Saturday, December 19, 2015

Weird decimals

This Numberphile video is a well designed investigation into the properties of circles.  Pi is a decimal with no discovered patterns. Pi is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter.  The investigation was researched and implemented by the mathematicians from Numberphile.

15 comments:

  1. I think this is very cool and everyone could learn from this. Why do mathmaticians us pi as 3.149632?

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  2. whoops meant 3.14159! Sry for a typo Mr. Martin...

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    1. Also you have to edit the us into a use at the 2nd sentence :P

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  3. I think this is very cool and interesting because there is so much numbers and the people have a funny sense of humor. I am also surprised of how one person memorized pi till like 1 and 1/2 /4ths of it. WHY DID THEY NAME THIS BIG NUMBER PI?

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  5. I never knew 710,000 digit's would take 3 3's.
    -FINOT B. HAILE

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  6. It's shocking that million numbers of pie need that long paper. Also why are there different points around the paper?

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  7. -ANONYMOUSIOUS- JK #Shravan barua

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  8. Also is there anything longer than pi and has a pattern???

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  9. Thank you for your comments so far!

    I hope you've starting thinking about each other's question, has anyone found good answers to these questions?

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  10. PI IS SO BIG. IT HAS SO MANY NUMBERS!!!!!!!
    -KARLA GUERRA

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  11. I also saw a image of the numbers of pi, and I saw 1 column that has not one single 5.

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