Sunday, 26 April 2026

Sang-Heronian Triangles and some History about Near Equilateral Triangles

    

The first Near Equilateral triangles with consecutive integer sides and integer area (sometimes called Brahamagupta triangles) was discovered over 2500 years ago. The discovery of the 3,4,5 right triangle seems lost in antiquity back before 500 BC. All Pythagorean triangles are Heronian, but lots (infinitely many) of other triangles that are not right triangles also are Heronian.  The second near equilateral triangle, the 13, 14, 15; was known to Heron of Alexandra as early as 70 AD, almost 2000 years ago. Since then, they've grown in number, and to infinity, and been dissected and diagnosed repeatedly. They've even been generalized to three dimensions in Heronian Tetrahedra. Here is one part of their story.

Heron of Alexandria is known to have developed a method of finding the area of triangles using only the lengths of the three sides. It is known that it was proven in his Metrica around 60 AD. His proof was extended in the 7th century by Brahamagupta extended this property to the sides of inscribable quadrilaterals. Since around 1880, the triangular method of Heron has been known as Heron's formula, or Hero's Formula. It emerged in French, formula d'Heron (1883?) and German, Heronisch formel (1875?) and in George Chrystal's Algebra in 1886 in England. 


L E Dickson's History of Number Theory states that Heron stated the 13, 14, 15 triangle and gave its area as 84, the height of 12 being the common side of a 5,12,13 triangle and a 9, 12, 15.  The 5 and 9 combining to form the base of length 14. Brahmagupta is cited in the same work for giving an oblique triangle composed of two right triangles with a common leg a, stating that the three sides are \( \frac{1}{2}(\frac{a^2}{b}+ b)\) , \( \frac{1}{2}(\frac{a^2}{c}+ c)\), and \( \frac{1}{2}(\frac{a^2}{b}- b) + ( \frac{1}{2}(\frac{a^2}{c}- c)\)

In 1621 Bachet took two Pythagorean right triangles with a common leg, 12, 35, 37 and 12, 16, 20 and produced a triangle with sides of 37, 20, 51. With an area of 306 if I did my numbers right.
Vieta and Frans van Schooten, both used the same approach of clasping two right triangles with a common leg; and by the first half of the 18th century, the Japanese scholar, Matsunago, realized that any two right triangles would work, by simply multiplying the sides of each by the hypotenuse of the other, he could juxtapose the two resulting triangles.

In the early 1800's through 1825 the problem was alive and hopping on the Ladies Diary and the Gentleman's Math Companion. One method created right triangles in another triangle to be reassembled into a rational triangle, similar in fact, to the problem that would appear in the 1916 American Mathematical Monthly. (Note; any triangle with rational sides and area can be scaled to become a Heronian triangle.)

In a letter of Oct 21, 1847; Gauss to H. C. Schumacher, he stated a method using circumscribed circles, and found lots of others chose the exact same solutions in their response. E. W. Grebe tabulated a set of 46 rational triangles in 1856. W. A. Whitworth noticed that the 13, 14, 15 triangle of antiquity, that had an altitude of 12, was the only one in which the altitude and sides were all consecutive. (1880)

Somehow, among all those, the contributions of a Professor from Scotland was not observed by Dickson.

The first modern western article I can find on the topic of Near Equilateral triangles with integer sides and area is from Edward Sang which appeared in 1864 in the Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Volume 23. I find it interesting that this is only a small aside in a much larger article and that he begins with an approach to examining the angles. Then he arrives at the use of a Pell type equation for approximating the square root of three, \(a^2 = 3x^2 + 1 \) and shows that every other convergent in the chain of approximations is a base of a Near Equilateral Triangle, using sides of consecutive integers. The alternate convergents we seek are given by 2/1, 7/4, 26/15, 97/56... each approaching the square root of three more closely, but also each with a numerator that is 1/2 the base of triangle with consecutive integers for sides and integer area. Perhaps it is easier to just use the recurent relation, \(n_i=4n_{i-1} - n_{i-2}\) with \(n_0=2\), and \(n_1=4\) for the actual middle side,2, 4, 14, 52, 194.... The first few such triangles have their even integer base as2x1=2; (1, 2, 3) area 0; 2x2=4; (3, 4, 5); area 12; 2x7=14;  (13, 14, 15); area 84; 2x26=52; (51, 52, 53); area 1170... etc. Throughout, he refers to "trigons" rather than triangles, and never invokes the name of Heron throughout.  



