Omar Khayyam
17th of May, Khayam’s International Day
The caravan of life shall always pass
Beware that is fresh as sweet young grass
Let's not worry about what tomorrow will amass
Fill my cup again, this night will pass, alas.

Born: 18 May 1048 in Nishapur, Persia (now Iran)
Died: 4 Dec 1131 in Nishapur, Persia (now Iran)
By : J. J. O'Connor and E. F. Robertson
Omar Khayyam's full name was Ghiyath al-Din Abu'l-Fath Umar ibn Ibrahim
Nisaburi Khayyami. A literal translation of the name Khayyami (or Khayyam)
means 'tent maker' and this may have been the trade of Ibrahim his father.
Khayyam played on the meaning of his own name when he wrote:-
Khayyam, who stitched the tents of science,
Has fallen in grief's furnace and been suddenly burned,
The shears of Fate have cut the tent ropes of his life,
And the broker of Hope has sold him for nothing!
The political events of the 11th Century played a major role in the
course of Khayyam's life. The Seljuq Turks were tribes that invaded
southwestern Asia in the 11th Century and eventually founded an empire
that included Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and most of Iran. The Seljuq
occupied the grazing grounds of Khorasan and then, between 1038 and
1040, they conquered all of north-eastern Iran. The Seljuq ruler Toghrïl
Beg proclaimed himself sultan at Nishapur in 1038 and entered Baghdad
in 1055. It was in this difficult unstable military empire, which also
had religious problems as it attempted to establish an orthodox Muslim
state, that Khayyam grew up.
Khayyam studied philosophy at Naishapur and one of his fellow students
wrote that he was:-
... endowed with sharpness of wit and the highest natural powers ...
However, this was not an empire in which those of learning, even those
as learned as Khayyam, found life easy unless they had the support of
a ruler at one of the many courts. Even such patronage would not provide
too much stability since local politics and the fortunes of the local
military regime decided who at any one time held power. Khayyam himself
described the difficulties for men of learning during this period in
the introduction to his Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra:-
I was unable to devote myself to the learning of this algebra and the
continued concentration upon it, because of obstacles in the vagaries
of time which hindered me; for we have been deprived of all the people
of knowledge save for a group, small in number, with many troubles,
whose concern in life is to snatch the opportunity, when time is asleep,
to devote themselves meanwhile to the investigation and perfection of
a science; for the majority of people who imitate philosophers confuse
the true with the false, and they do nothing but deceive and pretend
knowledge, and they do not use what they know of the sciences except
for base and material purposes; and if they see a certain person seeking
for the right and preferring the truth, doing his best to refute the
false and untrue and leaving aside hypocrisy and deceit, they make a
fool of him and mock him.
However Khayyam was an outstanding mathematician and astronomer and,
despite the difficulties which he described in this quote, he did write
several works including Problems of Arithmetic, a book on music and
one on algebra before he was 25 years old. In 1070 he moved to Samarkand
in Uzbekistan which is one of the oldest cities of Central Asia. There
Khayyam was supported by Abu Tahir, a prominent jurist of Samarkand,
and this allowed him to write his most famous algebra work, Treatise
on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra from which we gave the quote
above. We shall describe the mathematical contents of this work later
in this biography.
Toghril Beg, the founder of the Seljuq dynasty, had made Esfahan the
capital of his domains and his grandson Malik-Shah was the ruler of
that city from 1073. An invitation was sent to Khayyam from Malik-Shah
and from his vizier Nizam al-Mulk asking Khayyam to go to Esfahan to
set up an Observatory there. Other leading astronomers were also brought
to the Observatory in Esfahan and for 18 years Khayyam led the scientists
and produced work of outstanding quality. It was a period of peace during
which the political situation allowed Khayyam the opportunity to devote
himself entirely to his scholarly work.
During this time Khayyam led work on compiling astronomical tables
and he also contributed to calendar reform in 1079. Cowell quotes The
Calcutta Review No 59:-
When the Malik Shah determined to reform the calendar, Omar was one
of the eight learned men employed to do it, the result was the Jalali
era (so called from Jalal-ud-din, one of the king's names) - 'a computation
of time,' says Gibbon, 'which surpasses the Julian, and approaches the
accuracy of the Gregorian style.'
Khayyam measured the length of the year as 365.24219858156 days. Two
comments on this result. Firstly it shows an incredible confidence to
attempt to give the result to this degree of accuracy. We know now that
the length of the year is changing in the sixth decimal place over a
person's lifetime. Secondly it is outstandingly accurate. For comparison
the length of the year at the end of the 19th century was 365.242196
days, while today it is 365.242190 days.
In 1092 political events ended Khayyam's period of peaceful existence.
Malik-Shah died in November of that year, a month after his vizier Nizam
al-Mulk had been murdered on the road from Esfahan to Baghdad by the
terrorist movement called the Assassins. Malik-Shah's second wife took
over as ruler for two years but she had argued with Nizam al-Mulk so
now those whom he had supported found that support withdrawn. Funding
to run the Observatory ceased and Khayyam's calendar reform was put
on hold. Khayyam also came under attack from the orthodox Muslims who
felt that Khayyam's questioning mind did not conform to the faith. He
wrote in his poem the Rubaiyat :-
Indeed, the Idols I have loved so long
Have done my Credit in Men's Eye much Wrong:
Have drowned my Honour in a shallow cup,
And sold my reputation for a Song.
