Solving cubic equations by a formula that involves only the elementary operations of sum, product, and exponentiation of the coefficients is one of the greatest results in 16th century mathematics. This was achieved by Girolamo Cardano's Ars Magna in 1545. Still, a deep, substantial difference between the quadratic and the cubic formula exists: while the quadratic formula only involves imaginary numbers when all the solutions are imaginary too, it may happen that the cubic formula contains imaginary numbers, even when the three solutions are anyway all real (and different). This means that a scholar of the time could stumble upon numerical cubic equations of which he already knew three (real) solutions and the cubic formula of which actually contains square roots of negative numbers. This will be lately called the “casus irreducibilis”. Cardano's De Regula Aliza (Basel, 1570) is (at least, partially) meant to try to overcome the problem entailed by it. Its (partial) analysis is the heart of this dissertation.

THE TELLING OF THE UNATTAINABLE ATTEMPT TO AVOID THE CASUS IRREDUCIBILIS FOR CUBIC EQUATIONS: CARDANO'S DE REGULA ALIZA. WITH A COMAPRED TRANSCRIPTION OF 1570 AND 1663 EDITIONS AND A PARTIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION / S.g. Confalonieri ; tutor: M. Panza ; cotutor: M. Galuzzi. Università degli Studi di Milano, 2013 Oct 12. 24. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2011. [10.13130/confalonieri-sara-giulia_phd2013-10-12].

THE TELLING OF THE UNATTAINABLE ATTEMPT TO AVOID THE CASUS IRREDUCIBILIS FOR CUBIC EQUATIONS: CARDANO'S DE REGULA ALIZA. WITH A COMAPRED TRANSCRIPTION OF 1570 AND 1663 EDITIONS AND A PARTIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION.

S.G. Confalonieri
2013

Abstract

Solving cubic equations by a formula that involves only the elementary operations of sum, product, and exponentiation of the coefficients is one of the greatest results in 16th century mathematics. This was achieved by Girolamo Cardano's Ars Magna in 1545. Still, a deep, substantial difference between the quadratic and the cubic formula exists: while the quadratic formula only involves imaginary numbers when all the solutions are imaginary too, it may happen that the cubic formula contains imaginary numbers, even when the three solutions are anyway all real (and different). This means that a scholar of the time could stumble upon numerical cubic equations of which he already knew three (real) solutions and the cubic formula of which actually contains square roots of negative numbers. This will be lately called the “casus irreducibilis”. Cardano's De Regula Aliza (Basel, 1570) is (at least, partially) meant to try to overcome the problem entailed by it. Its (partial) analysis is the heart of this dissertation.
12-ott-2013
tutor: M. Panza ; cotutor: M. Galuzzi
English
24
2011
MATEMATICA
Settore MAT/04 - Matematiche Complementari
16th century ; Cardano ; casus irreducibilis ; irreducible case ; cubic equations
PANZA, MARCO
Doctoral Thesis
Prodotti della ricerca::Tesi di dottorato
-2.0
open
Università degli Studi di Milano
info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
1
S.G. Confalonieri
THE TELLING OF THE UNATTAINABLE ATTEMPT TO AVOID THE CASUS IRREDUCIBILIS FOR CUBIC EQUATIONS: CARDANO'S DE REGULA ALIZA. WITH A COMAPRED TRANSCRIPTION OF 1570 AND 1663 EDITIONS AND A PARTIAL ENGLISH TRANSLATION / S.g. Confalonieri ; tutor: M. Panza ; cotutor: M. Galuzzi. Università degli Studi di Milano, 2013 Oct 12. 24. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2011. [10.13130/confalonieri-sara-giulia_phd2013-10-12].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
phd_unimi_R08427.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Tesi di dottorato completa
Dimensione 64.03 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
64.03 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/230755
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact