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The Quadratic Quandary So Many Methods, So Little Time

The Quadratic Quandary So Many Methods, So Little Time. Kelly Jackson Camden County College CCLR Spring 2011. Major General Stanley…. Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta the Pirates of Penzance "The Major General's Song"

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The Quadratic Quandary So Many Methods, So Little Time

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  1. The Quadratic QuandarySo Many Methods, So Little Time Kelly Jackson Camden County College CCLR Spring 2011

  2. Major General Stanley… • Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta the Pirates of Penzance • "The Major General's Song" "I am the very model of a modern Major-General, I've information vegetable, animal, and mineral, I know the kings of England, and I quote the fights historical, From Marathon to Waterloo, in order categorical; I'm very well acquainted too with matters mathematical, I understand equations, both the simple and quadratical, About binomial theorem I'm teeming with a lot o' news-- With many cheerful facts about the square of the hypotenuse."

  3. Does he have a brain? • After receiving his brains from the wizard in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow recites the following: • "The sum of the square roots of any two sides of an isosceles triangle is equal to the square root of the remaining side."

  4. What is it? • The term "quadratic" comes from quadratus, which is the Latin word for "square". Area = x2 x x

  5. What is it? • In mathematics, a quadratic equation is a polynomial equation of the second degree. The general form is: • where x represents a variable, and a, b, and c, constants, with a ≠ 0.

  6. Babylonians • Babylonians (about 400 BC) were the first to solve quadratic equations? • This is an over simplification • Babylonians had no notion of 'equation'. • Solved problems which, in our terminology, would give rise to a quadratic equation. • The method is essentially one of completing the square. • Problems had answers which were positive, since the usual answer was a length.

  7. Plimpton 322

  8. Egypt The first known solution of a quadratic equation is the one given in the Berlin papyrus from the Middle Kingdom (ca. 2160-1700 BC) in Egypt.

  9. Greeks • Pythagoras, 500BC • Knew that the ratio of the area of a square to its side length (its square root) was not always a whole number. • He would not accept that it could be irrational

  10. Greeks • In about 300 BC Euclid developed a geometrical approach. • Finding a length which in our notation was the root of a quadratic equation. • Euclid had no notion of equation, coefficients etc. but worked with purely geometrical quantities. • He did allow for irrational solutions.

  11. Greeks Diophantus, 3rd Century BCE • Diophantine equations are polynomial equations with integer coefficients to which only integer solutions are sought. • Most of the problems in Arithmetica lead to quadratic equations. • 3 different types of quadratic equations: • ax2 + bx = c • ax2 = bx + c • ax2 + c = bx • Diophantus was always satisfied with a rational solution and did not require a whole number which means he accepted fractions as solutions to his problems. • Diophantus considered negative or irrational square root solutions "useless", "meaningless", and even "absurd".

  12. India • Hindu mathematicians took the Babylonian methods further. • Brahmagupta (598-665 AD) gives an, almost modern, method which admits negative quantities. • He also used abbreviations for the unknown

  13. Arabs • The Arabs did not know about the advances of the Hindus so they had neither negative quantities nor abbreviations for their unknowns. • However al-Khwarizmi (800 BCE) gave a classification of different types of quadratics • no zero or negatives. • six chapters each devoted to a different type of equation (five to quadratics) • Equations made up of three types of quantities • roots, squares of roots and numbers • x, x2 and numbers.

  14. Five Types of Quadratics • Al-Khwārizmī

  15. Al-Khwārizmī One square, and ten roots of the same, are equal to thirty-nine dirhems. That is to say, what must be the square which, when increased by ten of its own roots, amounts to thirty-nine.

  16. Al-Khwārizmī • The solution is this: you halve the number of roots, which in the present instance yields five. This you multiply by itself; the product is twenty-five. Add this to thirty-nine; the sum is sixty-four. Now take the root of this, which is eight, and subtract half the number of roots, which is five; the remainder is three. This is the root of the square which you sought for; the square itself is nine.

  17. Al-Khwārizmī • In our symbols:

  18. Al-Khwārizmī • His rule: • The Quadratic Formula (with a=1):

  19. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  20. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  21. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  22. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  23. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  24. Al-KhwārizmīWhy Does it Work?

  25. Europe • Jewish Mathematician Abraham bar Hiyya Ha-Nasi of Spain • Latin name Savasorda, • book Liber embadorum published in 1145 • first book published in Europe to give the complete solution of the quadratic equation

  26. Europe • 1545 GirolamoCardano compiled the works related to the quadratic equations • Al-Khwarismi's solution with the Euclidean geometry. • He allows for the existence of complex, or imaginary numbers - that is, roots of negative numbers. • Amateur-mathematician François Viète, in France. • End of the 16th Century • Mathematical notation and symbolism • In 1637, when René Descartes • published La Géométrie, quadratic formula adopted the form we know today.

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