Question:
What did the Islams contribute to modern day astronomy?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
What did the Islams contribute to modern day astronomy?
Fifteen answers:
anonymous
2009-02-17 19:54:05 UTC
They're called Muslims. An adherent of Islam is a Muslim.



Muslim > Islam

Christian > Christianity.



Start there. :)
teapot agnostic
2009-02-17 19:54:05 UTC
astronomy was more the Egyptians

Islam was more medicine and geometry mathematics



start here



http://members.tripod.com/~salems2/muslim_contribution_to_the_world.html





Baghdad, the fairy city of the Arabian Nights and capital of the famous Harun-ar-Rashid, the greatest emperor of his time, had the distinction of being the foremost centre of art and culture during mediaeval times. Renowned scholars and translators, artists and scientists flocked to this great metropolis from all parts of the world and adorned the learned assemblies of Harun and Mamun, who, besides being celebrated scholars themselves, were the greatest patrons of learning that the world has ever known. The Darul Hukama (House of Wisdom) founded by Mamun-ar-Rashid in Baghdad housed some of the most eminent scholars of the world belonging to different castes and creeds. The spade work done by the scholars of the House of Wisdom provided the foundation by which the stately edifice of Islamic learning was built. The caliphate of Mamun, undoubtedly constitutes the most glorious epoch in saracenic history and has rightly been called the 'Augustan age of Islam'. "The twenty years of his reign" says Ameer Ali, " have left enduring monuments of the intellectual development of the Muslim in all directions of thought. Their achievements were not restricted to any particular branch of science or literature, but ranged over the whole course of the domain of intellect; speculative philosophy and 'belles lettres' were cultivated with as much avidity as the exact sciences".' "We see for the first time" says Oelsner, "perhaps in the history of the world, a religious and despotic government allied to philosophy, preparing and partaking in its triumphs".l



Astronomy, in the real sense, started among the Arabs during the early period of the Abbasid Caliphate. It was much influenced by Sidhanta, a work in Sanskrit brought from India to Baghdad and translated into Arabic by Ibn Ibrahim al-Fazari and later on by Abu Musa Khwarizmi. Pahlavi tables (zij) compiled during the Sasanid period and Greek astronomical works translated during this period prepared the ground for Arabian astronomy. Ptolemy's Al-magest went into several translations in Arabic--the best being the one by Hajjaj Ibn Mater (827-28) and another by Humayun Ibn Ishaq, revised by Thabit bin Qurra (d/901).



Khwarizmi has written a valuable treatise on astronomy and has compiled his own Tables (zij) which, after two centuries was revised by Spanish atronomer Majriti (011007) and was translated into Latin by Adelard of Bath. This formed the basis of later astronomical pursuits both in the East and the West and replaced all earlier tables of Greek and Indian astronomers. This table was also adopted in China.



Mashallah and Ahmad bin Muhammad alNahavandi were the earliest Arab astronomers who flourished during the reign of Mansur, the second Abbasid Caliph. Mashallah was called the Phoenix of his age by Abul Faraj. He is distinguished for writing several valuable treatises on 'Astrolabe' the armillary sphere and the movements of heavenly bodies which have been acclaimed by later scientists. Ahmad compiled from his observations an astronomical table known as Al-Mustamal which registered an advance over earlier notions of the Greeks and Hindus.



