by neufer » Fri Jun 11, 2021 12:26 pm
https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=sine wrote:
<<
sine (n.) trigonometric function, 1590s (in Thomas Fale's "Horologiographia, the Art of Dialling"), from Latin sinus "fold in a garment, bend, curve, bosom."
Used mid-12c. by Gherardo of Cremona in Medieval Latin translation of Arabic geometrical text to render Arabic jiba "chord of an arc, sine" (from Sanskrit jya "bowstring"), which he confused with jaib "bundle, bosom, fold in a garment.">>
[quote="APOD Robot" post_id=314122 time=1623384403 user_id=128559]
[b][i][url=https://www.facebook.com/fiddleoak/photos/pb.218639154975119.-2207520000../1869092119929806/?type=3&theater]The serendipitous sequence[/url] follows the undulating path of a bird in flight..[/i][/b][/quote][quote=https://www.facebook.com/fiddleoak/photos/pb.218639154975119.-2207520000../1869092119929806/?type=3&theater]
[b][i]As Ron noted, the sinusoidal motion of the bird flapping its wings mirrors that of the sum of sines that the earth, sun, and moon all spin in, all aligned in some way for us to see in this image. I mean, at the end of the day, we are all just sums of sine waves.
Maybe a few cosines in there (you know who you are).[/i][/b][/quote][quote=https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=sine]
<<[b]sine (n.) trigonometric function, 1590s (in Thomas Fale's "Horologiographia, the Art of Dialling"), from Latin sinus "fold in a garment, bend, curve, bosom."
Used mid-12c. by Gherardo of Cremona in Medieval Latin translation of Arabic geometrical text to render Arabic jiba "chord of an arc, sine" (from Sanskrit jya "bowstring"), which he confused with jaib "bundle, bosom, fold in a garment."[/b]>> [/quote]