==================================
A note about Edward Sang before I continue.  In a 2021 article by Dennis Rogel, he calls Professor Sang, " probably the greatest calculator of logarithms of the 19th century" in A guide to Edward Sang’s tables
and to their reconstructions, and Wikipedia adds that he is, "best known for having computed large tables of logarithms, with the help of two of his daughters. (They did not mention the names of the daughters, but in Rogel's paper he cites Flora and Jane.) These tables went beyond the tables of Henry Briggs, Adriaan Vlacq, and Gaspard de Prony."  They add a list of his publications so extensive that they are grouped into five year periods.
===============================
The next paper using consecutive integer sides was in 1880 by a German mathematician named Reinhold Hoppe, who produced a closed form expression for these almost equilateral Heronian Triangles that was similar to, \( b_n =(2+2\sqrt{3})^n + (2-2\sqrt{3})^n \). His paper calls them "rationales dreieck" (rational triangles) I have not seen the entire paper, and don't know if the term Heronian appeared, or not.

The first American introduction to the phrase "Heronian Triangles", seemed to be an article in the American Mathematical Monthly which posed the introduction as a problem, to divide the triangle whose sides are 52, 56, and 60 into three Heronian Triangles by lines drawn from the vertices to a point within. The problem was posed by Norman Anning, Chillwack, B.C. It then includes a description that suggests it is introducing a new term, "The word Heronian is used in the sense of the German Heronische (with a German citation) to describe a triangle whose sides and area are integral. 

 The only other mentions of a Heronian triangle in English in a google search before the midpoint of the 20th century revealed a 1930 article from the Texas Mathematics Teacher's Bulletin. It credits a 1929 talk, it seems, by Dr. Wm. Fitch Cheney Jr. who, "discusses triangles with rational area K and integral sides a, b, c, the g.c.f of the sides 1, under the name Heronian triangles." (Dr Cheney published an article in the American Mathematical Monthly in 1929, The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 36, No. 1 (Jan., 1929), pp. 22-28)  Since any such rational area can be scaled up to an appropriate integer area with integer sides these address the general Heronian Triangle, but still no Near Equilateral, or at least not revealed in the snippet view.  

By the 1980's an article in the Fibonacci Quarterly found a way to produce a Fibonacci like sequence, a second order recursive relation to produce the even bases. Letting \(B_0 = 2, and B_1 = 4\), the recursion was \( U_{n+2} = 4 U{n+1} + U_n\) . This paper by W. H. Gould of West Virginia University addresses the full scope of consecutive sided integer triangles and mentions Hoppe, but not Professor Sang.  Gould's paper seems to be his solution to a problem he had posed earlier in the Fibonacci Quarterly, "of finding all triangles having integral area and consecutive integral sides."  (H. W. Gould, Problem H-37, Fibonacci Quarterly, Vol. 2 (1964), p. 124. .) 
Gould also mentions two other, seemingly earlier posed problems in other journals which I have yet to explore, and given the opportunity, will do so and return to this spot,  If you are impatient, they are

7. T. R. Running, Problem 4047, Amer. Math. Monthly, Vol. 49 (1942), p. 479; Solutions by W. B. Clarke and E. P. Starke, ibid. , Vol. 51 (1944), pp. 102-104.

8. W. B. Clarke, Problem 65, National Math. Mag. , Vol. 9 (1934), p. 63

Gould's article is a wonderful read for the geometry of the incircles and Euler lines in such special triangles is well explored.


These are each candidates to be the first American proposal of these consecutive integer sided triangles, but it seems Gould's paper was the first to expand the full scope of the solutions in any detail.


Some of the characteristics of these I think would be found interesting to HS and MS age students I will spell out below.  

As mentioned above, the length of the middle (even) side follows a 2nd order recursive relation \(B_n = 4B_{n-1}-B_{n-2}\)  so the sequence of these even sides runs 2, 4, 14, 52, 194, 724..... etc. ) is there to represent the degenerate triangle 1,2,3.

Interestingly, the heights follow this same recursive method giving heights of 0, 3, 12, 45, 168....

The height divides the even side into two legs of Pythagorean triangles that make up the whole of the consecutive integer triangle.  They are always divide so that one is four greater than the other, or each is b/2 =+/- 2.

Of the two triangles formed by on each side of the altitude, one is a primitive Pythagorean triangle, PPT, and the other is not.  The one that is a PPT switches from side to side on each new triangle, alternately with the shorter leg, and then the longer leg.  Here are the triangles with the two subdivisions of them with an asterisk Marking the PPT:


Short    Base         Long                      small triangle                 large triangle
  3          4               5                                               *3   4   5
13        14             15                            *5, 12, 13                        9, 12, 15
51        52              53                            24, 45, 51                      * 28, 45, 53
193     194           195                          *95, 168, 193                     99, 168, 195
723     724           725                            360, 627, 723                *364, 627, 725

The pattern of the ending digits of 3, 4, 5 repeated twice, and 1,2,3 once.  

