pi pi sili evolves into pi pi 1st in the mulecular pi industry. But if you subtract the remaining sili, it evolves into the 67th multivrese. but if its pi day, it would evolve into 2.57
pi minus pi is zero. Any number minus itself is zero.
pi+pi is 6.28. all that you have to do is add up the numbers.-fromama fromamzez.webs.com
pi = circumference/diameter circumference = pi*diameter or 2*pi*radius
it is pi..... wait no it isnt.....pi squared to the one half power is not pi...
It was developed by Pathagoris which developed the Pythagorean Theorem and it is equal to 3.14159265 roughly.
English mathematician William Jones developed the symbol for Pi in 1706.William Jones
The symbol π (pi) is the lowercase form of the 16th Greek letter Pi (prononced pee).
William Jones ,a welsh mathematician....
He discovered it because he was a very great mathematician of ancient history. He was smart and developed the discovery of Pi to better the world as it is today.
Pi is awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Pythagoras was a theory developed by a scientist who was greek and dutched all day long
Study of circles. It was derived by mathematicians(Greek?) who developed an infinite series to describe it.
Charles Hermite was the 19th century French mathematician who developed the method to prove that pi is a transcendental number.
The slope is the pitch divided by the developed circumference of the helix which is pi x diameter. Pitch = pi x diamter x slope
The earliest signs of the use of Pi was in the designs of the Old Kingdom pyramids in Egypt. Many divide the history of Pi into three periods: The ancient period during which Pi was studied in a geometrical manner, the classical era when Pi was fully developed after the creation of calculus in the 17th century and, most recently, the age of digital computers.
One might say that pi was created when the universe was created. Ancient people have knew that there was a constant ratio between the diameter and circumference of a circle and knew it was close to three. Better approximations were made as mathematics developed. The name of pi for this ration was not used until around 1700.