Daffodil International University

Educational => Mathematics => Interesting Maths => Topic started by: Mosammat Arifa Akter on April 22, 2015, 01:20:18 PM

Title: Finding the Value of Pi
Post by: Mosammat Arifa Akter on April 22, 2015, 01:20:18 PM
Historians estimate that by 2000 B.C. humans had noticed that the ratio of circumference to diameter was the same for all circles. This discovery hinged on the idea of proportion - in this case humans noticed that if you double the distance "across" a circle, then you double the distance "around" it. In today's algebraic notation this implied the formula
where Pi was constant. (It wasn't until 1706 that this notation, using the Greek letter seen in the above equation - often written Pi and pronounced like the English 'pie' - was introduced by William Jones).

pi=Circumference/diameter

The significance of this discovery is clear: Circles are everywhere - in the sun, the moon, the pupils of our eyes, the most basic religious rituals and the earliest man-made structures. Achieving a greater mathematical understanding of Pi would lead to scientific and technological advances that would further the development of civilization, as well as creating some very interesting problems in pure mathematics.
Title: Re: Finding the Value of Pi
Post by: naser.te on October 30, 2016, 07:39:35 AM
Good post.
Title: Re: Finding the Value of Pi
Post by: smriti.te on November 22, 2016, 12:45:12 AM
Nice post....