From every one of these Sang-Heronian triangles (I think) you can get another Heronian triangle by a simple reflection of whichever right triangle has the shorter hypotenuse.  For example, in the 13, 14, 15
 triangle, if you reflect the 5, 12 13 triangle around the altitude (12), you get a triangle with sides of (9-5),12, 15.  And the area is equal to the difference of the areas of the two right triangles, 54 sq un.

In the 1929 article mentioned above, Dr. Cheney writes that he knows of no examples of Heronian triangles up to that time that were not made up of two right triangles, and then gives an example of one that is not decomposable,  25, 34, 39.   He also points out that the altitudes of Heronian triangles are not always integers, and gives the example of 39,58,95 as an example which I calculate to be 4.8.

A paper by Herb Bailey and William Gosnell in Mathematics Magazine, October 2012 demonstrates Heronian triangles in other arithmetic progressions from the near-equilateral ones.

"We note below that if a triangle has consecutive integer sides, then it has integer
area if and only if its inradius is an integer. Thus we might as well have defined a
Brahmagupta triangle as one with consecutive integer sides and integer inradius. The
computations for generating Brahmagupta triangles are made somewhat easier by focusing 
on inradius rather than area."


And the The inradius 𝑟 is given by  \( r=\sqrt(\frac{(s-a)(s-b)(s-c)}{s})\)

I mentioned that there are also Heronian Tetrahedra, although that use of Heronian seems even later than for triangles, perhaps as late as 2006.   The earliest example of an exact rational tetrahedra with all integer edges, surfaces and volume was by Euler.  He created a tetrahedron formed by three right triangles  parallel to the xyz coordinate axes, and one oblique face connecting them.  The triple right angle edges were 153, 104, and 672, and the three edges of the oblique face were 185, 680, and 697.  These were each Pythagorean right triangles, the four faces of  (185,672,697), (104, 672, 680), (153,104,185) and (153,680,697)  

There are an infinite number of these Eulerian Birectangular tetrahedra, but they seem to get very large very quickly.  Euler showed that they can be found by deriving the three axis-parallel sides a, b, and c by using four numbers that are the equal sums of two fourth powers.  Euler found an example using , and that's the easy part.  Then he constructed the three monster lengths of 386678175332273368, and 379083360, Yes, those numbers are each in the hundreds of millions, and each pair had a larger hypotenuse to form a third side. 

I recently (2024) found a very similar formula for the square of the volume of a Tetrahedron in a paper in Letters to the editor of The Mathematical Intellingencer by Martin Lukarevski.  The Formula applies to a tetrahedron with all four faces congruent with edges a, b, c.    I did a little simple algebra to enhance the similarity to Heron's formula.


And at the near end of the Wikipedia discussion of these states, "A complete classification of all Heronian tetrahedra remains unknown."   

On This Day in Math - April 26

    


Mathematics is like childhood diseases. The younger you get it, the better.
~Arnold Sommerfeld

The 116th day of the year; 116! + 1 is prime! *Prime Curios (Students might investigate how often n!+1 is prime)
And:
116^2 + 1 is prime

The number 1 appears 116 times in the first 1000 digits of pi. Thanks to *Math Year-Round ‏@MathYearRound

Impress your History teacher, the 100 Years war between France and England..... lasted 116 years.

and Jiroemon Kimura died in 2013 in Japan. He was 116 years old.  Two years later his record was broken by an even older Japanese citizen who died.

And for a bit of Americana, from a British web site called *isthatabignumber.com..  It's about Hyperion, a tree that is 116 meters tall.




EVENTS

1514 Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) made his first observation of Saturn. Copernicus later proposed that the sun is stationary and that the Earth and the planets move in circular orbits around it. *astronomy.wikia.com Saturn_Project

1760 Euler was asked to tutor the niece of Frederick the Great, the Princess of Anhalt-Dessau. Euler wrote over 200 letters to her in the early 1760s. On this date he sent the third of these letters. The letter covered the physics of sound and he gave a speed of one thousand feet per second. He closes by telling the Princess that we are incapable of hearing a string vibrating at less than 30 vibrations per second, or one that is more than 7552 vibrations per second.  Euler started the first letter with an explanation of the concept of "size". Starting with the definition of a foot, he defined the mile and the diameter of the earth as a unit in terms of foot and then calculated the distance of the planets of the Solar System in terms of the diameter of the earth.




