PI is the number that represents the ration of a circle's circumference to its diameter.
The interesting part is that PI is non-repeating and never ending so its very nature is an approximation. Mathematicians have tried to find patterns within π since ancient times. Archaeologists believe that the ancient Egyptians constructed the Great Pyramid of Giza with knowledge of π. Greek mathematician Archimedes was the first to calculate a range for π using polygons.
Throughout it's history, π has become a fascination among mathematicians and more recently computer programmers. Welsh mathematician William Jones was the first to use the symbol π to represent the ratio of a circle's circumference to it's diameter in the early 1700s. In the 1940s, a little over 1000 digits of π were known.
As of July 2024, the record for PI calculation is 202 trillion Digits.
Read about it HERE.
The last 50 digits are: 5683914937 4658179610 2004394122 9823988073 3622511852
In 2014, scientist Ed Karrel calculated more than 10 QUADRILLION hexadecimal digit of PI.
Using hexadecimals make it faster to calculate. Converting hex to base 10 numbers which we all use each day is very difficult when you have these many digits according to Ed. Here is his blog.
All of this great if you are a math or computer geek. But why should the rest of us care?
PI is present in every aspect of our lives. PI is used in most calculation in the development of all the world's infrastructure. All communications, CAT scans, MRI machines, genetic research, propulsion systems (space and military aircraft), quantum physics....the list goes on. Famous scientific discoveries and the math that describes them incorporate PI:
* The calculation for determining the horsepower of your car has PI in it.
* Einstein's famous equation that describes relativity which is now directly applied in
satellite calibration has PI in it. Here it is in very simple form:
* How about the speed and volume of blood flow inside the first artificial heart? You bet.
PI is included in that calculation too.
* Want to figure out the position of two planets nearest to the earth? You need PI.
* Radio communications, cellphones, GPS satellites (see Einstein's equation above) computer hard drive/processor technology were both developed using mathematics that incorporates the number "PI".
* Airlines use PI to calculate flying distance around the earth
* Manufacturing uses PI to figure out how much of a substance will fit into a volume
of circular or cylindrical space
You might not like math. You might not get PI. Just remember that PI (3.14159...) is integrated into our everyday life unlike any other number. Without it, your daily life would be totally different.
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