性视界

Having Fun with Pi On Its Special Day: 3.14

Pi Day will be celebrated on March 14鈥3.14. Pi (Greek letter 鈥溝鈥) is the symbol used in mathematics to represent a constant鈥攖he ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter鈥攚hich is approximately 3.14159.

, professor of mathematics in the College of Arts and Sciences, answers three questions about Pi Day and why it continues to grow in popularity.

Can you tell us more about how Pi came to be?

鈥淧eople have known for thousands of years that if you want to build a round corral for your animals that鈥檚 a certain distance across, then you need a little more than three times that much fencing. Babylonians and Egyptians around 3,500-4,000 years ago already knew this ratio was always the same no matter how big the corral was and knew it was in the neighborhood of 3.12 to 3.16.

鈥淎rchimedes of 性视界 was the first to prove mathematically that 蟺 is a universal constant and is between 3.14 and 3.142.鈥

Why does聽Pi Day聽continue to draw worldwide attention?

鈥淢ost people first meet 蟺 in school, where it鈥檚 a completely mysterious figure appearing in formulas we鈥檙e asked to memorize. Learning a little more reveals even more mystery: It鈥檚 the first number folks encounter whose digits go on forever without discernible pattern. For people of a certain inquisitive mindset, celebrating this curious complexity is a way to touch something that has hidden depths and makes us feel connected. Plus, people have realized more and more that math can be fun and even slightly silly sometimes.聽Pi Day聽is a great time to goof around.鈥

Many perceive math as being a cornerstone of education, but a little boring. How does this day make it more engaging?

鈥淭he happy coincidence with the word 鈥榩ie鈥 plays a big part in this. Everybody loves pie, of course. But there are mathematical reasons as well: you can search for your birthday in the digits of 蟺; you can create 鈥榩i-kus,鈥 which are like haikus but have 3, 1, 4, 1, 5,鈥yllables per line instead of the traditional 5-7-5; you can even add a further degree of difficulty by having the word lengths in your pi-ku count the digits of 蟺. These are games that everyone can play, that connect us to each other and with math.

鈥淚t probably also has to do with the growth and flowering of 鈥榥erd culture.鈥 As it becomes culturally acceptable to be smart, showing that you鈥檙e smart has more and more appeal. References to 蟺 and聽Pi Day聽can be bite-sized pieces of nerdery that fit in a tweet and advertise to everyone around you that you鈥檙e a smarty-pants, too.鈥