-
Pi is the first letter of the Greek word
perimeter meaning distance around.
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In 1737, Euler used the symbol for pi to be
equal to the ratio of the circumference to
the diameter in a circle.
- A brief history of pi:
Biblical References: I Kings 7:23,
II Chronicles 4:2
In Kings, it states, "And he made a
molten sea, ten cubits from one brim
to the other:
it was round all about,
and a line of thirty cubits did
compass it about."
240 B.C. Archimedes found pi to be
between 223/71 and 22/7
150 A.D. Ptolemy found pi to be
approximately 377/120 (or 3.1416)
480 A.D. In China, pi was found to be
approximately equal to 355/113 or
3.1415929 ...
1150 Bhaskara (a Hindu) gave 3927/1250
as an accurate value of pi
1579 Viete used polygons having 393,216
sides to evaluate pi correct to 9 places
1610 Van Ceulen used 2^62 sides to
compute pi to 35 decimal places
Biblical References: I Kings 7:23, II Chronicles 4:2
In Kings, it states, "And he made a molten sea, ten cubits from one brim to the other:
it was round all about, and a line of thirty cubits did compass it about."
240 B.C. Archimedes found pi to be between 223/71 and 22/7
150 A.D. Ptolemy found pi to be approximately 377/120 (or 3.1416)
480 A.D. In China, pi was found to be approximately equal to 355/113 or 3.1415929 ...
1150 Bhaskara (a Hindu) gave 3927/1250 as an accurate value of pi
1579 Viete used polygons having 393,216 sides to evaluate pi correct to 9 places
1610 Van Ceulen used 2^62 sides to compute pi to 35 decimal places
(2)(2)(4)(4)(6)(6)(8)... 1650 John Wallis pi/2 = ------------------------- (1)(3)(3)(5)(5)(7)(7)... 1 1 1 1674 Leibniz pi/4 = 1 - --- + --- - --- + ... 3 5 7
1897 Indiana's General Assembly
considered Bill No. 246 to
legislate the value of pi.
The
value considered was sixteen
divided by the square root of 3,
which equals 9.2376... which isn't
even close! Luckily, a professor
from Purdue happened to be at the
capitol when this bill was introduced,
and he advised the senators of their
error.
Click here to find out more about this bill!
1949 ENIAC (first modern computer)
spent 70 hours to compute pi to
2,037 places
1986 Cray-2 Supercomputer computes
pi to 29,360,128 decimal places
(it took 28 hours and 12 trillion
arithmetic operations)
1988 Yasumasa Kanada of the
University of Tokyo computed pi to
201,326,000 decimal places
1990 The Chudnovsky brothers computed
pi to 1,011,196,691 decimal places
1997 Pi is computed to 51,539,600,000
decimal places
On April 4, 1999, Pi is computed to
68,719,470,000 decimal places by
Yasumasa Kanada
and Daisuke Takahashi
at the University of Tokyo.
On September 20, 1999, Pi is computed to
206,158,430,000 decimal places by
Yasumasa Kanada
and Daisuke Takahashi
at the University of Tokyo.
In September 2002, Pi is computed to
1,240,000,000,000 decimal places by
Professor Yasumasa Kanada
at the University of Tokyo. It took over
400 hours on a Hitachi Supercomputer.
Click here to read the news release!
The 1983 Guinness Book of World Records
lists Rajan Mahadevan as having recited
31,811 places of pi
from memory (it
doesn't say why he did this ... )
Click here to see a news release about a Virginia student
who memorized pi to 8,000 digits
which begin 3.1415926535897932384626433832795...
- Yes, I know a digit.
- May I draw a circle?
- Wow, I made a great discovery!
- Now I need a verse recalling pi.
- How I wish I could enumerate pi easily today.
- May I have a large container of coffee right now?
- May I have a large container of coffee -- sugar and cream?
- Sir, I need a large microwave to simmer, broil, and roast.
- Hey, I need a large motorboat to rescue women and girls.
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How I wish I could recollect pi
Eureka! cried the great inventor.
Christmas pudding, Christmas Pie
Is the problem's very center. -
God! I need a drink --
Alcoholic of course --
After all those lectures
Involving radical equations. -
See, I have a rhyme assisting
My feeble brain, its tasks ofttimes resisting. -
See, I have a rhyme assisting
My feeble brain, its tasks ofttimes resisting. -
Sir, I send a rhyme excelling (3.14159)
In sacred truth and rigid spelling (265358)
Numerical sprites elucidate (979)
For me the lexicon's full weight (32846)
... From ask Marilyn, 5/30/2004 -
Que j'aime a faire apprendre un nombre utile aux sages
Immortel Archimede, antique ingenieur,
Aui de ton jugement peut sonder la valuer?
Pour moi ton probleme eut de pareils avantages.(The author was a French mathematics professor named Lucas.
A literal translation of his rhyme:
How I would like to express a number useful to the wise.
Immortal Archimedes, ancient engineer,
Who can appreciate the value of your judgment?
For me your problem had equal advantages.)