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Pi (Pye) is the theorem that was first proposed by Pythagoras of ancient Greece to explain the ratio of a circles radius to it's circumference.

The number produced by dividing the radius into the circumference is called Pi in his honour. The number Pi is recursive, that is as far as it has been calculated it can never be resolved into a divisive whole number.Below is an example to the first 100 decimal points.

3.1487939047983275863218793271042710832671092381263910630965237932762916327910697231067231629716023765793160297659721

The question Pi in 10 probably means using Pi to the tenth decimal place which would be 3.1487939047

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Q: What does pi in base pi in 10 mean?
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Related questions

Did they find the end to pi?

In base pi yes, it is 10 in base pi.


What is the surface are of a hemisphere with a radius of 10?

Entire surface area of the hemisphere including its base area:- (2*pi*10^2)+(pi*10^2) = 300*pi square units


How many 'f's are there in pi?

In base 10, there are none. In base 16 or higher, there are infinitely many.


What is the volume of a cylinder that has a base area of 10 pi cm square and height of 25 cm?

The volume of a cylinder is the area of its base times its height. 10 pi square centimeters * 25 centimeters = 250 pi centimeters cubed = 785.398 centimeters cubed


How do you find diameter of a circle with the diameter 10?

You have answered this question for yourself; the answer is '10' Do you mean to ask ; What is the circumference/area of a circle, with a diameter of '10'?. If so , commit to memory ' elementary school maths. A = pi r^2 C = 2 pi r or pi d . From this 2r = d Hence 2r = 10 r = 5 C = 10 pi = 31.41592.... units A = pi 5^2 = 25 pi = 78.5398... units^2


What is the scientific notation for pi-co?

Not sure what pi-co is, but if you mean the prefix pico, for SI units, the answer is 10-12.


Why is log i 0.682i Where i is the imaginary number sqr rt -1?

By Euler's formula, e^ix = cosx + i*sinx Taking natural logarithms, ix = ln(cosx + i*sinx) When x = pi/2, i*pi/2 = ln(i) But ln(i) = log(i)/log(e) where log represents logarithms to base 10. That is, i*pi/2 = log(i)/log(e) And therefore log(i) = i*pi/2*log(e) = i*0.682188 or 0.682*i to three decimal places.


What is the surface area of a cylinder with a height of 10 feet and a base with a radius of 7 . Round to the nearest tenth?

Entire surface area: (2*pi*49)+(14*pi*10) = 747.7 square feet


What is the height of a cylinder with a volume of 6903 cubic feet and a base radius of 10 feet?

V = pi*r2*h so h = V/(pi*r2) = 6903/(pi*100) = 21.97 feet


Is the volume formula universal for all the figures?

No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3 No because, Sphere : (4 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Hemisphere: (2 * pi * cube of the radius)/3 Cylinder: pi * (square of the base radius) * height Cone: (pi * square of base radius * height)/3


What does the prefix pi -co mean in maths?

It's pico, and it is 10-12


What is the volume of a cone with radius of 6 ft and height of 10 ft?

Area of the base times the height divided by 3. (pi*6*6*10)/3=376.8 approximately because of the rounding of pi to 3.14