2450 BC - Egypt, first systematic method for the approximative calculation of the circle on the basis of the Sacred Triangle 3-4-5,
1650 BC - Rhind Papyrus, copy of a lost scroll from around 1850 BC, the scribe Ahmes presents first known aproximate value of π at 3.16 and first attempt at squaring the circle.
750 - Al-Khawarizmi - Considered father of modern algebra. First mathematician to work on the details of 'Arithmetic and Algebra of inheritance' besides the systematisation of the theory of linear and quadratic equations.
895 - Thabit ibn Qurra - The only surviving fragment of his original work contains a chapter on the solution and properties of cubic equations.
975 - Al-Batani - Extended the Indian concepts of sine and cosine to other trigonometrical ratios, like tangent, secant and their reciprocals. Derived the formula: sin α = tan α / Ö (1+tan˛ α) and cos α = 1 / Ö(1 + tan˛ α).
1020 - Abul Wafa - Gave this famous formula: sin (α + β) = sin α cos β + sin β cos α. Also discussed the quadrature of the parabola and the volume of the paraboloid.
1030 - Ali Ahmed Nasawi - Develops the division of days into 24 hours, hours into 60 minutes and minutes into 60 seconds.
1070 - Omar Khayyam begins to write Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra and classifies cubic equations. Invented the second and third degree of quadratic equations.
1668 - Nicholas Mercator and William Brouncker discover an infinite series for the logarithm while attempting to calculate the area under a hyperbolic segment,
1811 - Carl Friedrich Gauss discusses the meaning of integrals with complex limits and briefly examines the dependence of such integrals on the chosen path of integration,
1824 - Niels Henrik Abel partially proves that the general quintic or higher equations cannot be solved by a general formula involving only arithmetical operations and roots,
1825 - Augustin-Louis Cauchy presents the Cauchy integral theorem for general integration paths -- he assumes the function being integrated has a continuous derivative,
1825 - Augustin-Louis Cauchy introduces the theory of residues in complex analysis,
1831 - Mikhail Vasilievich Ostrogradsky rediscovers and gives the first proof of the divergence theorem of earlier described by Lagrange, Gauss and Green,
1870 - Felix Klein constructs an analytic geometry for Lobachevski's geometry thereby establishing its self-consistency and the logical independence of Euclid's fifth postulate,
1878 - Charles Hermite solves the general quintic equation by means of elliptic and modular functions
1882 - Carl Louis Ferdinand von Lindemann proves that π is transcendental and that therefore the circle cannot be squared with a compass and straightedge,
1895 - Diederik Korteweg and Gustav de Vries derive the KdV equation to describe the development of long solitary water waves in a canal of rectangular cross section,
1908 - Josip Plemelj solves the Riemman problem about the existence of a differential equation with a given monodromic group and uses Sokhotsky - Plemelj formulae,
1943 - Kenneth Levenberg proposes a method for nonlinear least squares fitting,
1948 - John von Neumann mathematically studies self-reproducing machines,
1949 - John von Neumann computes π to 2,037 decimal places using ENIAC,
1950 - Stanislaw Ulam and John von Neumann present cellular automata dynamical systems,
1953 - Nicholas Metropolis introduces the idea of thermodynamic simulated annealing algorithms,
1955 - Enrico Fermi, John Pasta, and Stanislaw Ulam numerically study a nonlinear spring model of heat conduction and discover solitary wave type behavior,
1963 - Martin Kruskal and Norman Zabusky analytically study the Fermi-Pasta-Ulam heat conduction problem in the continuum limit and find that the KdV equation governs this system,
1965 - Martin Kruskal and Norman Zabusky numerically study colliding solitary waves in plasmas and find that they do not disperse after collisions,
1983 - Gerd Faltings proves the Mordell conjecture and thereby shows that there are only finitely many whole number solutions for each exponent of Fermat's last theorem,
1987 - Yasumasa Kanada, David Bailey, Jonathan Borwein, and Peter Borwein use iterative modular equation approximations to elliptic integrals and a NEC SX-2 supercomputer to compute π to 134 million decimal places,
2002 - Yasumasa Kanada, Y. Ushiro, Hisayasu Kuroda, Makoto Kudoh and a team of nine more compute π to 1241 billion digits using a Hitachi 64-node supercomputer,
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