Ah Pi, that elusive impossible goal. It has driven many to madness (especially the guy in this movie), but many also to great feats.
And so unsurprisingly it has a special place in the hearts of many mathematicians. The 16th century German mathematician Ludoph van Ceulen even had his tombstone engraved with his 32 decimal place estimations of pi.
Ah, Pi!
Fiercely irrational, blissfully transcendent, and so essential to the universe and how it works...
But it's so tricky. Oh course, I know how to write Pi's true form, but instead of revealing that truth to you and thus blowing your minds, I'll just share with you some other def.s of pi, beyond just the ratio of the perimeter of a circle and its diameter (meter! meter!) (all better than the old stand-by 3.14).
1. Good old Archimedes came up with a rough estimate: π is between 223/71 and 22/7
He figured this by drawing a circle, drawing a polygram inside the circle, touching all the sides, and then drawing a polygram outside the circle where the circle touched all of its sides. Then he compared the two polygrams, and by making more and more sides... and this is how you get the rough estimate 22/7 which I used through much of elementary school.
2. Here's one an Indian did write up in the 15th century AD:
and so on... FOREVER!!!
Pretty damn awesome. INFINITE SERIES RULE!!!
Good work Madhava of Sangamagrama! It would take until the 17th century for the series to be rediscovered through the hearty work of James Gregory and Gottfried Leibniz.
3. And if you like your arctangents (and who doesn't?), how about this def. of pi:
Kudos John Machin!
And if you don't like your arctans, well,
and so on, still FOREVER!!!
At least according to a nice little Taylor expansion of arctangent.
4. Well, to take Pi to the next level, another Indian had to get into the game. And so in the early 19th century another Indian did (actually Indians had been working all along, but this 5 def.s not a total history). I'm talking about the one, the only Srinivāsa Rāmānujan!!!
Check out his method for finding Pi, derived from the highest halls of Number Theory:
While that method didn't hit the big time till 1985, in that year William Gosper used it to calculate Pi to 17 million digits. Dude, sweet.
5. But if you want to go a little ways by the abstract route. Well, remember that Euler with some Taylor formulization of e^(ix), sin x and cos x, came up with
which when x = pi leads to a nice little identity involving pi:
Ah, Euler, you may have lived in the 18th century and pronounced your name like a greaser, but you're still one of the best.
So in conclusion let me give you one more def. of pi:
Pi = Awesome
Exactly
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Archimedes Rules!!! Woo!!!
I'm not a Hellenophile, I have a good taste for the Classics mind you, but I'm not one of those who say the Greeks invented everything. With Math, for example, despite the immense Greek influence (often not done by actual Greeks but by Egyptians or Syrians who spoke Greek), but India, Arabia, and China also had a huge impact on the history of Math. And yet, there is one Greek, who's outstanding enough that I can never get tired of hearing about him.
ARCHIMEDES!!!
So we have a man who created ancient war machines that matched even the Romans for years. Yet despite the mountains of gold that earned him, the war machines were a distraction. His love was Math. Pure Math. And it was there he performed miracles. Mechanics of Floating Objects. Combinatric speculation. Areas of curves and spheres. And the number of grains of sands that it would take to fill up the universe.
He was so high up the math ladder he had to invent his own number system. He dabbled with the basics of integral calculus and said that they weren't rigorous enough for him.
And the man doesn't stop giving. The Archimedes Palimpsest, the best collection of Archimedes writings despite being buried under layers of rewritten parchment, has never been in the best condition, having been mold encrusted, painted over, and scraped apart. Yet with a little patience, a little hard work, and some ultra-fancy X-rays, the Palimpsest is still giving up new texts by, about, or unrelated to Archimedes. As late as April 2007, a new commentary about Archimedes was discovered.
Check out more info about the Archimedes Palimpsest.
ARCHIMEDES!!!
So we have a man who created ancient war machines that matched even the Romans for years. Yet despite the mountains of gold that earned him, the war machines were a distraction. His love was Math. Pure Math. And it was there he performed miracles. Mechanics of Floating Objects. Combinatric speculation. Areas of curves and spheres. And the number of grains of sands that it would take to fill up the universe.
He was so high up the math ladder he had to invent his own number system. He dabbled with the basics of integral calculus and said that they weren't rigorous enough for him.
And the man doesn't stop giving. The Archimedes Palimpsest, the best collection of Archimedes writings despite being buried under layers of rewritten parchment, has never been in the best condition, having been mold encrusted, painted over, and scraped apart. Yet with a little patience, a little hard work, and some ultra-fancy X-rays, the Palimpsest is still giving up new texts by, about, or unrelated to Archimedes. As late as April 2007, a new commentary about Archimedes was discovered.
Check out more info about the Archimedes Palimpsest.
Mathimoto Speaks!!!
I, John Thomas, on behalf of Mathimoto, man of math, air his complaint: People do not know enough about math!!!
And thus, I have been commanded to share with the people the world of math!!!
So stay tuned for:
Math History
Mini-math Lessons
Cool Math Facts
Math News
And MATH ULTRA-AWESOMENESS!!!
Math rules!!!
And thus, I have been commanded to share with the people the world of math!!!
So stay tuned for:
Math History
Mini-math Lessons
Cool Math Facts
Math News
And MATH ULTRA-AWESOMENESS!!!
Math rules!!!
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