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From zero to calculus, from gravity to the speed of light -- India's mathematical and scientific legacy shaped the modern world.
How Brahmagupta turned nothingness into the foundation of all computation.
The trigonometric function that powers GPS, music, and physics began as a Sanskrit word.
In 499 CE Aryabhata nailed pi to four decimal places -- 1100 years before Europe.
Indian mathematicians used negative numbers centuries before Europeans accepted them.
Pingala's chandas shastra encoded binary mathematics in Vedic metre patterns.
The Fibonacci sequence was discovered by Indian scholars studying musical rhythms.
How a Baghdad scholar transmitted Indian numerals to the world and gave us "algorithm".
The Kerala School developed infinite series and proto-calculus 200 years before Newton.
Baudhayana's Shulba Sutra described this theorem centuries before Greece.
Madhava and the Kerala astronomers who changed the world from a village.
Aryabhata stated that Earth rotates on its axis in 499 CE.
Bhaskaracharya described gravitational attraction in the 12th century.
Sayana's Rig Veda commentary gives a remarkably accurate speed of light.
Vedic cosmology's age of the universe aligns remarkably with modern geology.
A visual timeline of India's contributions from Harappan weights to space missions.