Aryabhatta is the first of the great astronomers
of the classical age of Indian mathematics and Indian astronomy.
He was born in Kerala, in 476 AD but
later lived in Kusumapura, which his commentator Bhaskara I (629 AD) identifies
with pataliputra (modern Patna) in Bihar.
His first name “Arya” is hardly a
south Indian name while “Bhatt” (or Bhatta) is a typical north Indian name even
found today specially among the trader community.
Aryabhatta studied at the University of Nalanda. One
of his major works was Aryabhatiya written in 499 AD. His book aryabhatiya
covers astronomical and mathematical theories in which the earth was taken to
be spinning on its axis and the periods of the planets were given with respect
to the sun.
He is the man who found the number
zero (0). After the arrival of zero the number system had changed to new
strategy.
Aryabhatta believes that the moon and
planets shine by reflected sunlight and he also believes that the orbits of the
planets are ellipses. He correctly explains the causes of eclipses of the Sun
and the Moon. His value for the length of the year at 365 days 6 hours 12
minutes 30 seconds is remarkably close to the true value which is about 365
days 6 hours. In this book, the day was reckoned from one sunrise to the next,
whereas in his Aryabhata-siddhanta he took the day from one midnight to
another. There was also difference in some astronomical parameters.
Aryabhatta was the first to explain how the Lunar
Eclipse and the Solar Eclipse happened. Aryabhatta also gave close
approximation for Pi. In the Aryabhatiya, he wrote-“Add 4 to 100, multiply by
8, then add 62000 and then divided by 20000. The result is approximately the
circumference of a circle of diameter twenty thousand. By this rule the
relation of the circumference to diameter is given.” In other words, p ~
62832/20000= 3.1416, correct to four rounded – off decimal places.
Aryabhatta
was the first astronomers to make an attempt at measuring the earth’s
circumference. Aryabhata accurately calculated the earth’s circumference as
24835 miles, which was only 0.2 % smaller than the actual value of 24,902
miles. This approximation remained the most accurate for over a thousand years.
Aryabhatiya was translated into Latin in the 13th
century. Through this translation, European mathematician got to know methods
for calculating the areas of triangles, volumes of spheres as well as square
and cube root.
Aryabhatta’s ideas about eclipses and the sun being the sources
of moonlight may not have caused much of an impression on European astronomers
as by then they had come to know of these facts through the observations of
Copernicus and Galileo. Considering that Aryabhatta discovered these facts 1500
years ago, and 1000 years before Copernicus and Galileo makes him an early
pioneer of this field. Aryabhatta – Siddhanta were reliable for practical
purpose of fixing the Panchanga (Hindu Calendar) .
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