The infinite life of pi Reynaldo Lopes

Try to measure a circle.

The diameter and radius are easy,

they’re just straight lines

you can measure with a ruler.

But to get the circumference,

you’d need measuring tape
or a piece of string,

unless there was a better way.

Now, it’s obvious

that a circle’s circumference
would get smaller or larger

along with its diameter,

but the relationship
goes further than that.

In fact, the ratio between the two,

the circumference divided by the diameter,

will always be the same number,

no matter how big
or small the circle gets.

Historians aren’t sure when or how

this number was first discovered,

but it’s been known in some form

for almost 4,000 years.

Estimates of it appear
in the works of ancient Greek,

Babylonian,

Chinese,

and Indian mathematicians.

And it’s even believed to have been used

in building the Egyptian pyramids.

Mathematicians estimated it

by inscribing polygons in circles.

And by the year 1400,

it had been calculated to as far
as ten decimal places.

So, when did they finally
figure out the exact value

instead of just estimating?

Actually, never!

You see, the ratio

of a circle’s circumference
to its diameter

is what’s known as an irrational number,

one that can never be expressed

as a ratio of two whole numbers.

You can come close,

but no matter how precise the fraction is,

it will always be just a tiny bit off.

So, to write it out in its decimal form,

you’d have an on-going series of digits

starting with

3.14159

and continuing

forever!

That’s why, instead of trying to write out

an infinite number of digits every time,

we just refer to it using
the Greek letter pi.

Nowadays, we test the speed of computers

by having them calculate pi,

and quantum computers have been able

to calculate it
up to two quadrillion digits.

People even compete to see

how many digits they can memorize

and have set records for remembering

over 67,000 of them.

But for most scientific uses,

you only need the first forty or so.

And what are these scientific uses?

Well, just about any calculations
involving circles,

from the volume of a can of soda

to the orbits of satellites.

And it’s not just circles, either.

Because it’s also useful
in studying curves,

pi helps us understand periodic
or oscillating systems

like clocks,

electromagnetic waves,

and even music.

In statistics, pi is used in the equation

to calculate the area
under a normal distribution curve,

which comes in handy
for figuring out distributions

of standardized test scores,

financial models,

or margins of error in scientific results.

As if that weren’t enough,

pi is used in particle
physics experiments,

such as those using
the Large Hadron Collider,

not only due to its round shape,

but more subtly,

because of the orbits
in which tiny particles move.

Scientists have even used pi

to prove the illusive notion

that light functions as both a particle

and an electromagnetic wave,

and, perhaps most impressively,

to calculate the density
of our entire universe,

which, by the way,

still has infinitely less stuff in it

than the total number of digits in pi.