Author Topic: Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival  (Read 1638 times)

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Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival
LiveScience.com
By Tia Ghose  March 14, 2015 1:21 PM



The "Pi Day of the Century" event at the 2015 SXSW Interactive festival featured mini pies.



AUSTIN, Texas — It's an event that comes around just once in a century.

Math nerds and circle fans everywhere celebrated the "Pi Day of the Century" today, March 14, 2015, at 9:26 a.m. and 53 seconds. The date and time spelled the first 10 digits of pi: 3.141592653.

Revelers here at the 2015 South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive festival celebrated the event with free mini-pi(e)s, selfies with giant pi symbols, and a countdown to the big moment.

Pi is the mathematical constant that represents the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, and its decimal representation famously never ends and never repeats.

Though we all know the famous number as pi, it was actually only given its dessert-sounding name about 300 years ago, when William Jones, a Welsh mathematician, began initially using the symbol π in a mathematical textbook in 1711 to refer to the perimeter of a circle.

This morning, as the time approached, Stephen Wolfram, founder and CEO of Illinois-based software company Wolfram Research, explained some of the history of the ancient number. In antiquity, the value of pi was generally known to be roughly about three.

"Archimedes, the famous mathematician of antiquity, had a thousand-sided polygon from which he worked out that pi was about 3.14," said Wolfram, who hosted the Pi Day of the Century celebrations here at the festival.

After that, mathematician Leonardo Fibonacci in 1200 calculated the ancient number as 3.1418, which if correct, would have meant the holiday would be celebrated in three years, he said.

By the early 1600s, the Dutch mathematician Ludolph van Ceulen calculated 35 digits of Pi, and for many years the number was known as the Ludolphine number.

Nowadays, pi is known to be about a trillion digits long, thanks to computers, Wolfram said.

For those who are sad to have missed the celebrations, take heart! Pi Day of the Century has already passed in the Central time sone, but it's still approaching in several other regions. (Although Wolfram noted that in the British way of noting the date, with the day first and the month second, today would not be the Pi Day of the Century).

Either way, see you in a century for the next big Pi Day!


http://news.yahoo.com/math-nerds-celebrate-pi-day-century-sxsw-festival-172140642.html

Offline Geo

Re: Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival
« Reply #1 on: March 16, 2015, 03:35:12 pm »
Over here, a couple married at the Pi moment. March 14, 2015,  9:26.

Offline Yitzi

Re: Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival
« Reply #2 on: March 17, 2015, 02:55:10 am »
And meanwhile, the real math nerds know that pi was a mistake (if one not worth the hassle of correcting), and the true circle constant is 2pi.

Offline Geo

Re: Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival
« Reply #3 on: March 17, 2015, 11:42:29 am »
Yitzi, I had no idea! :o

Offline gwillybj

Re: Math Nerds Celebrate 'Pi Day of the Century' at SXSW Festival
« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2015, 01:04:14 pm »
and everybody knows pi R round not square
Two possibilities exist: Either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying. ― Arthur C. Clarke
I am on a mission to see how much coffee it takes to actually achieve time travel. :wave:

 

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