Despite being out of favour on all sides, Khayyam remained at the Court
and tried to regain favour. He wrote a work in which he described former
rulers in Iran as men of great honour who had supported public works,
science and scholarship.
Malik-Shah's third son Sanjar, who was governor of Khorasan, became
the overall ruler of the Seljuq empire in 1118. Sometime after this
Khayyam left Esfahan and travelled to Merv (now Mary, Turkmenistan)
which Sanjar had made the capital of the Seljuq empire. Sanjar created
a great centre of Islamic learning in Merv where Khayyam wrote further
works on mathematics.
The paper [18] by Khayyam is an early work on algebra written before
his famous algebra text. In it he considers the problem:-
Find a point on a quadrant of a circle in such manner that when a normal
is dropped from the point to one of the bounding radii, the ratio of
the normal's length to that of the radius equals the ratio of the segments
determined by the foot of the normal.
Khayyam shows that this problem is equivalent to solving a second problem:-
Find a right triangle having the property that the hypotenuse equals
the sum of one leg plus the altitude on the hypotenuse.
This problem in turn led Khayyam to solve the cubic equation x3 + 200x
= 20x2 + 2000 and he found a positive root of this cubic by considering
the intersection of a rectangular hyperbola and a circle. An approximate
numerical solution was then found by interpolation in trigonometric
tables. Perhaps even more remarkable is the fact that Khayyam states
that the solution of this cubic requires the use of conic sections and
that it cannot be solved by ruler and compass methods, a result which
would not be proved for another 750 years. Khayyam also wrote that he
hoped to give a full description of the solution of cubic equations
in a later work:
If the opportunity arises and I can succeed, I shall give all these
fourteen forms with all their branches and cases, and how to distinguish
whatever is possible or impossible so that a paper, containing elements
which are greatly useful in this art will be prepared.
Indeed Khayyam did produce such a work, the Treatise on Demonstration
of Problems of Algebra which contained a complete classification of
cubic equations with geometric solutions found by means of intersecting
conic sections. In fact Khayyam gives an interesting historical account
in which he claims that the Greeks had left nothing on the theory of
cubic equations. Indeed, as Khayyam writes, the contributions by earlier
writers such as Mahani and Khazin were to translate geometric problems
into algebraic equations (something which was essentially impossible
before the work of Khawrazmi). However, Khayyam himself seems to have
been the first to conceive a general theory of cubic equations. Khayyam
wrote :
In the science of algebra one encounters problems dependent on certain
types of extremely difficult preliminary theorems, whose solution was
unsuccessful for most of those who attempted it. As for the Ancients,
no work from them dealing with the subject has come down to us; perhaps
after having looked for solutions and having examined them, they were
unable to fathom their difficulties; or perhaps their investigations
did not require such an examination; or finally, their works on this
subject, if they existed, have not been translated into our language.
Another achievement in the algebra text is Khayyam's realisation that
a cubic equation can have more than one solution. He demonstrated the
existence of equations having two solutions, but unfortunately he does
not appear to have found that a cubic can have three solutions. He did
hope that "arithmetic solutions" might be found one day when
he wrote:
Perhaps someone else who comes after us may find it out in the case,
when there are not only the first three classes of known powers, namely
the number, the thing and the square.
The "someone else who comes after us" were in fact del Ferro,
Tartaglia and Ferrari in the 16th century. Also in his algebra book,
Khayyam refers to another work of his which is now lost. In the lost
work Khayyam discusses the Pascal triangle but he was not the first
to do so since Karaji discussed the Pascal triangle before this date.
In fact we can be fairly sure that Khayyam used a method of finding
nth roots based on the binomial expansion, and therefore on the binomial
coefficients. This follows from the following passage in his algebra
book:
The Indians possess methods for finding the sides of squares and cubes
based on such knowledge of the squares of nine figures, that is the
square of 1, 2, 3, etc. and also the products formed by multiplying
them by each other, i.e. the products of 2, 3 etc. I have composed a
work to demonstrate the accuracy of these methods, and have proved that
they do lead to the sought aim. I have moreover increased the species,
that is I have shown how to find the sides of the square-square, quatro-cube,
cubo-cube, etc. to any length, which has not been made before now. the
proofs I gave on this occasion are only arithmetic proofs based on the
arithmetical parts of Euclid's "Elements".
In Commentaries on the difficult postulates of Euclid's book Khayyam
made a contribution to non-Euclidean geometry, although this was not
his intention. In trying to prove the parallels postulate he accidentally
proved properties of figures in non-euclidean geometries. Khayyam also
gave important results on ratios in this book, extending Euclid's work
to include the multiplication of ratios. The importance of Khayyam's
contribution is that he examined both Euclid's definition of equality
of ratios (which was that first proposed by Eudoxus) and the definition
of equality of ratios as proposed by earlier Islamic mathematicians
such as Mahani which was based on continued fractions. Khayyam proved
that the two definitions are equivalent. He also posed the question
of whether a ratio can be regarded as a number but leaves the question
unanswered.
Outside the world of mathematics, Khayyam is best known as a result
of Edward Fitzgerald's popular translation in 1859 of nearly 600 short
four line poems the Rubaiyat. Khayyam's fame as a poet has caused some
to forget his scientific achievements which were much more substantial.
Versions of the forms and verses used in the Rubaiyat existed in Persian
literature before Khayyam, and only about 120 of the verses can be attributed
to him with certainty. Of all the verses, the best known is the following:-
The Moving Finger writes, and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.