Abū al-Wafāʾ Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad ibn Yaḥyā ibn Ismāʿīl ibn al-ʿAbbās al-Būzjānī or Abū al-Wafā Būzhjānī (, ; 10 June 940 – 15 July 998) mathematician and astronomer who worked in Baghdad. He made important innovations in spherical trigonometry, and his work on arithmetic for businessmen contains the first instance of using negative numbers in a medieval Islamic text.

He is also credited with compiling the tables of sines and tangents at 15' intervals. He also introduced the secant and cosecant functions, as well studied the interrelations between the six trigonometric lines associated with an arc. He was a contemporary of the distinguished scientists Abū Sahl al-Qūhī and al-Sijzi who were in Baghdad at the time and others such as Abu Nasr Mansur, Abu-Mahmud Khojandi, Kushyar Gilani and al-Biruni. In Baghdad, he received patronage from members of the Buyid court.

Astronomy

Abu al-Wafa' was the first to build a wall quadrant to observe the sky. The result was very close to present-day calculations, showing a difference of approximately 1 hour between the two longitudes. Abu al-Wafa is also known to have worked with Abū Sahl al-Qūhī, who was a famous maker of astronomical instruments. While what is extant from his works lacks theoretical innovation, his observational data were used by many later astronomers, including al-Biruni.

Almagest

Among his works on astronomy, only the first seven treatises of his Almagest (Kitāb al-Majisṭī) are now extant. The work covers numerous topics in the fields of plane and spherical trigonometry, planetary theory, and solutions to determine the direction of Qibla. and may have discovered the law of sines for spherical triangles, however, other scholars like Abu-Mahmud Khojandi have been credited with the latter achievement:

:<math>\frac{\sin A}{\sin a} = \frac{\sin B}{\sin b}

= \frac{\sin C}{\sin c}</math>

where <math>A, B, C</math> are the sides of the triangle (measured in radians on the unit sphere) and <math>a, b, c</math> are the opposing angles.

Some sources suggest that he introduced the tangent function, although other sources give the credit for this innovation to al-Marwazi.

  • "A Book on What Is Necessary from the Science of Arithmetic for Scribes and Businessmen", ( Kitāb fī mā yaḥtāj ilayh al-kuttāb wa’l-ʿummāl min ʾilm al-ḥisāb). This is the first book where negative numbers have been used in the medieval Islamic texts.

He also wrote translations and commentaries on the algebraic works of Diophantus, al-Khwārizmī, and Euclid's Elements.

Legacy

  • The crater Abul Wáfa on the Moon is named after him.
  • On 10 June 2015, Google changed its logo in memory of Abu al-Wafa' Buzjani.

Notes

References

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