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Solving the cubic

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Solving the cubic Three people were involved in the solution of the cubic: del Ferro (1465-1526), Niccol Tartaglia (1499-1557) and Girolamo Cardano (1501-1557). – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Solving the cubic


1
Solving the cubic
  • Three people were involved in the solution of the
    cubic del Ferro (1465-1526), Niccolò Tartaglia
    (1499-1557) and Girolamo Cardano (1501-1557). Del
    Ferro and Tartaglia. There were thought to be two
    cases x3cxd called the cosa and x3cxd with
    positive c and d.
  • Del Ferro solved the cosa and kept his result
    secret.
  • Tartaglia then first claimed to be able to solve
    equations of the kind x3bx2d, but then also
    solved all cubic equations.
  • Cardano was given the formula by Tartaglia and
    found and published proofs for the formulas for
    all cubic equations. He was also aware of del
    Ferros solution.

2
Girolamo Cardano (1501-1557)Ars Magna (The great
art)
  1. Let the cube be equal to the first power and
    constant
  2. and let DC and DF be two cubes
  3. the product of the sides of which, AB and BC, is
    equal to one-third the coefficient of x,
  4. and let the sum of these cubes be equal to the
    constant.
  5. I say that AC is the value of x.
  6. Now since AB x BC equals one-third the
    coefficient of x, 3(AB x BC) will equal the
    coefficient of x,
  7. and the product of AC and 3(AB x BC) is the whole
    first power, AC having been assumed to be x.
  8. But AC x 3(AB x BC) makes six bodies, three of
    which are AB x BC2 and the other three, BC x AB2.
  9. Therefore these six bodies are equal to the whole
    first power,
  • x3cxd
  • Let DC, DF be cubes with sides AB and BC.
  • s.t. (a) AB BC1/3c.
  • and (b) DCDFAB3BC3d.
  • Then ACx!
  • Proof
  • AB BC1/3c ? 3AB BCc
  • and under the assumption ACx, AC(3ABxBC)cx.
  • Claim AC(3ABxBC)3ABxBC23BCxAB2. Notice that
    (ACABBC) so that the equation is actually clear
    algebraically.
  • By 7. AC(3ABxBC)cx and by 8. AC(3ABxBC)3ABxBC23
    BCxAB2 so 3ABxBC23BCxAB2cx

3
Girolamo Cardano (1501-1557)Ars Magna (The great
art)
  1. and these six bodies plus the cubes DC and DF
    constitute the cube AE, according to the first
    proposition of Chapter VI.
  2. The cubes DC and DF are also equal to the given
    number.
  3. Therefore the cube AE is equal to the given first
    power and number, which was to be proved.
  4. It remains to be shown that 3AC(AB x BC) is equal
    to the six bodies.
  5. This is clear enough if I prove that AB(BC x AC)
    equals the two bodies ABxBC2 and BC x AB2,
  6. for the product of AC and (AB x BC) is equal to
    the product of AB and the surface BE since all
    sides are equal to all sides
  7. but this i.e., AB x BE is equal to the product
    of AB and (CD DE)
  8. the product AB x DE is equal to the product CB x
    AB2, since all sides are equal to all sides
  9. and therefore AC(AB x BC) is equal to AB x BC2
    plus BC x AB2, as was proposed.
  1. 3ABxBC23BCxAB2CDDFAE or (uv)(3uv)3u2v3uv2u
    3v3(uv)3.
  2. DCDFd, this was assumption 3.
  3. So from 9,10,12 AEcxd and if ACx then x3cxd.
  4. Remains to prove the claim 8.
  5. Enough to show AB(BC x
    AC) AB x BC2 BC x AB2 by eliminating the
    common factor 3.
  6. Since BEACxBC AC(ABxBC) ABxBE
  7. Since BECDDE ABxBEAB(CDDE)
  8. Since GEAB DGCB AB x DE ABxGExDGCB x AB2
  9. So AC(ABxBC) AB(CDDE) ABxBC2 BC x AB2
    since CDBC2

4
The Great Art
  • Short version and the rule
  • Set xuv
  • x3(uv)3u33u2v3uv2v3.
  • If (1) u3v3d and (2) 3uvc, so
    3u2v3uv2(uv)3uvcx.
  • Then x3cxd.
  • From (2) vc/(3u).
  • Substituted in (1) yields u3(c/(3u))3d ?
    u6-du3(c/3)30
  • Set Uu3, then U2-dU(c/3)30 and
  • Let Vv3, then Vd-U, so
  • Finally
  • As Cardano says
  • The rule, therefore, is
  • When the cube of one-third the coefficient of x
    is not greater than the square of one-half the
    constant of the equation, subtract the former
    from the latter and add the square root of the
    remainder to one-half the constant of the
    equation and, again, subtract it from the same
    half, and you will have, as was said, a binomium
    and its apotome, the sum of the cube roots of
    which constitutes the value of x

5
Binomial Theorem for Exponent 3 in Terms of Solids
  • (uv)3u33u2v3uv2v3u33uv(uv)v3

6
Examples
  • x36x40
  • c6, (c/3)3238
  • d40, (d/2)2202400
  • 400-8392 and
  • x36x6
  • c6, (c/3)3238
  • d6, (d/2)2329
  • 9-81 and thus
  • Problems with x315x4, the formula yields
  • c15, (c/3)353125
  • d4, (d/2)2224
  • 125-4121 and se
  • which contains complex numbers. But actually
    there are three real solutions
  • 4,-2 v3 and -2-v3.
  • Also what about the other possible solutions?

Rafaeleo Bombelli (1526-1572) started to
calculate cube roots of complex numbers
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