|  Pi, π | 
In General
  > s.a. Euler's Equation; series.
  * Value: The transcendental number
π = 3.1415 92653 58979 32384 62643 38327 95028 84197 16939 93751 05820 ....
* Approximations: Archimedes' approximation, 3 + 10/71 < π < 3 + 1/7; In 1655 the English mathematician John Wallis published a book in which he derived a formula for pi as the product of an infinite series of ratios,
π/2 = (2 · 2 / 1 · 3) (4 · 4 / 3 · 5) (6 · 6 / 5 · 7) · · · ,
    where the terms are of the form \((2j)\,(2j)\,/\,(2j-1)\,(2j+1)\) with \(j\)
    from 1 to infinity; Also, π equals 22/7 to within a 0.04% error!
  * Properties: Related to the
    quadrature of the circle; Its digits pass tests for randomness; Thought to
    be a normal number; 2001, D Bailey & R Crandall showed connection to
    chaos theory.
  * Integral representations:
    It appears in
  
  @ General references: issue SA(88)feb; Blatner 99;
    Posamentier & Lehmann 04;
    Adrian 06 [I].
  @ Statistical estimation: Bloch & Dressler AJP(99)apr;
    > s.a. statistical geometry [Buffon's needle].
  @ Wallis' formula: Friedmann & Hagen JMP(15)
    + news PhysOrg(15)nov,
    pt(15)nov [and quantum physics];
    Chashchina & Silagadze PLA(17)-a1704 [comments];
    Cortese & García JGP(17)-a1709 [from the harmonic oscillator].
  @ Related topics: Jáuregui & Tsallis JMP(10)-a1004,
    Amdeberhan et al JMP(12)
      [representation in terms of q-exponential function, and generalizations].
  > Approximations:
    see Wikipedia page. 
History and Curiosities
  * History: Until the V century, the best
    value was Archimedes' approximation; 1665, Wallis formula; 1706, Name given by William
    Jones (and 100 digits calculated), from the initial of "perimetron" –
    later used by Euler; 1844, Johann Dase of Hamburg calculated (in his head!) 205 digits;
    1882, Proved to the transcendental; 1897, The Indiana state House of Representatives
    passed a bill decreeing that π = 4.0 – but the bill didn't make it past the
    Senate; 1949, ENIAC calculated 2037 digits in 70 hours; 1999, over \(6 \times 10^9\)
    digits calculated by computer, using Ramanujan's work; 2001, \(5 \times 10^{11}\)
    digits known; 2020, \(5 \times 10^{13}\) digits known (Timothy Mullican).
  * Memorization: J Conway memorized
    many digits; 2000, a ND kid memorized more than 5000; But the records are 40,000
    for Hideaki Tomoyori (1987, in 17 hr 21 min), and 42,194 for Hiroyuki Goto (1995,
    in 9 hr 21 min).
  * Related facts: March 14th
    is celebrated as Pi Day.
  @ References:
    news ns(10)mar [interesting facts];
    news ns(12)mar [US ruling that the idea of making music based on π cannot be copyrighted];
    news sn(18)mar [in support of using τ = 2π instead].
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  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 2 apr 2021