Daily conversations

  Food & Restaurant

  Travel & Car
  Family
  Home
  Occupations
  Kitchen
  Week days & Seasons
  School
  Numbers
  Colours
  Parts of human body

  Things

  Persian language

  Persian alphabet

  Persian grammar

  Persian Music
  Persian foods
  Persian poems
  Iranian scientists
  English words of Persian origin

  Free Downloads

  Support

  Feedback

  Upload your video

  Search

Category  »  Iranian scientists                                Add to your favorites Start here Print Send this page to your friends  

Marvazi, astronomer and mathematician

Ahmad ibn 'Abdallah Habash al-Hasib al-Marwazi (Arabic: أحمد بن عبد الله المروازي حباش الحاسب) was a Persian astronomer and mathematician from Merv in Khorasan, Persia.

He flourished in Baghdad, and died a centenarian between 864 and 874. He worked under the Abbasid caliphs al-Ma'mun and al-Mu'tasim.

He made observations from 825 to 835, and compiled three astronomical tables: the first were still in the Hindu manner; the second, called the 'tested" tables, were the most important; they are likely identical with the "Ma'munic" or "Arabic" tables and may be a collective work of al-Ma'mun's astronomers; the third, called tables of the Shah, were smaller.

Apropos of the solar eclipse of 829, Habash gives us the first instance of a determination of time by an altitude (in this case, of the sun); a method which generally adopted by Muslim astronomers.

He also seems to have introduced the notion of "shadow," umbra (versa), equivalent to our tangent in trigonometry, and he compiled a table of such shadows which seems to be the earliest of its kind.

Source: wikipedia.org


Previous

Next


Related links:

Add this page to Your Favorites
 

Previous

Next

 

Email this page to:


Your email address:



 

 

 

 

 

 

About us | Contact us | Terms of use | Advertise here

Copyright © 2006 - 2008 Learn-Persian.com . All rights reserved.

About Iran Iran photos About us Contact us Advertise at Learn-Persian.com Svenska English Deutsch