A Brief History of π
Pi has been known for almost 4000 years—but even if we calculated the
number of seconds in those 4000 years and calculated pi to that number
of places, we would still only be approximating its actual value. Here’s a
brief history of finding pi:
The ancient Babylonians calculated the area of a circle by taking 3 times the square of its
radius, which gave a value of pi = 3. One Babylonian tablet (ca. 1900–1680 BC) indicates
a value of 3.125 for pi, which is a closer approximation.
In the Egyptian Rhind Papyrus (ca.1650 BC), there is evidence that the Egyptians
calculated the area of a circle by a formula that gave the approximate value of 3.1605 for
pi.
The ancient cultures mentioned above found their approximations by measurement. The
first calculation of pi was done by Archimedes of Syracuse (287–212 BC), one of the
greatest mathematicians of the ancient world. Archimedes approximated the area of a
circle by using the Pythagorean Theorem to find the areas of two regular polygons: the
polygon inscribed within the circle and the polygon within which the circle was
circumscribed. Since the actual area of the circle lies between the areas of the inscribed
and circumscribed polygons, the areas of the polygons gave upper and lower bounds for
the area of the circle. Archimedes knew that he had not found the value of pi but only an
approximation within those limits. In this way, Archimedes showed that pi is between 3
1/7 and 3 10/71.
A similar approach was used by Zu Chongzhi (429–501), a brilliant Chinese
mathematician and astronomer. Zu Chongzhi would not have been familiar with
Archimedes’ method—but because his book has been lost, little is known of his work. He
calculated the value of the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter to be
355/113. To compute this accuracy for pi, he must have started with an inscribed regular
24,576-gon and performed lengthy calculations involving hundreds of square roots
carried out to 9 decimal places.
Mathematicians began using the Greek letter π in the 1700s. Introduced by William
Jones in 1706, use of the symbol was popularized by Euler, who adopted it in 1737.
An 18
th
century French mathematician named Georges Buffon devised a way to
calculate pi based on probability. You can try it yourself at the Exploratorium exhibit
Throwing Pi.

More Related Content

PPTX
History of pie
PPT
Power presentation of pi
PPTX
The history of pi
PPTX
Maths Pi
PPTX
History of pi
PPTX
History of pi
PPT
What I Spi
PPTX
invention of pi
History of pie
Power presentation of pi
The history of pi
Maths Pi
History of pi
History of pi
What I Spi
invention of pi

What's hot (20)

PPTX
presentation on pi.pptx
PDF
Pi pdf
PPTX
Number pi
PPTX
PPTX
History of pi
PPTX
PPTX
PI THE MATHEMATICAL CONSTANT
PPTX
Pi (π)
PPT
Pi day presentation 1
PPTX
PPTX
A Project on Pi
DOCX
History of pi
PPT
The Origin And History Of Pi By Nikitha Reddy
PPTX
Ancient indian mathematicians
PPTX
PPT
Pi Ppt
PPTX
Application of Pi
PPT
Pythagoras Theorem
PPTX
Aryabhatta
presentation on pi.pptx
Pi pdf
Number pi
History of pi
PI THE MATHEMATICAL CONSTANT
Pi (π)
Pi day presentation 1
A Project on Pi
History of pi
The Origin And History Of Pi By Nikitha Reddy
Ancient indian mathematicians
Pi Ppt
Application of Pi
Pythagoras Theorem
Aryabhatta
Ad

Similar to History of pi (20)

PPTX
project 3 maths project grade 8 (math).pptx
PPTX
Maths π project School Project Numbers Numbers
PPTX
Presentation (8).pptx
PPT
Powerpresentationofpi 120620040452-phpapp01
PDF
Estimate Pi by Dropping Toothpicks - Experiment.pdf
PPT
Hari love sachin
DOCX
METHOD OF BABYLONIANS
PPTX
Interesections presentation
PPTX
History of Mathematics: Egyptian Geometry ( Antipona ). pptx
PPT
Hari love sachin
PPTX
Historical events in geometry
PPTX
Pi and phi
PPTX
history of trigonometry
PDF
History of geometry
PPSX
şErife özder
PPSX
şErife özder
PPSX
şErife özder
PPSX
şErife özder
project 3 maths project grade 8 (math).pptx
Maths π project School Project Numbers Numbers
Presentation (8).pptx
Powerpresentationofpi 120620040452-phpapp01
Estimate Pi by Dropping Toothpicks - Experiment.pdf
Hari love sachin
METHOD OF BABYLONIANS
Interesections presentation
History of Mathematics: Egyptian Geometry ( Antipona ). pptx
Hari love sachin
Historical events in geometry
Pi and phi
history of trigonometry
History of geometry
şErife özder
şErife özder
şErife özder
şErife özder
Ad