1766 D’Alembert after writing to Frederick II in praise of Lagrange writes to Lagrange about an offer to move to Berlin:
My dear and illustrious friend, the king of Prussia has charged me to write you that, if you would like to come to Berlin to occupy a place in the Academy, he would give you a pension of 1,500 crowns, which are 6,000 French pounds … Mr Euler, unhappy for reasons of which I do not know the details, but in which I see that everyone thinks him wrong, requests permission to leave and wants to go to St. Petersburg. The king, who was not too anxious to grant it, would definitely give it to him if you accept the proposition that he has made
Frederick II of Prussia had more than once invited both d’Alembert and Lagrange to move to Berlin. The encyclopaedist had declined the offer and suggested the name of his Turinese friend. But Lagrange, even though he was on good terms with Euler, did not relish a "cohabitation" with him in the Berlin Academy. *Mauro ALLEGRANZA, Stack Exchange
D'Alembert



1826 The first class of 10 students graduated from Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute on 26 Apr 1826. The Renssalaer School was founded in 1824 in Troy, N.Y., by Stephen van Renssalaer becoming the first engineering college in the U.S. It opened on 3 Jan 1825, with the purpose of instructing persons, who may choose to apply themselves, in the application of science to the common purposes of life." The first director and senior professor was Amos Eaton who served from Nov 1824 - 10 May 1842. The name of Renssalaer Institute was adopted on 26 Apr 1832, and Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute on 8 Apr 1861. *TIS



1861 Richard Owen gives the longest ever discourse at a Royal Institution lecture, ‘On the Scope and Appliances of a National Museum of Natural History’.
Discourse speakers were supposed to aim to speak for exactly one hour but Owen kept talking for two. (It may be coincidence but this is the last discourse he gave.) *Royal Institution web page


1882, the photophone was demonstrated by Alexander Graham Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter. In their device, a mirrored silver disc was made to vibrate by speech from a speaking tube. Light reflected off the disc was focused by a parabolic dish onto a selenium photocell. The variations in the reflected light were converted into electrical signals carried to headphones.
 It was invented jointly by Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant Charles Sumner Tainter on February 19, 1880, at Bell's laboratory at 1325 L Street in Washington, D.C. Both were later to become full associates in the Volta Laboratory Association, created and financed by Bell.
While honeymooning in Europe with his bride Mabel Hubbard, Bell likely read of the newly discovered property of selenium having a variable resistance when acted upon by light, in a paper by Robert Sabine as published in Nature on 25 April 1878. In his experiments, Sabine used a meter to see the effects of light acting on selenium connected in a circuit to a battery. However Bell reasoned that by adding a telephone receiver to the same circuit he would be able to hear what Sabine could only see.

A photophone receiver and headset, one half of Bell and Tainter's optical telecommunication system of 1880




1892 Hermite to Stieltjes: “You state this result and then try to mortify me by saying that it is easy to prove. Since I can’t succeed in doing it I appeal to your good nature to help me out of this difficulty.” [Two Year Journal, 11, 49] *VFR (Boy, haven't we all been there?)
Charles Hermite



1920 Shapley and Curtis debate the nature of the nebulae. In astronomy, the Great Debate, also called the Shapley–Curtis Debate, was an influential debate between the astronomers Harlow Shapley and Heber Curtis which concerned the nature of spiral nebulae and the size of the universe.  
Shapley was arguing in favor of the Milky Way as the entirety of the universe. He believed that "spiral nebulae" such as Andromeda were simply part of the Milky Way. He could back up this claim by citing relative sizes—if Andromeda were not part of the Milky Way, then its distance must have been on the order of 108 light years—a span most contemporary astronomers would not accept.
Curtis, on the other hand, contended that Andromeda and other such as "nebulae" were separate galaxies, or "island universes" (a term invented by the 18th-century philosopher Immanuel Kant, who also believed that the "spiral nebulae" were extragalactic). He showed that there were more novae in Andromeda than in the Milky Way. From this, he could ask why there were more novae in one small section of the galaxy than the other sections of the galaxy, if Andromeda were not a separate galaxy but simply a nebula within Earth's galaxy. 
Later in the 1920s, Edwin Hubble showed that Andromeda was far outside the Milky Way by measuring Cepheid variable stars, proving that Curtis was correct. It is now known that the Milky Way is only one of as many as an estimated 200 billion (2×1011)[6] to 2 trillion (2×1012) or more galaxies in the observable universe.  more here.

Shapley

Curtis




1921 the first U.S. broadcast of the weather was made from St. Louis, Missouri, over station WEW for the federal government. *TIS
Radio Station WEW, the original radio station of Saint Louis University, played an important role in the history of early radio. In 1921 it became only the second radio station in the U.S. and the first station west of the Mississippi River. In 1939 it became the first station to broadcast Sacred Heart Radio, a Catholic religious program which eventually grew to include over a thousand stations around the world. Finally, in 1947 WEW became the first FM radio station in St. Louis.




