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Shadows, Stardust, and Pi: Inside the Mind of Aryabhata:The First Astronomer

gumroad   75.00 INR   by learnoscope
65d old

How did a 23-year-old ancient scholar calculate the cosmos without a telescopes?You know that Pi is 3.1416. You know the Earth spins on its axis. You know how eclipses work. But do you know who figured it out first?In 499 CE, a young Indian mathematician named Aryabhata wrote a 121-verse book that fundamentally hacked the universe. He didn't have computers. He didn't have glass lenses. But he had a mind that saw the cosmos in pure, perfect geometry.In this highly visual, 30-infographic ebook by The LearnoScope, we break down the mind-bending science of ancient India. Using stunning visuals and high-impact precision learning, we translate complex ancient astrophysics into gripping, easy-to-understand layouts.Find out how ancient astronomers built the math that eventually launched satellites, powered global navigation, and changed human history forever.Grab your copy and step into the observatory of the ancient world!

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