Though the ruins at Harappa and Mohenjodaro in north-western
India and Pakistan have given us many clues about the lifestyle of
the Indus Valley Civilisation - probably the oldest civilisation
that existed on the Indian Subcontinent - they have not as yet
revealed any mathematical documents. The oldest records of Indian
mathematics hence date back to the period of the Aryans. Indian
mathematics has its roots in the Hindu religion, and has produced
some great mathematicians, the importance of whose work is still
being gauged.
Aryabhatta
In 476 CE (Common Era), the year of the fall of the Western
Roman Empire, Aryabhatta, the author of one of the oldest
mathematical texts, was born. His work, the Aryabhatiya, was
written in 499 in the form of verse. It contains rules for various
calculations in mathematics and astronomy. Aryabhatta put down
methods of finding the square and cube roots of numbers, correctly
stated the area of a triangle as half the product of its base and
altitude and that of a circle as the product of its circumference
and half its diameter. the Aryabhatiya also gives an approximation
for the value of pi as 62832/20000, which is 3.1416, or correct to
four decimal places (pi = 3.1415926535 up to ten decimal places;
it is an infinite decimal) which, however, was possibly influenced
by the value accepted by Greek mathematicians at the time.
The Decimal Number System
One facet of the Aryabhatiya which influenced later
mathematicians was the assertion that each place in a number was
ten times the preceding place, which defines the decimal
place-value numeration (the tens place is ten times the units
place, and so on.) From this initial breakthrough would later
arise the development of using only ten numerals for the entire
decimal number system, a norm in the modern era. (Previously,
individual symbols were used for numbers above nine). Added to
this was the adoption of zero as a placeholder; the Hindu notation
used a round goose egg as the symbol for the “empty” places in
the decimal system. Though the individual discoveries of the place
system and a symbol for the ten numerals occurred concurrently
(and was possibly shared mutually) in Greece and China, it was in
India that they were combined to give rise to the modern decimal
system.
The Origin Of Trigonometry
The Indians introduced the equivalent of the sine function
linking the length of a circular arc and the angle subtended by it
at the centre of the circle. In Aryabhatiya, the length of the arc
of a circle of radius 3438 units is recorded for twenty-four
different central angles from 3.75 degrees to 90 degrees. On
dividing these lengths by the radius, we obtain a reasonably
accurate approximation of the sine values of these angles. The
tables also include an approximation for the versed sine (1 -
cosine) of these angles. These tables replaced the Greek tables of
chords and today, the sine function is the basis of trigonometry.
Brahmagupta
Brahmagupta lived in Central India about a century after
Aryabhatta and put forward various concepts in mensuration and
algebra, such as a formula for the area of a cyclic quadrilateral.
He established a general form for the solution of a quadratic
equation, and recognised the presence of two roots.
Brahmagupta’s work is the first instance of operations involving
negative numbers and zero (the Greeks could not represent their
concept of nothingness as a number, hence the absence of zero in
their early works.) Brahmagupta also recognised the irrational
roots of numbers as numbers even though they seemed to be
incommensurable. This lead was followed by mathematicians until
the nineteenth century when the real number system was firmly
established.
Brahmagupta also was the first to come out with a general
solution for the indeterminate equation (one with no definite
roots) ax + by = c (known as the Diophantine equation after Greek
mathematician Diophantus). He stated that the roots would be in
the form :
Interestingly, Diophantus himself could not arrive at this
general form for his equation; he was content with just one
solution for it.
Hindu mathematicians undoubtedly borrowed much from their
contemporaries in Greece,
Babylon and China,
but they picked out those concepts that appealed to them,
developed on them without apprehension and approached them with an
open mind. Though their influence is rarely seen in analytical
geometry and calculus, they gave the world the sine function and
established the numeral system that is in use by most of the
civilised world today.