On Saturday morning at 9:26 a.m. get ready to celebrate the most epic Pi Day you’ll ever encounter.
What is Pi Day, you ask? It’s March 14 — 3.14. Get it? No? Think back to math class: it’s the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter.
Pi is a pretty cool number, and not just for number-crunchers. It turns out that there is no end to it, insofar as we know. It’s been calculated to over one trillion digits beyond the decimal point. And get this: there is no repetition or pattern to the numbers.
But this year is particularly special as it is March 14, 2015, or, as those who celebrate Pi would say, 3.1415.
But wait: it gets better.
At 9:26:53 a.m., we will see the first 10 numbers of Pi. It’s a once in a lifetime event
March 14, 2015 will be a Pi Day like no other (really, it’s pretty cool) | Globalnews.ca
Yay! Einstein and I share something in common with pi day :-D
What is Pi Day, you ask? It’s March 14 — 3.14. Get it? No? Think back to math class: it’s the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter.
Pi is a pretty cool number, and not just for number-crunchers. It turns out that there is no end to it, insofar as we know. It’s been calculated to over one trillion digits beyond the decimal point. And get this: there is no repetition or pattern to the numbers.
But this year is particularly special as it is March 14, 2015, or, as those who celebrate Pi would say, 3.1415.
But wait: it gets better.
At 9:26:53 a.m., we will see the first 10 numbers of Pi. It’s a once in a lifetime event
March 14, 2015 will be a Pi Day like no other (really, it’s pretty cool) | Globalnews.ca
Yay! Einstein and I share something in common with pi day :-D