It was during the reign of Mamun, that practical steps were taken for the advancement of astronomy and several observatories equipped with the latest instruments were set up at various places in his domain. One of them was the observatory in Jundeshapur, in south-west Persia. Early in the 9th century A.D. the first regular observations (Rasd) with the best available and fairly accurate instruments were made in this observatory. Mamun got a degree of meridian measured in the plain of Sanjar and followed a method which was much superior to that of Greeks. The astronomical observations made during the reign of Mamun regarding the equinoxes, the eclipses, the apparitions of the comets and' other celestial phenomena, have earned an important place in the astronomical annals of mediaeval times. "The size of the earth was calculated", says Ameer Ali "from the measurement of a degree on the shores of the Red Sea--this at a time when Christian Europe was asserting the flatness of the earth".' Attached to his Darul Hukama (House of Wisdom), Mamun erected at Baghdad near the Shamsiyah gate, an astronomical observatory under the directorship of Sind Ibn All, a converted Jew and Yahya Ibn Abi Mansur (830 or 831 A.D.). According to C. A. - Nallino, "Here astronomers made systematic observation of celestial movements and verified with remarkably precise results all the fundamental elements of the Almagest: the obliquity of the ecliptic, the precession of the equinoxes, the length of the solar year, etc." With the aid of these observations the astronomical tables called the Tested Tables or Tables of Mamun were prepared. According to Ibn al-Ibri, Mamun later established another observatory on Mt. Qasiyum outside Damascus. Afterwards several other observatories were erected at Wasit, Apamea, etc. Musa bin Shakir was a well-known engineer during the reign of Harun-ar-Rashid. His sons, specialised in astronomical researches and earned a great reputation as astronomers during the reign of Mamun and his two successors. Their research regarding the movements of solar and other astral bodies, was remarkable. They ascertained the size of the earth, the obliquity of the ecliptic, the variations of the lunar latitudes and the precession of the equinoxes! The work of the sons of Musa bin Shakir was continued by Al-Naziri and Muhammad bin Isa Abu Abdulla, who made notable additions to it. The invention of the telescope by Abul Hasan forms a landmark in the advancement of astronomical observations and, in improved form, was used with remarkable success in the observatories of Maragha, Cairo and Seville. A number of Mamun's astronomers headed by Musa Khwarizmi and Musa Ibn Shakir successfully engaged in one ofthe most oblicate geodetic operations, i.e., the determination of the size and the circumference of the earth. The measurement carried out in the plain of Sanjar and also at Palmyra, "yielded 56 2/3 Arabic miles as the length of a degree of the meridian--a remarkably accurate result, exceeding the real length of the degree at the place by about 2,877 feet" says C. A. Nallino.--"This would make the diameter of the earth 6,500 miles and its circumference 20,400 miles".' Muhammad Bin Musa al-Khwarizmi, a versatile genius of Islamic history translated the Sidhanta or Indian tables and wrote a commentary on it. He has written a valuable treatise on astronomy and has compiled his own tables (zij) which after two centuries were revised by the Spanish astronomer Majriti and translated into Latin by Adelard of Bath in 1126 A.D. These formed the basis of later astronomical works in the East and the West, replacing all earlier tables by Greek and Indian astronomers. These tables were also used in China.



Ibrahim al-Fazari was the first Muslim to construct an astrolabe. He wrote on the use of the armillary sphere and prepared tables in accordance with the Arabic years. One of the earliest Arabic treatises on this instrument was written by Isa-al-Asturlabi who resided in Baghdad at about 830 A.D.



Abul Abbas al-Farghani (Alfraganus), a resident of Farghana in Central Asia, was an astronomer of repute, who in 861 A.D., according to Ibn Abi Usabiyah (Vol. I, page 207), supervised for the Abbasid Caliph Al-Mutawakkil the erection of a Nilometer at Fustat.

His well-known work AI-Mudkhil-ila-ilm-hayat-al-aflak (compendium of astronomy) was translated into Latin in 1135 A. D. by John of Seville and Gerard of Cremona. It was also rendered into Hebrew. "The introduction of Astronomy into Christian Europe", says J. W. Draper, "has been attributed to the translation of the works of Muhammad Fargani. In Europe, also, the Arabs were the first to build observatories; the Giralda, or Tower of Seville was erected under the superintendence of Geber, the mathematician"



The Buwayhid Sultans were also great patrons of learning and were surrounded by a galaxy of talented scholars invited from the four corners of the Islamic world. The Buwayhid Sultan Sharaf al-Daulah (982--89, A.D.) founded a good observatory in his palace at Baghdad where such celebrated astronomers as Abdur Rahman al-Sufi, Ahmad al-Saghani and Abul Wafa carried on their research. Abdur Rahman al-Sufi wrote al-kawakib al-Sabitah (fixed stars) which is known as a masterpiece of observational astronomy. Alkohi, another astronomer attached to the same dynasty, studied the movements of the planets and his research regarding the summer solstice and the autumnal equinox were of considerable value. Abul Wafa, born in 939 A. D. in Khorasan and established in Iraq was an outstanding mathematician and astronomer, who introduced the use of the secant as well as the tangent into astronomical observations. Another Buwayhid ruler, Rukn al-Daulah, (932--76 A. D.) patronised Abu Jafar al-Khazin, a well-known astronomer of Khorasan, who ascertained 'the obliquity of the ecliptic and solved a problem of Archimedes which leads to a cubic equation'.l



By the close of the tenth century A.D., Baghdad was thronged with hundreds of astronomers including Ali Ibn Amajur and Abul Hasan Ali Ibn Amajur who are known for their accurate calculation of the lunar movements.



