a manual on making observations in astronomy based on instruments of the time. The Tantrasamgraha 432 Sanskrit verses divided into 8 chapters, and it covers various aspects of Indian astronomy. It is based on the epicyclic and eccentric models of planetary motion. Description of chapters below Chapter 1: deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. Chapter 2: deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. Chapter 3: Treatise on shadow deal; Various problems related with the sun's position on the celestial sphere; The relationships of its ex-pressions in the three systems of coordinates namely ecliptic, equatorial and horizontal coordinates. Chapter 4: on the lunar eclipse and On the solar eclipse Chapter 5: treat various aspects of the eclipses of the sun and the moon Chapter 6: vyatipata and deals with the complete deviation of the longitudes of the sun and the moon Chapter 7: visibility computation discusses the rising and setting of the moon and planets Chapter 8: el...

Pi in Pascal's Triangle

$\displaystyle\pi = 3+\frac $ This is a remarkable series for $\pi$ that I could not find anywhere else. I'll give it two proofs: a short one that reduces it to Nilakantha's series, and another, due to Jonas Castillo Toloza, that thus gives an independent derivation of the latter. These deserve a Pascal's Triangle and the Binomial Coefficients • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pi in Pascal's Triangle • • • • Copyright © 1996-2018 70811082

The contribution of Kelallur nilakantha somayaji to astronomy by N. K. Sundareswaran

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Nilakantha (1444

Biography Nilakantha was born into a Namputiri Brahmin family which came from South Malabar in Kerala. The Nambudiri is the main caste of Kerala. It is an orthodox caste whose members consider themselves descendants of the ancient Vedic religion. He was born in a house called Kelallur which it is claimed coincides with the present Etamana in the village of Trkkantiyur near Tirur in south India. His father was Jatavedas and the family belonged to the Gargya gotra, which was a Indian caste that prohibits marriage to anyone outside the caste. The family followed the Ashvalayana sutra which was a manual of sacrificial ceremonies in the Rigveda, a collection of Vedic hymns. He worshipped the personified deity Soma who was the "master of plants" and the healer of disease. This explains the name Somayaji which means he was from a family qualified to conduct the Soma ritual. Nilakantha studied astronomy and Vedanta, one of the six orthodox systems of Indian Hindu philosophy, under the teacher Ravi. He was also taught by Damodra who was the son of The Tantrasamgraha ( Strategy collection ) is his major astronomy treatise written in 1501. It consists of 432 Sanskrit verses divided into 8 chapters, and it covers various aspects of Indian astronomy. It is based on the epicyclic and eccentric models of planetary motion. The first two chapters deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. The third chapter Treatise on shadow deals with various problems related with the sun's posi...

Jyeṣṭhadeva

Pupil of Jyeṣṭhadeva ( c. 1500– c. 1575) c. 1350– c. 1425). He is best known as the author of Drk-karana a treatise on astronomical observations. According to K. V. Sarma, the name "Jyeṣṭhadeva" is most probably the Sanskritised form of his personal name in the local language Malayalam. Life period of Jyeṣṭhadeva [ ] There are a few references to Jyeṣṭhadeva scattered across several old manuscripts. Parakroda) born about the year 1500 CE. He was a pupil of Uparagakriyakrama, completed in 1592, aged benign teacher. From a few references in Drkkarana, a work believed to be of Jyeṣṭhadeva, one may conclude that Jyeṣṭhadeva lived up to about 1610 CE. Parangngottu, the family house of Jyeṣṭhadeva, still exists in the vicinity of Trikkandiyur and Alathiyur. Mathematical lineage [ ] Little is known about the mathematical traditions in Jyeshthadeva's works [ ] Jyeṣṭhadeva is known to have composed only two works, namely, Drkkarana. The former is commentary with rationales of Three factors make • It is composed in the spoken language of the local people, namely, the • The work is in prose, again in contrast to the prevailing style of writing even technical manuals in verse. All the other notable works of the • Most importantly, See also [ ] • • • • References [ ] • ^ a b c (PDF). Indian Journal of History of Science. 26 (2): 185–207. Archived from (PDF) on 12 September 2014 . Retrieved 28 January 2010. • • C. K. Raju (2001). (PDF). Philosophy East & West. 51 (3): 325–362. . Retriev...

Nilakantha Somayaji

Ta članek vključuje njegovi viri pa ostajajo nejasni, ker nima Prosimo, pomagajte ga (mesec ni naveden) Keļallur Nilakantha Somayaji ali Keļallur Comatiri, Njegovo najpomembnejše delo je Biografija [ | ] Kelallur Nilakantha Somayaji se je rodil 14. junija 1444 v majhni vasi v bližini Tirurja v okrožju Nilakantha je bil Imel je ženo Aryo in dva sinova, Ramo in Dakshinamurtija. Naziv Somayaji si je pridobil z izvedbo obreda Somayajna po naboodirski tradiciji. Umrl je leta 1544 in s tem dočakal starost sto let. Šolanje v Kerali [ | ] Nilakantha je obiskoval znano indijsko šolo v Kerali, ki sta jo v 14. stoletju ustanovila Tantrasamgraha [ | ] • Prvi dve poglavji obravnavata gibanje in položaje planetov. • Tretje poglavje obravnava različne probleme, povezane s položajem • Četrto in peto poglavje predstavljata razpravi o • Šesto poglavje obravnava premikanje • Sedmo poglavje govori o vzhajanju ter zahajanju • Zadnje poglavje govori o višini luninih vrhov, preučuje velikost dela Dela [ | ] Poleg • v delu • • • delo • • • delo • delo • v delu • delo Viri in literatura [ | ] • Nilakantha Somayaji. [citirano dne 30.11.2022]. Dostopno na naslovu: • Nilakantha Somayaji. [citirano dne 30.11.2022]. Dostopno na naslovu: • Nilakantha Somayaji. [citirano dne 30.11.2022]. Dostopno na naslovu: • Nilakantha Somayaji: Astronomer/Mathematician of Kreala School of Astronomy. [citirano dne 30.11.2022]. Dostopno na naslovu: • Vyatīpāta. [citirano dne 30.12.2022]. Dostopno na naslovu: Sklici [ | ...

