The mathematician and poet Omar Khayyam was born in Neyshābūr (in Iran) only a few years before al-Bīrūnī’s death. He later lived in Samarkand and Eṣfahān, and his brilliant work there continued many of the main lines of development in 10th-century mathematics. Not only did he discover a general method of extracting roots of arbitrary high degree, but his Algebra contains the first complete treatment of the solution of cubic equations. Omar did this by means of conic sections, but he declared his hope that his successors would succeed where he had failed in finding an algebraic formula for the ...(100 of 41449 words)