In 499ce, he is in 23rd years old .he will find out the approximation of pi
There is no recorded single discoverer of the value of pi. Although, it has been recorded that the Egyptians were aware of pi.
If you mean the value of pi then its value is of a circle's circumference divided by its diameter and pi is an irrational number that can't be expressed as a fraction.
One can define an infinite number of fractions to successively approximate pi, and get closer and closer to pi's value. There is no closest fraction to pi. No matter how close the fraction is to pi you can always find one that is closer.
Yes, you could if you knew the exact value for pi as well as the diameter of the circle. Multiply the diameter by the exact value for pi to get the circumference. However, it is impossible because the exact value for pi is not known. It is only known to about a trillion decimal places, but the exact value is not known.
PI stands for polarization index. We need to find IR value(IR1) for 1min and again find the IR value(IR2) for 10min. PI=IR2/IR1
In 499ce, he is in 23rd years old .he will find out the approximation of pi
There is no recorded single discoverer of the value of pi. Although, it has been recorded that the Egyptians were aware of pi.
You cannot find the "PI" of anything Pi is a set numerical value, PI = 3.14159265358979323846… (It goes on forever) But in geometry we consider Pi to equal 3.14
The first to find the value in pi were the Babylonians and Egyptians.
If you mean the value of pi then its value is of a circle's circumference divided by its diameter and pi is an irrational number that can't be expressed as a fraction.
douchbag
Pythagoras
just divide 22 by 7
3.16 its right do not improve!!
3.14 or 22/7
aryabhatta discovered it as 3.1416