Jump to content

Fibonacci: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Excirial (talk | contribs)
m Reverted edits by 198.41.70.101 to last revision by Excirial (HG)
Line 36: Line 36:
In the 19th century, a statue of Fibonacci was constructed and erected in Pisa. Today it is located in the western gallery of the [[Camposanto Monumentale|Camposanto]], historical cemetery on the [[Piazza dei Miracoli]].<ref>[http://www.epsilones.com/documentos/d-fibonacci.html#fibonacci-ingles Fibonacci's Statue in Pisa]</ref>
In the 19th century, a statue of Fibonacci was constructed and erected in Pisa. Today it is located in the western gallery of the [[Camposanto Monumentale|Camposanto]], historical cemetery on the [[Piazza dei Miracoli]].<ref>[http://www.epsilones.com/documentos/d-fibonacci.html#fibonacci-ingles Fibonacci's Statue in Pisa]</ref>


your a fag and jelous
==''Liber Abaci''==
{{main|Liber Abaci}}
In the ''Liber Abaci''(1202), Fibonacci introduces the so-called ''modus Indorum'' (method of the Indians), today known as Arabic numerals (Sigler 2003; Grimm 1973). The book advocated numeration with the digits 0–9 and [[place value]]. The book showed the practical importance of the new [[numeral system]], using [[lattice multiplication]] and [[Egyptian fractions]], by applying it to commercial [[bookkeeping]], conversion of weights and measures, the calculation of interest, money-changing, and other applications. The book was well received throughout educated Europe and had a profound impact on European thought.

''Liber Abaci'' also posed, and solved, a problem involving the growth of a hypothetical population of rabbits based on idealized assumptions. The solution, generation by generation, was a sequence of numbers later known as [[Fibonacci number]]s. The number sequence was known to Indian mathematicians as early as the 6th century, but it was Fibonacci's ''Liber Abaci'' that introduced it to the West.


==Fibonacci sequence==
==Fibonacci sequence==

Revision as of 14:13, 25 March 2010

Template:Two other uses

Fibonacci
NationalityItalian
Known forFibonacci number
Fibonacci prime
Brahmagupta–Fibonacci identity
Fibonacci polynomials
Fibonacci pseudoprime
Fibonacci word
Reciprocal Fibonacci constant
Introduction of digital notation to Europe
Pisano period
Practical number
Scientific career
FieldsMathematician
Statue of Fibonacci. Camposanto, Pisa.

Leonardo Pisano Bogollo, (c. 1170 – c. 1250)[1] also known as Leonardo of Pisa, Leonardo Pisano, Leonardo Bonacci, Leonardo Fibonacci, or, most commonly, simply Fibonacci, was an Italian mathematician, considered by some "the most talented western mathematician of the Middle Ages."[2]

Fibonacci is best known to the modern world for:[3]

Biography

Leonardo Fibonacci was born around AD 1170 to Guglielmo Fibonacci, a wealthy Italian merchant. Guglielmo directed a trading post (by some accounts he was the consultant for Pisa) in Bugia, a port east of Algiers in the Almohad dynasty's sultanate in North Africa (now Bejaia, Algeria). As a young boy, Leonardo traveled with him to help; it was there he learned about the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.[5]

Recognizing that arithmetic with Hindu-Arabic numerals is simpler and more efficient than with Roman numerals, Fibonacci traveled throughout the Mediterranean world to study under the leading Arab mathematicians of the time. Leonardo returned from his travels around 1200. In 1202, at age 32, he published what he had learned in Liber Abaci (Book of Abacus or Book of Calculation), and thereby introduced Hindu-Arabic numerals to Europe.

Leonardo became an amicable guest of the Emperor Frederick II, who enjoyed mathematics and science. In 1240 the Republic of Pisa honored Leonardo, referred to as Leonardo Bigollo,[6] by granting him a salary.

In the 19th century, a statue of Fibonacci was constructed and erected in Pisa. Today it is located in the western gallery of the Camposanto, historical cemetery on the Piazza dei Miracoli.[7]

your a fag and jelous

Fibonacci sequence

In the Fibonacci sequence of numbers, each number is the sum of the previous two numbers, starting with 0 and 1. Thus the sequence begins 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610 etc.

The higher up in the sequence, the closer two consecutive "Fibonacci numbers" of the sequence divided by each other will approach the golden ratio (approximately 1 : 1.618 or 0.618 : 1).

The golden ratio was used widely in the Renaissance in paintings.

Books written by Fibonacci

See also

Notes

  1. ^ http://library.thinkquest.org/27890/biographies1.html
  2. ^ Howard Eves. An Introduction to the History of Mathematics. Brooks Cole, 1990: ISBN 0-03-029558-0 (6th ed.), p 261.
  3. ^ Leonardo Pisano - page 3: "Contributions to number theory". Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2006. Accessed 18 September 2006.
  4. ^ Parmanand Singh. "Acharya Hemachandra and the (so called) Fibonacci Numbers". Math. Ed. Siwan , 20(1):28-30, 1986. ISSN 0047-6269]
  5. ^ http://www.maths.surrey.ac.uk/hosted-sites/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibBio.html
  6. ^ See the incipit of Flos: "Incipit flos Leonardi bigolli pisani..." (quoted in the MS Word document Sources in Recreational Mathematics: An Annotated Bibliography by David Singmaster, 18 March 2004 - emphasis added), in English: "Here starts 'the flower' by Leonardo the wanderer of Pisa..."
    The basic meanings of "bigollo" appear to be "good-for-nothing" and "traveler" (so it could be translated by "vagrant", "vagabond" or "tramp"). A. F. Horadam contends a connotation of "bigollo" is "absent-minded" (see first footnote of "Eight hundred years young"), which is also one of the connotations of the English word "wandering". The translation "the wanderer" in the quote above tries to combine the various connotations of the word "bigollo" in a single English word.
  7. ^ Fibonacci's Statue in Pisa

References

  • Goetzmann, William N. and Rouwenhorst, K.Geert, The Origins of Value: The Financial Innovations That Created Modern Capital Markets (2005, Oxford University Press Inc, USA), ISBN 0195175719.
  • Grimm, R. E., "The Autobiography of Leonardo Pisano", Fibonacci Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 1, February 1973, pp. 99-104.
  • A. F. Horadam, "Eight hundred years young," The Australian Mathematics Teacher 31 (1975) 123-134.

Template:Persondata