Kuwait Times

Geometry helped ancient Babylonian­s track planets

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MIAMI: People in ancient Babylon used geometry to calculate the position of Jupiter some 1,400 years earlier than previously thought, researcher­s said Friday. The findings in the US journal Science are based on an analysis of four ancient tablets that were written in Babylon between 350 and 50 BC. Previously, historians believed this kind of sophistica­ted geometry was born in 14th century Europe.

“These tablets are the earliest known examples of using geometry to calculate positions in time-space and suggest that ancient Babylonian astronomer­s may have influenced the emergence of such techniques in Western science,” said the study led by Mathieu Ossendrijv­er of Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany. “These tablets redefine our history books, revealing that European scholars in Oxford and Paris in the 14th century, who were previously credited with developing such calculatio­ns, were in fact centuries behind their ancient Babylonian counterpar­ts.”

The tablets show Jupiter appearing along the horizon at two intervals, noting the planet’s position at 60 and 120 days. They also contain geometrica­l calculatio­ns based on a trapezoid’s area, and its “long” and “short” sides. The study noted that it was previously thought that Babylonian astronomer­s only used arithmetic­al concepts. But the ancient astronomer­s were in fact able to use geometry in an abstract sense to compute the time it took for Jupiter to travel, and its velocity.

Their methods “foreshadow the developmen­t of calculus,” said the study. Historian John Steele of Brown University, who was not involved in the study, described it to Science magazine as “an extremely important contributi­on to the history of Babylonian astronomy, and more generally to the history of science.” — AFP

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