More from Mohit Kothari (6)

PDF
Peakload gss 2008_09
PDF
Srijantripathireport 150324060509-conversion-gate01
DOC
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp0
DOC
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp02
DOC
Jagdish cv
DOC
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp02
Peakload gss 2008_09
Srijantripathireport 150324060509-conversion-gate01
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp0
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp02
Jagdish cv
Gssherap 110901224655-phpapp02

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
CloudStack 4.21: First Look Webinar slides
PDF
Improvisation in detection of pomegranate leaf disease using transfer learni...
PDF
Taming the Chaos: How to Turn Unstructured Data into Decisions
PDF
A review of recent deep learning applications in wood surface defect identifi...
PDF
Consumable AI The What, Why & How for Small Teams.pdf
PDF
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
PPTX
Configure Apache Mutual Authentication
PPTX
Modernising the Digital Integration Hub
PDF
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
PDF
Convolutional neural network based encoder-decoder for efficient real-time ob...
PDF
Getting started with AI Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
PDF
OpenACC and Open Hackathons Monthly Highlights July 2025
PPTX
Benefits of Physical activity for teenagers.pptx
PPTX
TEXTILE technology diploma scope and career opportunities
PPT
What is a Computer? Input Devices /output devices
PDF
A proposed approach for plagiarism detection in Myanmar Unicode text
PDF
A contest of sentiment analysis: k-nearest neighbor versus neural network
DOCX
search engine optimization ppt fir known well about this
PDF
Zenith AI: Advanced Artificial Intelligence
PDF
Developing a website for English-speaking practice to English as a foreign la...
CloudStack 4.21: First Look Webinar slides
Improvisation in detection of pomegranate leaf disease using transfer learni...
Taming the Chaos: How to Turn Unstructured Data into Decisions
A review of recent deep learning applications in wood surface defect identifi...
Consumable AI The What, Why & How for Small Teams.pdf
How ambidextrous entrepreneurial leaders react to the artificial intelligence...
Configure Apache Mutual Authentication
Modernising the Digital Integration Hub
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
Convolutional neural network based encoder-decoder for efficient real-time ob...
Getting started with AI Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
OpenACC and Open Hackathons Monthly Highlights July 2025
Benefits of Physical activity for teenagers.pptx
TEXTILE technology diploma scope and career opportunities
What is a Computer? Input Devices /output devices
A proposed approach for plagiarism detection in Myanmar Unicode text
A contest of sentiment analysis: k-nearest neighbor versus neural network
search engine optimization ppt fir known well about this
Zenith AI: Advanced Artificial Intelligence
Developing a website for English-speaking practice to English as a foreign la...

History of pi

  • 1. A Brief History of π Pi has been known for almost 4000 years—but even if we calculated the number of seconds in those 4000 years and calculated pi to that number of places, we would still only be approximating its actual value. Here’s a brief history of finding pi: The ancient Babylonians calculated the area of a circle by taking 3 times the square of its radius, which gave a value of pi = 3. One Babylonian tablet (ca. 1900–1680 BC) indicates a value of 3.125 for pi, which is a closer approximation. In the Egyptian Rhind Papyrus (ca.1650 BC), there is evidence that the Egyptians calculated the area of a circle by a formula that gave the approximate value of 3.1605 for pi. The ancient cultures mentioned above found their approximations by measurement. The first calculation of pi was done by Archimedes of Syracuse (287–212 BC), one of the greatest mathematicians of the ancient world. Archimedes approximated the area of a circle by using the Pythagorean Theorem to find the areas of two regular polygons: the polygon inscribed within the circle and the polygon within which the circle was circumscribed. Since the actual area of the circle lies between the areas of the inscribed and circumscribed polygons, the areas of the polygons gave upper and lower bounds for the area of the circle. Archimedes knew that he had not found the value of pi but only an approximation within those limits. In this way, Archimedes showed that pi is between 3 1/7 and 3 10/71. A similar approach was used by Zu Chongzhi (429–501), a brilliant Chinese mathematician and astronomer. Zu Chongzhi would not have been familiar with Archimedes’ method—but because his book has been lost, little is known of his work. He calculated the value of the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter to be 355/113. To compute this accuracy for pi, he must have started with an inscribed regular 24,576-gon and performed lengthy calculations involving hundreds of square roots carried out to 9 decimal places. Mathematicians began using the Greek letter π in the 1700s. Introduced by William Jones in 1706, use of the symbol was popularized by Euler, who adopted it in 1737. An 18 th century French mathematician named Georges Buffon devised a way to calculate pi based on probability. You can try it yourself at the Exploratorium exhibit Throwing Pi.