1962 The UK became the world's third spacefaring country, after the US and the USSR, with the launch of the satellite Ariel 1. It was built by Nasa in collaboration with British scientists to study the properties of the upper atmosphere and cosmic rays, and formed the first of six missions. "The big legacy is that, despite the fact we are a relatively small country, we are a major international player in space research," said Martin Barstow, an astrophysicist and head of the college of science and engineering at the University of Leicester. *The Guardian

*NASA


1968 Time magazine (p. 41) reports a “Trial by Mathematics” in which a couple was convicted on the basis of mathematical probability. Later the reasoning was found to be incorrect. The discussion there is of interest. See also Journal of Recreational Mathematics, 1(1968), p. 183. *VFR See details here.


1985 A 22-cent commemorative stamp for Public Education in America issued in Boston.




1986 Nuclear reactor number 4 at Chernobyl, USSR, exploded and released a large amount of radioactive material into the atmosphere. [A. Hellemans and B. Bunch. The Timetables of Science, p. 597].

BIRTHS

1711 David Hume, (7 May[O.S. 26 April]1711,– 25 August 1776) was a Scottish philosopher, historian, economist, and essayist, known especially for his philosophical empiricism and skepticism. He was one of the most important figures in the history of Western philosophy and the Scottish Enlightenment. Hume is often grouped with John Locke, George Berkeley, and a handful of others as a British Empiricist *Wik



1832 Robert Tucker (26 April 1832 in Walworth, Surrey, England - 29 Jan 1905 in Worthing, England) A major mathematical contribution made by Tucker was his work as editor of William Kingdon Clifford's papers. Fifty-seven of Clifford's papers were collected and edited by Tucker and published in 1882 as Mathematical Papers. Tucker also wrote many biographies including those of Gauss, Sylvester, Chasles, Spottiswoode, and Hirst, all of which appeared in Nature. But, like a number of schoolmaster's at this time, he also made a contribution to research in geometry. He wrote over 40 research papers which were published in leading journals. These papers, although sometimes not of the highest quality, do contain a number of interesting ideas. Hill specially singles out for special mention his work on the Triplicate-Ratio Circle, the group of circles sometimes known as Tucker Circles, and the Harmonic Quadrilateral. *SAU





1874 Edward Vermilye Huntington (April 26 1874, Clinton, New York, USA – November 25, 1952, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA) . This enthusiastic and innovative teacher was professor of mechanics at Harvard from 1919 to 1941. He made many contributions to the logical foundations of mathematics. His book, The Continuum (1917), was the standard introduction to set theory for many years. In 1928 he recommended the “method of equal proportion” for the apportionment of representatives to Congress; in 1941 this method was adopted by Congress. *VFR (now often called the Huntington-Hill method)



1879 Sir Owen Willans Richardson (26 Apr 1879; 15 Feb 1959 at age 79) English physicist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1928 for “his work on the thermionic phenomenon [electron emission by hot metals] and especially for the discovery of the law named after him.”This effect is why a heated filament in a vacuum tube releases a current of electrons to travel an anode, which was essential for the development of such applications as radio amplifiers or a TV cathode ray tube. Richardson's law mathematically relates how the electron emission increases as the absolute temperature of the metal surface is raised. He also conducted research on photoelectric effects, the gyromagnetic effect, the emission of electrons by chemical reactions, soft X-rays, and the spectrum of hydrogen.*TIS



1889 Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language.*Wik This noted philosopher introduced the word “tautology” in his Tractatus Logico Philosophicus of 1921. *VFR





1900 Charles Richter(April 26, 1900, Hamilton, Ohio - September 30, 1985, Pasadena, California ) This American seismologist developed the earthquake magnitude scale which bears his name. *VFR The scale is logarithmic (base ten). When an earthquake occurs, the maximum amplitude of the shake is measured on a seismometer and assigned a Richter number. A quake with a value of 5 on the Richter scale is 10 times more powerful than a quake with a value of 4. The choice of a log scale seems to have come from his associate, Beno Gutenberg,




1922 Asger Hartvig Aaboe (April 26, 1922 – January 19, 2007) was a historian of the exact sciences and mathematician who is known for his contributions to the history of ancient Babylonian astronomy. He studied mathematics and astronomy at the University of Copenhagen, and in 1957 obtained a PhD in the History of Science from Brown University, where he studied under Otto Neugebauer, writing a dissertation "On Babylonian Planetary Theories". In 1961 he joined the Department of the History of Science and Medicine at Yale University, serving as chair from 1968 to 1971, and continuing an active career there until retiring in 1992. In his studies of Babylonian astronomy, he went beyond analyses in terms of modern mathematics to seek to understand how the Babylonians conceived their computational schemes.*Wik



1933 Arno Allan Penzias (26 Apr 1933, ) is a German-American astrophysicist who shared one-half of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics with Robert Woodrow Wilson for their discovery of a faint electromagnetic radiation throughout the universe. Their detection of this radiation lent strong support to the big-bang model of cosmic evolution. (The other half of the prize was awarded to Pyotr Kapitsa for unrelated research.)*TIS



