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ABU ABDULLAH AL-BATTANI
Abdallah Muhammad Ibn
Jabir Ibn Sinan al-Battani al-Harrani was born around 858 C.E. in Harran,
and according to one account, in Battan, a State of Harran. Battani was
first educated by his father Jabir Ibn San'an al-Battani, who was also a
well-known scientist. He then moved to Raqqa, situated on the bank of the
Euphrates, where he received advanced education and later on flourished as
a scholar. At the beginning of the 9th century, he migrated to Samarra,
where he worked till the end of his life in 929 C.E. He was of Sabian
origin, but was himself a Muslim.
Battani was a famous
astronomer, mathematician and astrologer. He has been held as one of the
greatest astronomic of Islam. He is responsible for a number of important
discoveries in astronomy, which was the result of a long career of 42
years of research beginning at Raqqa when he was young. His well-known
discovery is the remarkably accurate determination of the solar year as
being 365 days, 5 hours, 46 minutes and 24 seconds, which is very close to
the latest estimates. He found that the longitude of the sun's apogee had
increased by 16° , 47' since Ptolemy. This implied the important discovery
of the motion of the solar apsides and of a slow variation in the equation
of time. He did not believe in the trapidation of the equinoxes, although
Copernicus held it.
Al-Battani determined
with remarkable accuracy the obliquity of the ecliptic, the length of the
seasons and the true and mean orbit of the sun. He proved, in sharp
contrast to Ptolemy, the variation of the apparent angular diameter of the
sun and the possibility of annular eclipses. He rectified several orbits
of the moon and the planets and propounded a new and very ingenious theory
to determine the conditions of visibility of the new moon. His excellent
observations of lunar and solar eclipses were used by Dunthorne in 1749 to
determine the secular acceleration of motion of the moon. He also provided
very neat solutions by means of orthographic projection for some problems
of spherical trigonometry.
In mathematics, he was
the first to replace the use of Greek chords by sines, with a clear
understanding of their superiority. He also developed the concept of
cotangent and furnished their table in degrees.
He wrote a number of
books on astronomy and trigonometry. His most famous book was his
astronomical treatise with tables, which was translated into Latin in the
12th century and flourished as De scienta stellerum — De numeris
stellerum et motibus. An old translation of this is available of the
Vatican. His Zij was, in fact, more accurate than all others
written by that time.
His treatise on
astronomy was extremely influential in Europe till the Renaissance, with
translations available in several languages. His original discoveries both
in astronomy and trigonometry were of great consequence in the development
of these sciences.
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