I would be remiss indeed if I ignored this important holiday. :D To those who may be unaware, today is March 14th, commonly known as Pi day. Not the kind you eat, although I encourage that as well! Pi, or pi stands for a mathematical unit used in calculating area, or circumference to a circle. The equations are as follows: A=pi*r^2 and C=pi*d. Pi is most often simply shortened to 3.14, hence March 14th. The full number of pi is an endless string of decimal points, going on forever with not recognizable pattern. There are even contests held for who can memorize the most digits of pi. Here are the first dozen or so: 3.141592653589793… and so on and so forth. Many people like to use the time, date, year, etc to use as many digits of pi as possible. For example, March 14, at 1:59pm could be written as: 3.14 1:59:26, or the month, day, and time. Last year we all got pretty excited because we could use the year as well: 3.14.15. But perhaps the most excited we ever got was way back in the year of 1592, 100 years after Columbus. For in that year, we could use the whole year instead of just the last 2 digits: 3.14 1592! Add in the time and… 3.14 1592, 6:53:58, or month.day year, hours.minutes,seconds!!
Conversely, if we go with the ISO 8601
standard format (http://xkcd.com/1179/ ) of
time and date (YYYY-MM-DD-HH-MM-SS-s) we run into a month issue:
3141-59-26 (I’m pretty sure there aren’t
59 months in a year…but who knows? If the moon crashes into the Earth by then
we may need to adjust the Gregorian Calendar a wee bit).
Pi has been around since the biblical
days although just the number 3 was used. Since then, the Chinese had a go at
refining it, and found 7 decimal places of pi. Thereafter, pi was used in many
cultures who created approximations such as 22/7, 25/8, 16/9 squared, and
339/108. It wasn’t until Archimedes took a look at it in 250 BC however, that
it became closer to what we know today. Archimedes used a series of refined
polygons to “trap pi” in finer and finer polygons to discover it’s value.
Archimedes proved that pi rested in-between the following fractions: 223/71 and
22/7, or 3.1408 and 3.1429. Over time mathematicians improved on this until
they were able to reach over 70 digits of pi! This was by hand by the way, not
with computers. Today of course, we can calculate pi to as many digits as we
need! I believe there is a computer out there somewhere that is still
calculating the next digits of pi. Our current record by the way, is 10
trillion digits of pie, more than we’ll ever need, but possibly less than the
national debt will be in a few years depending on the coming election!
Personally, I’m torn. I love Pi, but then
I love Pie. Especially pumpkin pie. Oh! And Apple pie. And chocolate cream pie.
And… *wanders off in search of pie*
Anywho, happy pi day everyone!
woof
4 comments:
I've only memorized 6 digits with any reliability. I added five more today. Going to see if they stick.
3.1415926535
Nice! I'm proud of you! And you even wrote a pi day blog! :D *high fives*
Woo! *Munches Pi* I personally love pi. Love it, I love eating the digits one by one *snacks on a five*. The crunchy bits at the edges are the best though. Unfortunently, there are only two edges in pi. The round one (That's the 3), and the last digit, or bottom of the number *snacks on a 2*. Then there is the upper crust of pi, as it soars along the line of infinity. That bit's ok, but you fill up rather quickly. Just take a nice deep slice, and some of it all! Best of all, it's the only pi that lasts forever!
(And if you dig too deep, you might uncover your greed and expose a dragon egg) I hear dragonses are especially tasty. *blink* oh dear, this one's restless!
Haha, awesome! Hey, wait, you'll end up eating the whole article! come back with that 2!
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