1938 Manuel Blum (26 April 1938; Caracas, Venezuela -) is a computer scientist who received the Turing Award in 1995 "In recognition of his contributions to the foundations of computational complexity theory and its application to cryptography and program checking".
Blum attended MIT, where he received his bachelor's degree and his master's degree in EECS in 1959 and 1961 respectively, and his Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1964 under professor Marvin Minsky.
He worked as a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley until 1999. In 2002 he was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences.
He is currently the Bruce Nelson Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, where his wife, Lenore Blum, and son, Avrim Blum, are also professors of Computer Science. *Wik





1943 Ralph William Gosper Jr. (born April 26, 1943), known as Bill Gosper, is an American mathematician and programmer. Along with Richard Greenblatt, he may be considered to have founded the hacker community, and he holds a place of pride in the Lisp community.[2] The Gosper curve and Gosper's algorithm are named after him.

 Gosper enrolled in MIT in 1961, and he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics from MIT in 1965 despite becoming disaffected with the mathematics department because of their anti-computer attitude.

In his second year at MIT, Gosper took a programming course from John McCarthy and became affiliated with the MIT AI Lab.

His contributions to computational mathematics include HAKMEM and the MIT Maclisp system. He made major contributions to Macsyma, Project MAC's computer algebra system. Gosper later worked with Symbolics and Macsyma, Inc. on commercial versions of Macsyma.

In 1974, he moved to Stanford University, where he lectured, and worked with Donald Knuth.

Since that time, he has worked at or consulted for Xerox PARC, Symbolics, Wolfram Research, the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, and Macsyma Inc. *Wik

The Lissajoke Ambiguous Roller is a playful and clever invention by Gosper. The "Lissajoke" is a pun on Lissajous curves—figures formed by the parametric equations involving sine and cosine functions, often producing intricate, symmetrical loops. It seems to have been created around 2014.

A nice example of a lisajoke roller is demonstrated here





DEATHS

1600 Cunradus Dasypodius ((c. 1530–1532 – April 26, 1600) whose fame is based on the “construction of an ingeneous and accurate astronomical clock in the cathedral of Strasbourg, installed between 1571 and 1574.” *VFR The Strasbourg astronomical clock is located in the Cathédrale Notre-Dame of Strasbourg, Alsace, France. The current, third clock dates from 1843. Its main features, besides the automata, are a perpetual calendar (including a computus), an orrery (planetary dial), a display of the real position of the Sun and the Moon, and solar and lunar eclipses. The main attraction is the procession of the life-size figures of Christ and the Apostles which occurs every day at 12:30pm,(not sure if I read this right, but that seems to be when the clock reads noon (corrections anyone?))*Wik
[A minor point on language, the "orrery" was proabably not so-named in that period, according to a post at the Univ of Penn Library, "The name Orrery comes from the following train of facts. When George Graham, the celebrated London mechanic and watchmaker, employed one Rowley to construct his planetarium, said Rowley retained a model, and was afterward patronized by Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery, in making a large machine which, though only representing one or two of the heavenly bodies, was sold to George the First for a thousand guineas. Sir Richard Steele in the work entitled "A New and General Biographical Dictionary", published in 1761, attributed this invention to the Earl of Orrery. Hence compilers of the British Encyclopaedia, which was republished in Philadelphia, followed his lead and such machines have since been known as Orreries. ]

1815 Carsten Niebuhr (March 17, 1733 Lüdingworth – April 26, 1815 Meldorf, Dithmarschen), German mathematician, cartographer, and explorer in the service of Denmark. Niebuhr's first book, Beschreibung von Arabien, was published in Copenhagen in 1772, the Danish government providing subsidies for the engraving and printing of its numerous illustrations. This was followed in 1774 and 1778 by the two volumes of Niebuhr's Reisebeschreibung von Arabien und anderen umliegenden Ländern. These works (particularly the one published in 1778), and most specifically the accurate copies of the cuneiform inscriptions found at Persepolis, were to prove to be extremely important to the decipherment of cuneiform writing. Before Niebuhr's publication, cuneiform inscriptions were often thought to be merely decorations and embellishments, and no accurate decipherments or translations had been made up to that point. Niebuhr demonstrated that the three trilingual inscriptions found at Persepolis were in fact three distinct forms of cuneiform writing (which he termed Class I, Class II, and Class III) to be read from left to right. His accurate copies of the trilingual inscriptions gave Orientalists the key finally crack the cuneiform code, leading to the discovery of Old Persian, Akkadian, and Sumerian. *Wik



