On Tusi's Classification of Cubic Equations and its Connections to Cardano's Formula and Khayyam's Geometric Solution
Bahman Kalantari, Rahim Zaare-Nahandi

TL;DR
This paper explores Tusi's classification of cubic equations, connecting it to Cardano's formula and Khayyam's geometric solution, offering new proofs, explicit root approximation methods, and historical insights.
Contribution
It establishes a direct link between Tusi's form and Cardano's discriminant, provides elementary algebraic methods for root calculation, and offers new derivations of classical solutions.
Findings
Explicit connection between Tusi form and Cardano's discriminant.
Elementary algebraic derivation of the quadratic formula from Tusi's approach.
Novel geometric derivation of Khayyam's solution.
Abstract
Omar Khayyam's studies on cubic equations inspired the 12th century Persian mathematician Sharaf al-Din Tusi to investigate the number of positive roots. According to the noted mathematical historian Rashed, Tusi analyzed the problem for five different types of equations. In fact all cubic equations are reducible to a form {\it Tusi form} . Tusi determined that the maximum of on occurs at and concluded when , , there are roots in and , ignoring the root in . Given a {\it reduced form} , when , we show it is reducible to a Tusi form with . It follows there are three real roots if and only if is positive. This gives an explicit connection…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Theory of Mathematics · Mathematical and Theoretical Analysis · Mathematics and Applications
