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essay on number zero

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Answered by arnabchakraborty14
2

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HISTORY OF THE NUMBER ZERO

HISTORY OF THE NUMBER ZEROThe story of zero refers to 'something can be made out of nothing'. This story is such a history of the development of an idea that has brought up the imaginativeness of many great minds across the globe throughout centuries (Kaplan and Seife). Zero can be used for two purposes which are reasonably different from one another, and it has different aspects within the two uses for being a concept, a notion, a notation and a name. First, it can be used as a symbol to indicate an empty place in today's place value number system to describe the correct positioning of other numbers. It would not have been so easy for the term and idea behind the invention of the number to be widely accepted and used. The number and term zero has not been spontaneously derived concept. It took a huge period to develop the concept and use of zero as a name and a symbol (O'Connor and Robertson).

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Answered by aishunicy2580
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Zero was invented by Brahmgupta, an Indian mathematician who lived in the fifth century AD. He is the inventor of the Hindu-Arabic numeral that became the backbone of the development of mathematics in future. Over a period of time, the concept became known to the western world. In the medieval period, zero was extensively used in calculations. It is considered as a whole number; therefore zero is also a rational and real number. One of the unique about the numeral is that it is not a prime and composite number. the zero is that it is neither a positive nor a negative number.

         Brahmagupta is unique. He is the only scientist we have to thank for discovering the properties of precisely zero…

Brahmagupta was an Ancient Indian astronomer and mathematician who lived from 597 AD to 668 AD. He was born in the city of Bhinmal in Northwest India. His father, whose name was Jisnugupta, was an astrologer.

Although Brahmagupta thought of himself as an astronomer who did some mathematics, he is now mainly remembered for his contributions to mathematics.

Many of his important discoveries were written as poetry rather than as mathematical equations! Nevertheless, truth is truth, regardless of how it may be written.

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