Al khawarizmi made remarkable and distinguished contributions. He conceived the idea of using letters instead of numbers to solve mathematical problems and this branch of mathematics is known today as algebra. His famous treatise "hisbul jubr-wal-Muqabla" is the first work on analytical algebra. He also invented the term logarithm(algorithm).
the best answer: zero
The modern number system were first invented by a Muslim mathematician which later converted into current established digits and numbers. Also "Algebra" was invented by a Muslim mathematician Jaaber.
Al-Khawarizm
All the digits! Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi gave the West all of the Hindu digits and much more besides. Please see the link.
Al khwarizmi
Al-khwarizmi was a muslim mathematician who invented algebra.
Islamic fundamentalism simply means following and practicing the fundamentals of Islam. Every Muslims should be fundamentalist. Just like every mathematician should follow and practice the fundamentals of Mathematics, until he does that, he is not a good mathematician. Similar, until a Muslim follows the basic and fundamental principles of Islam, he is not a good Muslim.
Willebrod Snellius was a Dutch mathematician and astronomer in the 16th and 17th centuries. For years he was credited with discovering the law of refraction, but that distinction goes to a Muslim physicist and mathematician named Ibn Sahl who discovered it over 600 years earlier.
Yes, he is a Muslim convert from Christianity.
no, because of the work of Albert Durer, and the work of a famous Muslim mathematician and optics writer. Answer 2: He was not seen as a plagiarist.
Euclid was a Greek Mathematician from Alexandria (Egypt) and his book, the Elements, was the first systematic exposition of the subject. So the answer to the queston is "No".
Ibn Sahl, a Muslim physicist and mathematician, is credited with discovering the law of refraction in the 10th century. He described how light bends as it passes from one medium to another.