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Takebe Kenkō

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Takebe Katahiro (建部 賢弘, 1664 - August 24, 1739), also known as Takebe Kenkō, was a Japanese mathematician in the Edo period.[1]

Biography

Takebe was the favorite student of Seki Takakazu[1] Takebe is considered to have extended and disseminated Seki's work.[2]

In 1706, Takebe was offered a position in the Tokugawa shogunate's department of ceremonies.[1]

In 1719, Takebe's new map of Japan was completed; and the work was highly valued for its quality and detail.[1]

Shogun Yoshimune honored Takebe with rank and successively better positions in the shogunate.[3]

Legacy

Takebe played critical role in the development of the Enri (円理, "circle principle") - a crude analogon to the western calculus. He also created charts for trigonometric functions.[4]

He obtained power series expansion of (arcsin(x))^2 in 1722, 15 years earlier than Euler. This was the first power series expansion obtained in Wasan. This result was first conjectured by heavy numeric computation.

He used Richardson extrapolation.

He also computated 41 digits of , based on polygon approximation and Richardson extrapolation.

Takebe Prizes

In the context of its 50th anniversary celebrations, the Mathematical Society of Japan established the Takebe Prize and the Takebe Prizes for the encouragement of young people who show promise as mathematicians.[4]

Selected works

In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about Takebe Kenko, OCLC/WorldCat encompasses roughly 10+ works in 1o+ publications in 3 languages and 10+ library holdings.[5]

See also

Notes

References

  • Endō Toshisada (1896). History of mathematics in Japan (日本數學史史, Dai Nihon sūgakush). Tōkyō: _____. OCLC 122770600
  • Horiuchi, Annick. (1994). Les Mathematiques Japonaises a L'Epoque d'Edo (1600–1868): Une Etude des Travaux de Seki Takakazu (?-1708) et de Takebe Katahiro (1664–1739). Paris: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin. 10-ISBN 2711612139/13-ISBN 9782711612130; OCLC 318334322
  • Selin, Helaine, ed. (1997). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Dordrecht: Kluwer/Springer. 10-ISBN 0792340663/13-ISBN 9780792340669; OCLC 186451909
  • David Eugene Smith and Yoshio Mikami. (1914). A History of Japanese Mathematics. Chicago: Open Court Publishing. OCLC 1515528 -- note alternate online, full-text copy at archive.org
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Takebe Katahiro", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews

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