- Zu Geng or Zu
Gengzhi (Chinese: 祖暅之; Wade–Giles: Tsu Keng-chih; ca. 480 – ca. 525) was a
Chinese mathematician, politician, and writer. His
courtesy name...
- the
Daming calender and
calculated π. Zu Chongzhi,
along with his son Zu
Gengzhi,
wrote a
mathematical text
entitled Z**** Shu (綴述; "Methods for Interpolation")...
- – 266 AD Sun Tzu: c. 3rd – 5th
century AD Zu Chongzhi: 429 – 500 AD Zu
Gengzhi: c. 450 – c. 520 AD Zhen Luan: 535–566 Wang Xiaotong: 580–640 Li Chunfeng:...
-
Mechanical Theorems. In the 5th
century AD, Zu
Chongzhi and his son Zu
Gengzhi established a
similar method to find a sphere's volume.
Neither of the...
- nun (approximate date) Xiao Zhaowen,
emperor of
Southern Qi (d. 494) Zu
Gengzhi,
Chinese mathematician (d. 525)
Chilperic I, king of
Burgundy Conall Cremthainne...
-
Grand Old Qin)
performed by the
China Philharmonic Orchestra. Xiang'ai
Gengzhi (相爱耕织;
Sowing Mutual Love)
performed by Lei Jia.
Fenghua Juedai (风华绝代;...
- (approximate date) Maximinus,
Frankish abbot and
saint (approximate date) Zu
Gengzhi,
Chinese mathematician (approx.) Cameron, Alan (1982). "The
Death of Vitalian...
- 3rd
century AD to find the area of a circle. In the 5th
century AD, Zu
Gengzhi, son of Zu Chongzhi,
established a
method that
would later be
called Cavalieri's...
-
perpendicular cylinders although this work was only
finished by Zu
Chongzhi and Zu
Gengzhi. Liu's
commentaries often include explanations why some
methods work and...
-
chosen base plane. (The same
principle had been
previously used by Zu
Gengzhi (480–525) of China, in the
specific case of
calculating the
volume of the...