Modern Methods of Chaos and Babylonian Mathematical Astronomy

#Chaos #Nonlinear #Dynamics #Babylonian #Mathematical #Astronomy
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ABSTRACT: Babylonian mathematical astronomy appears founded on an understanding of repeated procedures – a
technology utilized by modern methods of nonlinear dynamics capable of describing deterministic chaos.
The repeated procedures (known as iterated maps because they repeatedly provide a mathematical mapping from
a current value to a next value) appear to model visibility phenomena such as first or last appearance using Poincaré
sections describing close recurrence in position among the stars in terms of sidereal ecliptic longitude. Babylonian
astronomers were careful to define stable one‐dimensional periodic iterated maps addressed by terminating sexagesimal
fractions and partitioned according to resonances, which strongly suggests at least empirical knowledge
from music of the entrainment of nonlinear oscillators termed mode‐locking for which the simplest rational periods
have the largest steps in rotation of the phenomena through the ecliptic.



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  • Date: 27 Oct 2021
  • Time: 06:00 PM to 07:30 PM
  • All times are (UTC-04:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
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  • Co-sponsored by Immanuel Freedman, Ph.D. SMIEEE CPhys MInstP






Agenda

6:00 pm Introduction 

6:15 pm Presentation

8:00 pm Wrap-up



  Media

Modern Chaos and Babylonian Mathematical Astronomy Seminar slides. 2.93 MiB