Al-Qūhī's perfect compass to draw conic sections Pregar Ta'm
Abū Sahl Wayjan ibn Rustam al-Kūhī (al-Qūhī; Persian: ابوسهل بیژن کوهیAbusahl Bijan-e Koohi) was a Persian[1][2]mathematician, physicist and astronomer. He was from Kuh (or Quh), an area in Tabaristan, Amol, and flourished in Baghdad in the 10th century. He is considered one of the greatest geometers, with many mathematical and astronomical writings ascribed to him.[3][4][5]
Al-Qūhī was the leader of the astronomers working in 988 AD at the observatory built by the Buwayhid amir Sharaf al-Dawla in Badhdad. He wrote a treatise on the astrolabe in which he solves a number of difficult geometric problems.
^Suter, Die Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber (75-76, 1900). In his treatise On Rising Times, he wrote that he had also investigated astronomy as well as centers of gravity and optics. His Perfect Compass, for example, represented a step beyond Ibn Sina’s pointwise constructions of conic sections and described an instrument al-Qūhī characterized as useful for drawing these sections on sundials and astrolabes.
^Jan Hogendijk (1984) "al-Kuhi's construction of an equilateral pentagon in a given square", Zeitschrift für Gesch. Arab.-Islam. Wiss. 1: 100-144; correction and addendum Volume 4, 1986/87, p.267
^Jan Hogendijk (2008) "Two beautiful geometrical theorems by Abu Sahl Kuhi in a 17th century Dutch translation", Ta'rikh-e Elm: Iranian Journal for the History of Science 6: 1-36
^Rashed, Roshdi (1996). Les Mathématiques Infinitésimales du IXe au XIe Siècle 1: Fondateurs et commentateurs: Banū Mūsā, Ibn Qurra, Ibn Sīnān, al-Khāzin, al-Qūhī, Ibn al-Samḥ, Ibn Hūd. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Reviews: Seyyed Hossein Nasr (1998) in Isis89 (1) pp. 112-113 JSTOR236661; Charles Burnett (1998) in Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London61 (2) p. 406 JSTOR3107736.
^John Lennart Berggren, Hogendijk: The Fragments of Abu Sahl al-Kuhi's Lost Geometrical Works in the Writings of al-Sijzi, in: C. Burnett, J.P. Hogendijk, K. Plofker, M. Yano (eds): Studies in the History of the Exact Sciences in Honour of David Pingree, Leiden: Brill, 2003, pp. 605–665
^Mohammed Abattouy (2002), "The Arabic Science of weights: A Report on an Ongoing Research Project", The Bulletin of the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies4, p. 109-130
^Berggren: "The correspondence of Abu Sahl al-Kuhi and Abu Ishaq al-Sabi: a translation with commentaries", J. Hist. Arabic Sci., volume 7, 1983, pp. 39-124.
^M. Steinschnieder, Lettere intorno ad Alcuhi a D. Bald. Boncompagni (Roma, 1863)