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Fun Facts: What You Didn’t Know about Pi
You may know pi as the ratio between a circle’s circumference and its diameter, or as the number 3.14. Here are some fun facts about pi that you might not know about.
- There is a computer called the Electronic Numeric Integrator and Computer (ENIC) that, in 1949, took 70 hours to figure out the first 2,037 decimal places of pi.
- The state legislature of Indiana proposed a bill in 1897 that tried to ascertain the most exact value of pi. The bill never passed.
- The record for discovering the most number of digits of pi belongs to Fabrice Bellard. He calculated 2.7 trillion decimal places on just a desktop computer.
- March 14 is known as Pi Day because of its date: 3/14. It is also the birthday of Albert Einstein, who was born in 1879. (Happy Pi Day!)
- The Greek letter π was selected to describe pi in 1706 by William Jones, an English mathematician.
- It would take 12 billion digits of pi, typed in a normal-size font, to reach Kansas from New York City.
- When people want to measure ripples emanating from a central point, they use pi.
- The Guinness Book of World Records states that Lu Chao holds the world record for memorizing
- the most number of digits of pi. He memorized 67,890 digits, which took him 24 hours and 4 minutes.
- Feynman point is the name for the six nines in a row that start at decimal point number 762.The number 1 is the most commonly occurring number in the first 100,000 decimal places of pi. It occurs 10,137 times.
Also in case you didn’t notice, 3.14 backwards looks like “PIE.”
Source: http://www.studentguide.org/all-about-pi-everything-you-need-to-know-then-some/
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