Home  ›  Abu Kamil

Abu Kamil

Kamil Abu Shoja-bin Aslam Abu Kamil Shuja or Ibn Aslam ( Arabic : ), mathematician Egypt , better known by the name of Al-Hasib Al-Misri was probably born in Egypt to 850 , died circa 930.

This is one of the successors of Al-Khwarizmi and plays a major role in the development of algebra. He proposes, in his Algebra, 69 problems of the first and second degrees, applications of algebra to pentagon and regular decagon , the Diophantine equations. He handles brilliantly roots and exposes the resolution of the quadratic equation of the form x + qx = p, only when the solutions are positive.

As for Al-Khwarizmi, all his work on the equations is only expressed in words.

His work has greatly influenced the work of Leonardo of Pisa (Fibonacci), which will broadcast the thirteenth century in Europe know algebraic Arabic.

The great figures of medieval Islam
Abu Kamil Ibn al-Baitar Abu Nuwas Al-Battani Al-Jazari Al-Maari Abu Midian Abdeslam Ben Mchich Shadhili Ahmad ibn Idris Al-Bakri Al-Biruni Taqi al-Din Alhazen Al-Kashi Al-Kindi Averroes Avicenna Al Idrissi Abbas Ibn Firnas Al-Marwazi Ibn al-Nadim Ibn Khaldun Ibrahim ibn Sinan Jabir Ibn Hayyan Hassan al-Wazzan Omar Khayyam Ibn al Khatib Al Maqqari Al-Khwarizmi Ibn Fadlan Ibn Nafis Abu Al-Qasim Ali Quchtchi Al-Soufi Ibn Battuta Al-Hallaj Al-Razi Qadi-zadeh Roumi Nasir ad-Din at- Tusi Aboul-Wafa Sinan Tabari Al-Farabi Al-Ghazali Ibn Arabi Jalal Ud Din Rumi Ibn Taymiyyah Farid al-Din Attar Saadi Avenpace Ibn Tufayl Ibn Hazm

Leave a Reply

0 vote, average: 0.00 out of 50 vote, average: 0.00 out of 50 vote, average: 0.00 out of 51 vote, average: 0.00 out of 50 votes, average: 0.00 out of 5 (0 votes, average: 0.00 out of 5, rated)
Loading ... Loading ...
Help us improve the wiki Send Your Comments