Pi Day came and went peacefully, with moderate intake of pies, and Cornell math professor and Google Scholar
Steve Strogatz turned to the pages of the March 13 (of course) issue of the New Yorker to describe pi and ask why if so fascinates segments of the public. In the article, "
Why Pi Matters," Strogatz notes,
So it’s fair to ask: Why do mathematicians care so much
about pi? Is it some kind of weird circle fixation? Hardly. The beauty of pi,
in part, is that it puts infinity within reach. Even young children get this.
The digits of pi never end and never show a pattern. They go on forever,
seemingly at random—except that they can’t possibly be random, because they
embody the order inherent in a perfect circle. This tension between order and
randomness is one of the most tantalizing aspects of pi.
Pi touches infinity in other ways. For example, there are
astonishing formulas in which an endless procession of smaller and smaller
numbers adds up to pi. One of the earliest such infinite series to be
discovered says that pi equals four times the sum 1 – 1/3 + 1/5 – 1/7 + 1/9 – 1/11
+ ⋯.
The appearance of this formula alone is cause for celebration. It connects all
odd numbers to pi, thereby also linking number theory to circles and geometry.
In this way, pi joins two seemingly separate mathematical universes, like a cosmic
wormhole.
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