How Imaginary Numbers Were Invented
November 1, 2021
- 0:38
- In 1494, Luca Pacioli who is Leonardo da Vinci's math teacher publishes "Summa de Arithmetica," a comprehensive summary of all mathematics known in Renaissance Italy at the time
- 3:42
- For thousands of years, mathematicians were oblivious to the negative solutions to their equations because they were dealing with things in the real world, lengths and areas and volumes.
- 4:28
- In the 11th century, Persian
mathematician Omar Khayyam identified 19 different cubic equations, again, keeping all coefficients positive
- 5:05
- Sometime around 1510, Scipione del Ferro finds a method to reliably solve depressed cubics
- 6:06
- Only on his deathbed in 1526 does he let it slip to his student Antonio Fior
- 6:26
- On February 12, 1535, Fior challenges mathematician Niccolo Fontana Tartaglia who has recently moved to Fior's hometown of Venice
- 10:36
- Tartaglia summarizes his method in an algorithm, a set of instructions.
- 11:25
- In Milan, on March 25, 1539 Tartaglia reveals his method to Gerolamo Cardano
- 12:07
- Cardano finds a way to turn any general cubic equation into a depressed cubic
- 12:43
- In 1542, Cardano travels to Bologna and finds the solution to the depressed cubic in del Ferro's old notebook and publishes the full solution to the cubic
- 13:16
- Cardano publishes "Ars Magna," The Great Art, an updated compendium of mathematics
- 16:19
- 10 years later, the Italian engineer Rafael Bombelli picks up where Cardano left off.
- 17:13
- Negative areas, which make no sense in reality, must exist as an intermediate step on the way to the solution
- 17:25
- In the 1600s, Francois Viete introduces the modern symbolic notation for algebra
- 17:39
- Rene Descartes makes heavy use of the square roots of negatives, popularizing them as a result
- 17:46
- He calls them imaginary numbers, a name that sticks, which is why Euler later introduces the letter i to represent the square root of negative one
- 18:20
- In 1925, Erwin Schrödinger is searching for a wave equation that governs the behavior of quantum particles building on de Broglie's insight that matter consists of waves
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