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Math 409/409G History of Mathematics Babylonian Numbering System.

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Presentation on theme: "Math 409/409G History of Mathematics Babylonian Numbering System."— Presentation transcript:

1 Math 409/409G History of Mathematics Babylonian Numbering System

2 The Babylonians represented numbers in base 60 (the sexagesimal system) whereas we represent numbers in base 10 (the decimal system).

3 Base 10 and base 60 numbers

4 Converting from base 60 To convert a base 60 number to base 10, expand the number and do the arithmetic. Example:

5 Converting to base 60 To convert a base 10 number to base 60, you start by repeatedly dividing by 60 until you get a quotient of 0. Example: Converting 54,321 10 to base 60

6 The “units digit” in the base 60 number is the remainder in the first division problem. The coefficient of the 60 1 term is the remainder in the second division problem. The coefficient of the 60 2 term is the remainder in the third division problem.

7 Babylonian numbers Babylonians represented their numbers in base 60, but the coefficients they used for the powers of 60 in this representation were in base 10, the same way we did in the last example.

8 Babylonians numbers 1 to 59 Babylonians used an upright wedge for the number 1 and a sideways wedge for the number 10. We will approximate these symbols by using:

9 Since the coefficients for the powers of 60 in the Babylonian system were in base 10, all they needed was a way to denote the numbers 1 through 59. So they used no more than 9 upright wedges for the units, and no more than 5 sideways wedges for the 10’s digit.

10 This positional notation usually caused no problem. But when it did, the Babylonians simply added spaces. Examples:

11 Babylonian problem with zero Since the Babylonians had no symbol for zero, there was no way of knowing if their base 60 symbol for 1 represented 1 or 60 10 or 3600 10. So they never achieved an accurate positional system. In our notation, this is not a problem.

12 Babylonian fractions The Babylonians felt that all useful fractions could be approximated by finite terminating fractions in base 60. In our base 60 notation, the fractional part of a number in separated from the whole number part by a semicolon. Example:

13 Converting fractions to base 60 Convert to a fraction over a power of 60. Convert the numerator to base 60.

14 Converting fractions from base 60

15 This ends the lesson on the Babylonian Numbering System


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