1876 Osip Ivanovich Somov (1 June 1815 in Otrada, Moscow gubernia (now oblast), Russia - 26 April 1876 in St Petersburg, Russia) Somov was the first in Russia to develop a geometrical approach to theoretical mechanics. He studied the rotation of a solid body about a point, studying examples arising from the work of Euler, Poinsot, Lagrange and Poisson. Other topics Somov studied included elliptic functions and their application to mechanics. *SAU



1902 Lazarus Immanuel Fuchs (5 May 1833 – 26 April 1902) was a German mathematician who contributed important research in the field of linear differential equations. He was born in Mosina (located in Grand Duchy of Poznań) and died in Berlin, Germany.
He is the eponym of Fuchsian groups and functions, and the Picard–Fuchs equation; Fuchsian differential equations are those with regular singularities. Fuchs is also known for Fuchs's theorem. *Wik



1920 Srinivasa Aaiyangar Ramanujan died at age 32. This self educated mathematician, who was discovered by G. H. Hardy of Cambridge, is remembered for his notebooks crammed with complicated identities. *VFR
Although self-taught, he was one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. He worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series. His remarkable familiarity with numbers, was shown by the following incident. While Ramanujan was in hospital in England, his Cambridge professor, G. H. Hardy, visited and remarked that he had taken taxi number 1729, a singularly unexceptional number. Ramanujan immediately responded that this number was actually quite remarkable: it is the smallest integer that can be represented in two ways by the sum of two cubes: 1729=13+123=93+103 *TIS
I later learned from a blog at John D. Cooks The Endeavour blog that there is a little more to the story. Here is how John writes it:
This story has become famous, but the rest of the conversation isn’t as well known. Hardy followed up by asking Ramanujan what the corresponding number would be for 4th powers. Ramanujan replied that he did not know, but that such a number must be very large.

Hardy tells this story in his 1937 paper “The Indian Mathematician Ramanujan.” He gives a footnote saying that Euler discovered 635318657 = 158^4 + 59^4 = 134^4 + 133^4 and that this was the smallest number known to be the sum of two fourth powers in two ways. It seems odd now to think of such questions being unresolved. Today we’d ask Hardy “What do you mean 653518657 is the smallest known example? Why didn’t you write a little program to find out whether it really is the smallest?”
His readers seem to find that Euler was correct. No surprise there.




1946 Louis Bachelier,(March 11, 1870 – April 28, 1946);the French mathematician, is now recognized internationally as the father of financial mathematics,..Bachelier was ahead of his time and his work was not appreciated in his lifetime. In the light of the enormous importance of international derivative exchanges (where the pricing is determined by financial mathematics) the remarkable pioneering work of Bachelier can now be appreciated in its proper context and Bachelier can now be given his proper place. *SAU



1951 Arnold (Johannes Wilhelm) Sommerfeld (5 Dec 1868, 26 Apr 1951 at age 82) was a German physicist whose atomic model permitted the explanation of fine-structure spectral lines. His first work was on the theory of the gyroscope (with Klein), and then on wave spreading in wireless telegraphy. More significant was his major contribution to the development of quantum theory, generally, and in its application to spectral lines and the Bohr atomic model. He evolved also a theory of the electron in the metallic state valuable to the study of thermo-electricity.*TIS



1976 Carl Benjamin Boyer (November 3, 1906 – April 26, 1976) was a historian of sciences, and especially mathematics. David Foster Wallace called him the "Gibbon of math history". He wrote the books History of Analytic Geometry, The History of the Calculus and Its Conceptual Development, A History of Mathematics, and The Rainbow: From Myth to Mathematics. He served as book-review editor of Scripta Mathematica. *Wik
His History of analytic Geometry is excellent.




1980 Stanisław Gołąb (July 26, 1902 – April 30, 1980) was a Polish mathematician from Kraków, working in particular on the field of affine geometry.
In 1932, he proved that the perimeter of the unit disc can take any value in between 6 and 8, and that these extremal values are obtained if and only if the unit disc is an affine regular hexagon. *Wik



1988 Guillermo Haro Barraza ( 21 March 1913 – 26 April 1988)  was a Mexican astronomer who was working as a newspaper reporter, when he interviewed (1937) Luis Erro of Tonantzintla Observatory. By 1943, Haro’s increasing interest in astronomy was rewarded with a staff position there, despite no formal training. His name remains associated with Herbig-Haro objects, that he and George Herbig discovered independently. These seemed to be stars much younger than the rest of the stars in the sky, and had distinquishing anomalies in their spectra which remained unexplained for many years. Haro’s career of contributions marked the emergence of serious astronomy in Mexico, recognized when he was elected (1959) as the first foreign associate of the Royal Astronomical Society from a developing country. *TIS



2006 Yuval Ne'eman (14 May 1925, 26 Apr 2006 at age 80) Israeli theoretical physicist, who worked independently of Gell-Mann but almost simultaneously (1961) devised a method of grouping baryons in such a way that they fell into logical families. Now known as the Eightfold Way (after Buddha's Eightfold Path to Enlightenment and bliss), the scheme grouped mesons and baryons (e.g., protons and neutrons) into multiplets of 1, 8, 10, or 27 members on the basis of various properties. He had served as the head of his Israel's atomic energy commission, and founded the country's space program.*TIS



2011 Hans-Ludwig Wußing (October 15, 1927 in Waldheim – April 26, 2011 in Leipzig) was a German historian of mathematics and science.


