1706
The observation that the ratio of circumference and radius is constant.
mathalets from the 3rd century in 130 ad from babylonian discovered that pi equals 3.14567789870989977890.....
To find the radius of a circle when given the circumference, you should start with the formula for circumference, which is this: circumference = 2*pi*radius To solve for the radius, you would the have to divide the circumference by 2*pi leaving you with a formula like this: radius = circumference/(2*pi) pi≈3.14159
The 80888840 the digit after the decimal place is a 5. If you start counting from the 3 (of 3.1415...) then it is a 3.
1706
Pi is not something that can be "solved." Please rephrase your question with mores specifics.
The observation that the ratio of circumference and radius is constant.
The first digits of pie start at 3.14. There are an infinite number of other digits in pi. Rounding pi to 3.14 is the most commonly used method.
In the novel "Life of Pi" by Yann Martel, Pi is a teenager. He is 16 years old at the start of the story and turns 17 during the course of his journey at sea.
mathalets from the 3rd century in 130 ad from babylonian discovered that pi equals 3.14567789870989977890.....
I know what it is
amplitude=1 period=2 pi phase shift=0 vertical translation=pi/4 it will start at (0,1) on the y-axis and cross through pi on the x-axis, then the min will be in the middle of pi and 2 pi at -1. there will be one complete wave to 2 pi on your graph (one curve on top and one on bottom of the x-axis), but then you need to shift it to the left, so that the graph will start at (0,-1).
9 √(2/pi) We start with the formulas for surface area (4 pi r^2) and volume (4/3 pi r^3). If 4 pi r^2 = 18, then r = 3/√(2 pi); plug that into the formula for volume and we get 9 √(2/pi) as the answer.
The word might be : "pints". :D
To find the radius of a circle when given the circumference, you should start with the formula for circumference, which is this: circumference = 2*pi*radius To solve for the radius, you would the have to divide the circumference by 2*pi leaving you with a formula like this: radius = circumference/(2*pi) pi≈3.14159
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