Abu Abdulla Ibn Muhammad Ibn Jabir-al Battani (Albategnius-877-91 8 A.D.) a Sabian from Harran was one of the most illustrious astronomers of the East who is known as the Ptolemy of the Arabs. His tables translated into Latin formed the basis for astronomical work in Europe for several centuries. He also wrote a voluminous trea
anonymous
2009-02-17 20:01:49 UTC
From the at least the 9th century, with scholars like Al-Battani , the Muslim World was leading in astronomical knowledge, and the sphericity of the Earth was consequently a well known fact (even in the comparatively primitive astronomy of Europe at the time, belief in a flat Earth was confined to a small minority of theologists). Muslim astronomers calculated the earth's circumference to be 40, 253.4 km (correct to within 200 km). [1]

Ibn Taymiya (died 1328 CE), said: "Celestial bodies are round - as it is the statement of astronomers and mathematicians - it is [likewise] the statement of the scholars of the Muslims; as Abul-Hasan ibn al-Manaadi, Abu Muhammad Ibn Hazm, Abul-Faraj Ibn Al-Jawzi and others have quoted: that the Muslim scholars are in agreement (that all celestial bodies are round). Indeed Allah has said: And He ( i.e., Allah) it is Who created the night and the day, the sun and the moon. They float, each in a Falak. Ibn Abbas says: A Falaka like that of a spinning wheel. The (word) Falak (in the Arabic language) means that which is round." ( Majmu'ul-Fatawa, Vol. 6, pp. 566).

"And We(Almighty) have set on the earth Mountains standing firm, Lest it should shake with them." [Al-Qur'aan 21:31]

George Sarton said ,

http://www.imamreza.net/eng/imamreza.php?id=6632



The Sanskrit word was ardhajya, meaning "half chord," which in Arabic was shortened and transliterated as jyb. In Arabic vowels are not spelled out, and so the word was read as jayb, meaning "pocket" or "gulf." In medieval Europe it was then translated as sinus, the Latin word for gulf.) From the ninth century onward the development of spherical trigonometry was rapid. Islamic astronomers discovered simple trigonometric identities, such as the law of sines, that made solving spherical triangles a much simpler and quicker process.



Stars and Astrolabes



read more

http://faculty.kfupm.edu.sa/PHYS/alshukri/PHYS215/Islamic_astronomy.htm
anonymous
2009-02-17 20:02:22 UTC
they used the sun and stars for navigation on their sea voyages. w/ the sun's position in the sky , they could tell north, west, east, south. and at nite they used the position of the stars. since the stars r in a fixed position all the time, they were used like a compass & in maps.
anonymous
2009-02-17 20:00:31 UTC
We're called Muslims! Islam is the name of our religion. You don't call Christians Christianity, do you? No, i didn't think so...
.
2009-02-17 19:59:11 UTC
In nautical astronomy, Muslim navigators developed two major instruments, the astrolabe and the compass. The astrolabe is described as the most important astronomical calculating device before the invention of digital computers and was the most important astronomical observational device before the invention of the telescope. Its uses are varied, and not just in astronomy, but also in surveying and navigation.



Muslims also developed observatories. A pioneering one was the Samarkand observatory which was equipped with a huge meridian and the finest instruments available, including a Fakhri sextant with a radius of 40.4 meters. It not only showed the degrees and minutes, but seconds too.







Caliph al-Ma’mun, who ruled Baghdad from 813 to 833 CE, gave astronomy the patronage and impetus it needed to become a major science.

He built the first observatory in Islam, and arguably the first observatory in the world or in history.







Long before Copernicus





The Polish scholar and inventor Copernicus is credited as the founder of modern astronomy. Historians have recently established that most of his theories were based on those of Nasir al-Din al-Tusi and Ibn Shatir. Ibn al-Shatirâs planetary theory and models are exactly mathematically identical to those prepared by Copernicus over a century after him, which raised the issue of how Copernicus acquired such elements of information. The line of transmission lies in Italy where Greek and Latin materials that made use of al-Tusi's device were circulating in Italy at about the time Copernicus studied there. Copernicus made repeated uses of al-Tusi's and his followers' devices.