From 1947 to 1952 Wussing  studied mathematics and physics at the University of Leipzig. Ernst Hölder was one of his teachers. In 1952 he took the state examination, and received his doctorate in 1957. His dissertation was on embedding finite groups. From 1956 to 1966 he was assistant at the Karl-Sudhoff Institute for the History of Medicine and Science at the University of Leipzig. He qualified as a professor there in 1966 with a ground-breaking work on the genesis of the abstract group concept. From 1966 to 1968 Wußing was lecturer, and from 1968 professor, of history of mathematics and natural sciences.

In 1969, his book Genesis of the Abstract Group Concept was published in German; it was translated by Abe Shenitzer and Hardy Grant in 1984. B.H. Newman wrote in Mathematical Reviews (see external link below) that Wussing's "main thesis, ably defended and well documented, is that the roots of the abstract notion of a group do not lie, as frequently assumed, only in the theory of algebraic equations, but they are also to be found in the geometry and in the theory of numbers at the end of the 18th and the first half of the 19th centuries". Newman comments that Wussings bibliography is "oddly arranged". Newman also notes that a broader perspective on the topic would require reading the works of George Abram Miller.

Promoted from a department head at the Karl-Sudhoff Institute, he headed the institute from 1977 to 1982. In 1971 he became a corresponding member of the International Academy of the History of Science, and a regular member in 1981. In 1984 he became a full member of the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig. Wussing retired in 1992.


Christoph Scriba, Joseph Dauben, and Hans Wussing at the 19th International Congress of History of Science in Zaragoza, Spain 1993
Wussing is the author of numerous scientific historical publications, the author of many mathematicians' biographies, and co-editor of several series of publications, including biographies in the Teubner Verlag, and several volumes in the series Klassiker der exakten Wissenschaften (Ostwald's Classics of the Exact Sciences), in particular on Euler's work on functional theory, Gauss's diary, and Felix Klein's Erlangen program. In 1993 he was awarded the Kenneth O. May Prize. Until 1998 he was Chairman of the Commission for the History of Science at the Saxon Academy of Sciences. He was also involved in the publication of Johann Christian Poggendorff's Biographical and Literary Pocket Dictionary of the History of Exact Sciences.






2014 Jacqueline Lelong-Ferrand (17 February 1918, Alès, France – 26 April 2014, Sceaux, France) was a French mathematician who worked on conformal representation theory, potential theory, and Riemannian manifolds. She taught at universities in Caen, Lille, and Paris.

Ferrand was born in Alès, the daughter of a classics teacher, and went to secondary school in Nîmes. In 1936 the École Normale Supérieure began admitting women, and she was one of the first to apply and be admitted. In 1939 she and Roger Apéry placed first in the mathematics agrégation; she began teaching at a girls' school in Sèvres, while continuing to do mathematics research under the supervision of Arnaud Denjoy, publishing three papers in 1941 and defending a doctoral thesis in 1942. In 1943 she won the Girbal-Baral Prize of the French Academy of Sciences, and obtained a faculty position at the University of Bordeaux. She moved to the University of Caen in 1945, was given a chair at the University of Lille in 1948, and in 1956 moved to the University of Paris as a full professor. She retired in 1984.

Ferrand had nearly 100 mathematical publications, including ten books, and was active in mathematical research into her late 70s. One of her accomplishments, in 1971, was to prove the compactness of the group of conformal mappings of a non-spherical compact Riemannian manifold, resolving a conjecture of André Lichnerowicz, and on the basis of this work she became an invited speaker at the 1974 International Congress of Mathematicians in Vancouver.






Credits :
*CHM=Computer History Museum
*FFF=Kane, Famous First Facts
*NSEC= NASA Solar Eclipse Calendar
*RMAT= The Renaissance Mathematicus, Thony Christie
*SAU=St Andrews Univ. Math History
*TIA = Today in Astronomy
*TIS= Today in Science History
*VFR = V Frederick Rickey, USMA
*Wik = Wikipedia
*WM = Women of Mathematics, Grinstein & Campbell