The constant pi, denoted ,
is a real number defined as the ratio of a circle's
circumference
to its diameter
,
(1)
| |||
(2)
|
has decimal expansion given by
(3)
|
(OEIS A000796). Pi's digits have many interesting properties, although not very much is known about
their analytic properties. However, spigot (Rabinowitz
and Wagon 1995; Arndt and Haenel 2001; Borwein and Bailey 2003, pp. 140-141)
and digit-extraction algorithms (the
BBP formula) are known for .
A brief history of notation for pi is given by Castellanos (1988ab). is sometimes known as Archimedes' constant
or Ludolph's constant after Ludolph van Ceulen (1539-1610), a Dutch
calculator. The symbol
was first used by Welsh mathematician William Jones in 1706,
and subsequently adopted by Euler. In Measurement of a Circle, Archimedes
(ca. 225 BC) obtained the first rigorous approximation by inscribing
and circumscribing
-gons on a circle using
the Archimedes algorithm. Using
(a 96-gon), Archimedes obtained
(4)
|
(Wells 1986, p. 49; Shanks 1993, p. 140; Borwein et al. 2004, pp. 1-3).
is known to be irrational
(Lambert 1761; Legendre 1794; Hermite 1873; Nagell 1951; Niven 1956; Struik 1969;
Königsberger 1990; Schröder 1993; Stevens 1999; Borwein and Bailey 2003,
pp. 139-140). In 1794, Legendre also proved that
is irrational (Wells
1986, p. 76).
is also transcendental (Lindemann 1882).
An immediate consequence of Lindemann's proof of the transcendence of
also proved that the geometric
problem of antiquity known as circle squaring
is impossible. A simplified, but still difficult, version of Lindemann's proof is
given by Klein (1955).
It is also known that
is not a Liouville number (Mahler 1953), but
it is not known if
is normal to any base (Stoneham 1970). The following table summarizes progress in
computing upper bounds on the irrationality
measure for
.
It is likely that the exponent can be reduced to
, where
is an infinitesimally small number (Borwein et al.
1989).
upper bound | reference |
20 | Mahler (1953), Le Lionnais (1983, p. 50) |
14.65 | Chudnovsky and Chudnovsky (1984) |
8.0161 | Hata (1992) |
7.606308 | Salikhov (2008) |
7.10320534 | Zeilberger and Zudilin (2020) |
It is not known if ,
, or
are irrational. However,
it is known that they cannot satisfy any polynomial
equation of degree
with integer coefficients
of average size
(Bailey 1988ab, Borwein et al. 1989).
J. H. Conway has shown that there is a sequence of fewer than 40 fractions ,
, ... with the property that if you start with
and repeatedly multiply by the first of the
that gives an integer result until a power
of 2 (say,
) occurs, then
is the
th
decimal digit of
.
crops up in all sorts of unexpected
places in mathematics besides circles and spheres.
For example, it occurs in the normalization of the normal
distribution, in the distribution of primes,
in the construction of numbers which are very close to integers
(the Ramanujan constant), and in the probability
that a pin dropped on a set of parallel lines intersects
a line (Buffon's needle problem). Pi also
appears as the average ratio of the actual length and the direct distance between
source and mouth in a meandering river (Stølum 1996, Singh 1997).
The Bible contains two references (I Kings 7:23 and Chronicles 4:2) which give a value of 3 for
(Wells 1986, p. 48). It should be mentioned, however, that both instances refer
to a value obtained from physical measurements and, as such, are probably well within
the bounds of experimental uncertainty. I Kings 7:23 states, "Also he made a
molten sea of ten cubits from brim to brim, round in compass, and five cubits in
height thereof; and a line thirty cubits did compass it round about." This implies
. The Babylonians gave
an estimate of
as
, while the Egyptians gave
in the Rhind papyrus
and 22/7 elsewhere. The Chinese geometers, however, did best of all, rigorously deriving
to 6 decimal places.
appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's insipid
and poorly acted 1966 film Torn Curtain, including in one particularly strange
but memorable scene where Paul Newman (Professor Michael Armstrong) draws a
symbol in the dirt with his foot at
the door of a farmhouse. In this film, the symbol
is the pass-sign of an underground East German network that
smuggles fugitives to the West.
The 1998 film Pi is a dark, strange, and hyperkinetic movie about a mathematician who is slowly going
insane searching for a pattern to the Stock Market. Both a Hasidic cabalistic sect
and a Wall Street firm learn of his investigation and attempt to seduce him. Unfortunately,
the film has essentially nothing to do with real mathematics. 314159, the first six
digits of , is the combination to Ellie's office
safe in the novel Contact
by Carl Sagan.
On Sept. 15, 2005, Google offered exactly 14159265 shares of Class A stock, which is the same as the first eight digits or after the decimal point (Markoff 2005).
The formula for the volume of a cylinder leads to the mathematical joke: "What is the volume of a pizza of thickness and radius
?"
Answer: pi z z a. This result is sometimes known as the second pizza
theorem.
The 2005 album Aerial features a song called "Pi" in which the first digits of are interspersed (unfortunately incorrectly) with lyrics.
There are many, many formulas for pi, from the simple to the very complicated.
Ramanujan (1913-1914) and Olds (1963) give geometric constructions for 355/113. Gardner (1966, pp. 92-93) gives a geometric construction for . Dixon (1991) gives constructions for
and
. Constructions for
approximations of
are approximations to circle squaring (which is
itself impossible).