Questions tagged [pi]

The number $\pi$ is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. Understanding its various properties and computing its numerical value drove the study of much mathematics throughout history. Questions regarding this special number and its properties fit in here.

$\pi$ is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. Its definition is modern analysis is (by Karl Weierstrass) $$ \pi = \int_{-1}^1 \frac{dx}{\sqrt{1-x^2}}. $$ An alternative definition, popularised by Landau is: Define $\frac{\pi}{2}$ as the smallest positive root of the cosine function.

It can also be given by the Gregory-Leibniz series (exhibits sublinear convergence) $$ \pi = 4 \sum_{j=0}^\infty \frac{(-1)^j}{2j+1}. $$ $\pi$ has the approximate numerical value $3.14159265358979323846\dots$, can be approximated by fractions, for example, $\frac{22}{7}, \frac{333}{106}, \frac{355}{113},\dots$, and is both irrational and transcendental.

It is part of Euler's famous identity:

$$e^{i\pi}+1=0.$$

1624 questions
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Does this picture represent anything mathematically?

This image here shows a beautiful fractal-like image. Does this map some sort of function, each number corresponding to a section/colour? Or is this just pretty art? Thanks!
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A question about $\pi$

Is it correct? $$\pi=3+\cfrac{\log(\frac{1}{\Delta})}{\log(\frac{1}{\Delta^{\sqrt{\Omega}}})},$$ with $$\Omega=\cfrac{1}{(\pi-3)^{2}}\thickapprox49.8790939?$$
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Is Pi over Pi rational?

A student asked this question in class today, and I wasn't sure of the answer. On the one hand, since Pi is irrational itself, Pi/Pi doesn't fit the definition of a rational number (namely a number of the form a/b where a,b are both integers, b not…
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How is $π$ irrational if.....

If we take a rope of length $x$ which is rational quantity and we make a circle out of it, we measure its diameter which is also rational, if we divide a rational number by another rational number we should get a rational number but the division of…
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Infinitely many expresions for $\pi$

It is known that there are many formulas or sequences that give the exact value of $\pi$,but is there any proof that unlimited of them exist? Conditioned that when u plot it in a graph the function should not be perfectly equal
Nimish
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Why is $\frac {4\sqrt{40}}{\log_{10}{40}} - 4\sqrt{10}$ so close to $\pi$?

Why is $$\frac {4\sqrt{40}}{\log_{10}{40}} - 4\sqrt{10}\approx 3.1419$$ so close to $\pi$?
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If π is irrational, does that means no one may ever draw a perfect circle?

Just had a thought today regarding PI. I'm not very good at geometry: If π is irrational, does that means no one may ever draw a perfect circle? This is just my assumption... .
adrian7
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Is this a true statement?

This is a 9GAG picture I saw tonight. The way it's put, it is evidently false, since 0.10100100010000… (the powers of 10 all in a row) is definitely decimal, infinite and nonrepeating (or in one word, irrational), but most surely doesn't contain…
MickG
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Could $\pi$, raised to some power can give rational result?

For example $\sqrt 7$ is irrational but $\sqrt 7$ raised to power $2$ is rational. Similarly, is it possible that $\pi$ raised to some power (say $n$) could be rational ?
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Geometry: Circumference of circle without $\pi$

I just found out a way to find out the circumference of the circle without using $\pi$: $$4\sqrt{(1.8626\cdot r)^2 - r^2}$$ It can calculate up to $2$ decimals equal to the answer got by using $\pi$. Please let me know if it works. Thanks.
SAD
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