Copernicus also refers profusely to al-Zarqali and al-Battani in his book De Revolutionibus. Al-Zarqali, born in 1028 CE, prepared the famous Toledan Tables, greatly influencing him. It is also known that Copernicus relied heavily on the comprehensive astronomical treatise that included star catalogues and planetary tables of Al-BattÄnÄ«.





Modelling the Stars





From the beginnings of human awakening people have pondered at the amazing canopy of stars and at the movement of everything in the sky. Clearly there was order in the heavens. Many attempts were made to identify the patterns in this order. This had great significance to life, since through these observations and derivations of rules we have the beginnings of predictive science. We can predict the position of the Sun in the sky, the Moon, the timing of eclipses, the changing position of the planets and the stars. In an attempt to make these predictions easier, people from many great Civilisations have built different kinds of models reflecting in a physical form what they have seen. These models were built based on the perspective of the earth with a sphere of stars surrounding the earth. There were several kinds of models:



1. Celestial Globes

2. Astrolabes

3. Armillary Spheres
avomatic
2009-02-17 20:08:05 UTC
there are many muslim astronomers, physicians, and space engineers, try doing some searches along those lines.
Robert R
2009-02-17 20:06:42 UTC
They basically created the science we now call celestial navigation. Also, a huge number of the star-names we have now are Arabic.
vinslave
2009-02-17 20:06:04 UTC
Muslim answer: Muslims refined the astrolabe allowing for serious breakthroughs in the knowledge of "space". "Abu Raihan al-Biruni (973-1048) developed precise method for determining the the positions of the sun and even completed groundbreaking work on longitude and latitude long before the rest of the world caught on . Hitti also notes one will find 'under the roll of Islam's most distinguished astronomers the celebrated name of Umar al-Khayyam (1048-1131) - The author of the even more celebrated Rubaiyat." - (pg114, "Islam Unveiled" by Robert Spencer.



That's just a tidbit, you must do more on your own.
anonymous
2009-02-17 11:55:37 UTC
Islam did nothing much to contribute

anything

They took prisoners with education during they conquering foreign lands and THOSE educated people working for them contributed everything, what moslemss are credited for
Cassie T
2009-02-17 19:54:48 UTC
Islam itself contributed nothing. However, the Middle East was the global center of advancement a couple thousand years ago, not because of Islam, but in spite of it (much like scientific advancements today are being made in spite of Christianity, not because of it).



And do your own homework. If you could find YA, then you can find Google.
Bobby Jim
2009-02-17 20:10:44 UTC
Here are some delightful words of wisdom directly quoted from the Qur'an.



Glogal Warming, climate, and the sun & moon:



Bukhari:V1B10N510

"Allah's Apostle said, 'If it is very hot, the severity of the heat is from the raging of the Hell Fire.'"



Tabari I:232

"Gabriel brings to the sun a garment of luminosity from the light of Allah's Throne according to the measure of the hours of the day. The garment is longer in the summer and shorter in the winter, and of intermediate length in autumn and spring. The sun puts on that garment as one of you here puts on his clothes."



Tabari I:244

"Allah then created for the sun a chariot with 360 handholds from the luminosity of the light of the Throne and entrusted 360 of the angels inhabiting the lower heaven with the sun and its chariot, each of them gripping one of those handholds. Allah also entrusted 360 angels with the moon."



Different Races:



Tabari I:258

"Allah sent Gabriel to the earth to bring Him some clay. The earth said, 'I take refuge in Allah against you mutilating me. Then He sent the angel of death. He took some soil from the earth and made a mixture. He did not take it from a single place but took red, white, and black soil. Therefore, the children of Adam came out different."
millertime06
2009-02-17 20:00:57 UTC
what have muslims contributed towards anything these days? They are doing nothing for the advancement of world peace. They go to non muslim lands and demand that the majority change to accpet them rather then they change to assimilate to their hosts culture. Muslims need to get out of Christian/Catholic lands and go back to where they came from If they do not like the way we live.
Steiner
2009-02-17 19:55:54 UTC
Zilch, only false information, they claim there is life on the moon!
anonymous
2009-02-17 19:53:10 UTC
nothing....the planets were already here....do your own work


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