The land of mathematics: Nilakantha Somayaji

Nilakantha Somayaji (1444-1544), from Kerala, was a major Indian mathematician and astronomer of the Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics and was a student of Damodara. Later, he lived in Tryambakeshwar. Among his many influential books, he wrote the comprehensive astronomical treatise Tantrasamgraha in 1501. He also wrote the Aryabhatiya Bhasya, which contains work on infinite series expansions, problems of algebra, spherical geometry, and many results of calculus. Grahapareeksakrama is a manual on making observations in astronomy based on instruments of the time. The Tantrasamgraha 432 Sanskrit verses divided into 8 chapters, and it covers various aspects of Indian astronomy. It is based on the epicyclic and eccentric models of planetary motion. Description of chapters below Chapter 1: deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. Chapter 2: deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. Chapter 3: Treatise on shadow deal; Various problems related with the sun's position on the celestial sphere; The relationships of its ex-pressions in the three systems of coordinates namely ecliptic, equatorial and horizontal coordinates. Chapter 4: on the lunar eclipse and On the solar eclipse Chapter 5: treat various aspects of the eclipses of the sun and the moon Chapter 6: vyatipata and deals with the complete deviation of the longitudes of the sun and the moon Chapter 7: visibility computation discusses the rising and setting of the moon and planets Chapter 8: el...

The contribution of Kelallur nilakantha somayaji to astronomy by N. K. Sundareswaran

Wikipedia citation Close Copy and paste this code into your Wikipedia page. Created by Imported from

Jyeṣṭhadeva

Pupil of Jyeṣṭhadeva ( c. 1500– c. 1575) c. 1350– c. 1425). He is best known as the author of Drk-karana a treatise on astronomical observations. According to K. V. Sarma, the name "Jyeṣṭhadeva" is most probably the Sanskritised form of his personal name in the local language Malayalam. Life period of Jyeṣṭhadeva [ ] There are a few references to Jyeṣṭhadeva scattered across several old manuscripts. Parakroda) born about the year 1500 CE. He was a pupil of Uparagakriyakrama, completed in 1592, aged benign teacher. From a few references in Drkkarana, a work believed to be of Jyeṣṭhadeva, one may conclude that Jyeṣṭhadeva lived up to about 1610 CE. Parangngottu, the family house of Jyeṣṭhadeva, still exists in the vicinity of Trikkandiyur and Alathiyur. Mathematical lineage [ ] Little is known about the mathematical traditions in Jyeshthadeva's works [ ] Jyeṣṭhadeva is known to have composed only two works, namely, Drkkarana. The former is commentary with rationales of Three factors make • It is composed in the spoken language of the local people, namely, the • The work is in prose, again in contrast to the prevailing style of writing even technical manuals in verse. All the other notable works of the • Most importantly, See also [ ] • • • • References [ ] • ^ a b c (PDF). Indian Journal of History of Science. 26 (2): 185–207. Archived from (PDF) on 12 September 2014 . Retrieved 28 January 2010. • • C. K. Raju (2001). (PDF). Philosophy East & West. 51 (3): 325–362. . Retriev...

Nilakantha (1444

Biography Nilakantha was born into a Namputiri Brahmin family which came from South Malabar in Kerala. The Nambudiri is the main caste of Kerala. It is an orthodox caste whose members consider themselves descendants of the ancient Vedic religion. He was born in a house called Kelallur which it is claimed coincides with the present Etamana in the village of Trkkantiyur near Tirur in south India. His father was Jatavedas and the family belonged to the Gargya gotra, which was a Indian caste that prohibits marriage to anyone outside the caste. The family followed the Ashvalayana sutra which was a manual of sacrificial ceremonies in the Rigveda, a collection of Vedic hymns. He worshipped the personified deity Soma who was the "master of plants" and the healer of disease. This explains the name Somayaji which means he was from a family qualified to conduct the Soma ritual. Nilakantha studied astronomy and Vedanta, one of the six orthodox systems of Indian Hindu philosophy, under the teacher Ravi. He was also taught by Damodra who was the son of The Tantrasamgraha ( Strategy collection ) is his major astronomy treatise written in 1501. It consists of 432 Sanskrit verses divided into 8 chapters, and it covers various aspects of Indian astronomy. It is based on the epicyclic and eccentric models of planetary motion. The first two chapters deal with the motions and longitudes of the planets. The third chapter Treatise on shadow deals with various problems related with the sun's posi...