3.15.2008

Happy Pi Day!

For those of you less geeky than I, you may not have been aware of the fact that today, being 3/14, is Pi Day! I do know, however, that the chemistry dept. serves pie on pi day, so more are probably aware then otherwise would have been. Anyway, I couldn't let this opportunity pass by without sharing a few little known pieces of trivia about Pi.

This rather startling equation relates five of the most important numbers in science.
(i = the square root of -1, for the uninitiated)

Pi has been calculated out to 1,241,100,000,000 decimal digits as of Oct. 20, 2005.

I have used a program that I downloaded to compute PI to 10,000,000,000 places on one of the lab computers. This process took 501270.83 seconds, or ~139.24 hours, and produced a 13 gigabyte text file containing the digits. If I printed this many digits of pi out in Word (never mind that Word won't even open a file anywhere near that large), using 12 point Times New Roman font, it would take 126,582,278.5 pages! Even if I scaled the font down to a minuscule 2 points, it would take more than 23,148,148 pages! Only if I scaled it down to 1 point font would it take fewer than a million pages to print: 47,244.5 to be exact (1 point font is a LOT smaller than 2 point). Now realize that more than 100 times this many digits have been calculated!!!

Now, after the above statistics, you might be thinking that there must be some scientific use for many digits of pi. But no! A mere 39 decimal digits is sufficient to compute the circumference of any circle that fits in the Observable universe to a precision comparable to the size of a Hydrogen atom. [Wikipedia] People calculate digits of pi for the same reason people climb Mount Everest: Because it's there!

Pi can be calculated using the simple series: \pi = \frac{4}{1}-\frac{4}{3}+\frac{4}{5}-\frac{4}{7}+\frac{4}{9}-\frac{4}{11}\cdots\!
but be prepared to spend some time on it, since 300 terms of the above series are not sufficient to calculate Pi to 2 decimal places.

The current Guinness Book record for memorizing digits of pi is 67,890 digits, held by Lu Chao, a 24-year-old graduate student from China.

I am able to recite 100 digits. Ask me sometime if you want to hear them! :)

Thats all for now. You can read the wikipdeia article if you want more cool facts about Pi!

Happy Pi Day! :)


Oh, yeah. I will be posting a select few pictures from the orchestra tour soon.

18 comments:

Barry Howe said...

I like pie.

Jonas said...

I particularly like that equation, although it really boggles my mind!

Kelsey said...

lol. I enjoyed the recital. Talent show really missed out!

Paul said...

pi is grand

Jonathan Gerrans said...

well, I *was* going to post some tour pictures, but then the bios flash I attempted on thursday went bad, and now all my computer does when I turn it on is beep intermittently. So, until my new motherboard arrives, pictures will be lacking...

Julianne said...

crazy.

Caitlin said...

.......

Jen said...

I want to hear you recite the 100 digits! How long does it take?

I've never seen that equation before now (4/1 - 4/3 + 4/5 ... or whatever it was), that's pretty cool. Too bad it's not very useful if it only gets you to two decimal places unless you keep going for a long time.

Ok pictures should be up by now...
I know I missed them at your grandparents' house. But I do want to see them eventually!

Jen said...

p.s. Why can't I subscribe to your blog (RSS)?

Jonathan Gerrans said...

rss should work now...

Jen said...

Yep! Thanks. I forgot to tell you that the reason I asked you instead of David was so that it would be a surprise? Kind of? Hopefully he won't read this before then... I just didn't want him to plan his own, it's more fun to be surprised.

Thanks!

Jen

Jonathan Gerrans said...

ok

18 seconds, btw

shama said...

Wow... Even though I am challenged in the area of math, that is quite intriguing!

Kristin said...

Johonn, it's posting time...

Kelsey said...

Is your blog still alive??

Or did it have too much pi...

Jonathan Gerrans said...

Ok ok, I'll try to post sometime soon! :) I just finished my first history exam, so i have a little more free time for a short while. :) Expect a post in the next few units of time, i haven't decided which units yet... :)

- Jonathan

Jonas said...

millenia, i'm afraid.

Jonathan Gerrans said...

I promise, I will post soon!!! I just tried this evening, but Blogger's image uploader is on the fritz, so I couldn't... (can't post without pictures! :) But as soon as possible I will be posting, and expect 2 or 3! :D

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