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Ancient Babylonians 'first to use geometry' | Ancient Babylonians 'first to use geometry' |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Sophisticated geometry - the branch of mathematics that deals with shapes - was being used at least 1,400 years earlier than previously thought, a study suggests. | Sophisticated geometry - the branch of mathematics that deals with shapes - was being used at least 1,400 years earlier than previously thought, a study suggests. |
Research shows that the Ancient Babylonians were using geometrical calculations to track Jupiter across the night sky. | Research shows that the Ancient Babylonians were using geometrical calculations to track Jupiter across the night sky. |
Previously, the origins of this technique had been traced to the 14th Century. | Previously, the origins of this technique had been traced to the 14th Century. |
The new study is published in Science. | The new study is published in Science. |
Its author, Prof Mathieu Ossendrijver, from the Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany, said: "I wasn't expecting this. It is completely fundamental to physics, and all branches of science use this method." | Its author, Prof Mathieu Ossendrijver, from the Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany, said: "I wasn't expecting this. It is completely fundamental to physics, and all branches of science use this method." |
Stargazers | Stargazers |
The Ancient Babylonians once lived in what is now Iraq and Syria. The civilisation emerged in about 1,800 BC. | The Ancient Babylonians once lived in what is now Iraq and Syria. The civilisation emerged in about 1,800 BC. |
Clay tablets engraved with their Cuneiform writing system have already shown these people were advanced in astronomy. | Clay tablets engraved with their Cuneiform writing system have already shown these people were advanced in astronomy. |
"They wrote reports about what they saw in the sky," Prof Ossendrijver told the BBC World Service's Science in Action programme. | "They wrote reports about what they saw in the sky," Prof Ossendrijver told the BBC World Service's Science in Action programme. |
"And they did this over a very long period of time, over centuries." | "And they did this over a very long period of time, over centuries." |
But this latest research shows they were also way ahead when it came to maths. | But this latest research shows they were also way ahead when it came to maths. |
It had been thought that complex geometry was first used by scholars in Oxford and Paris in medieval times. | |
They used curves to trace the position and velocity of moving objects. | They used curves to trace the position and velocity of moving objects. |
But now scientists believe the Babylonians developed this technique around 350 BC. | But now scientists believe the Babylonians developed this technique around 350 BC. |
Prof Ossendrijver examined five Babylonian tablets that were excavated in the 19th Century, and which are now held in the British Museum's archives. | Prof Ossendrijver examined five Babylonian tablets that were excavated in the 19th Century, and which are now held in the British Museum's archives. |
The script reveals that they were using four-sided shapes, called trapezoids, to calculate when Jupiter would appear in the night sky, and also the speed and distance that it travelled. | The script reveals that they were using four-sided shapes, called trapezoids, to calculate when Jupiter would appear in the night sky, and also the speed and distance that it travelled. |
"This figure - a rectangle with a slanted top - describes how the velocity of a planet, which is Jupiter, changes with time," he said. | "This figure - a rectangle with a slanted top - describes how the velocity of a planet, which is Jupiter, changes with time," he said. |
"We have a figure where one axis, the horizontal side, represents time, and the other axis, the vertical side, represents velocity. | "We have a figure where one axis, the horizontal side, represents time, and the other axis, the vertical side, represents velocity. |
"The area of trapezoid gives you the distance travelled by Jupiter along its orbit. | "The area of trapezoid gives you the distance travelled by Jupiter along its orbit. |
"What is so special is this type of graph is unknown from antiquity - so making figures of motion in this rather abstract space of velocity against time - this is something very, very new." | "What is so special is this type of graph is unknown from antiquity - so making figures of motion in this rather abstract space of velocity against time - this is something very, very new." |
He added that there was evidence that the Greeks used a "more straightforward" form of geometry, which dealt with the spatial relationships between the Earth and the planets rather than the concepts of time and velocity. | |
Prof Ossendrijver told the BBC that it was unclear how common this technique was. | Prof Ossendrijver told the BBC that it was unclear how common this technique was. |
"It could be that there was an earlier tablet, written by a genius, by one individual, who came up with this new way of doing astronomy. | "It could be that there was an earlier tablet, written by a genius, by one individual, who came up with this new way of doing astronomy. |
"It could also be that in fact this is a method that was more widely applied by different scholars. We don't know." | "It could also be that in fact this is a method that was more widely applied by different scholars. We don't know." |
Follow Rebecca on Twitter | Follow Rebecca on Twitter |
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