becase it can be
It has been represented by the Greek letter "π" since the mid-18th century.
Pi Day (March 14, a.k.a. 3.14, like the first three digits in pi) was first celebrated by the staff of the Exploratorium museum in San Francisco. In 1988, a member of the staff named Larry Shaw linked pi to March 14, and that first Pi Day was a subdued affair—a table of fruit pies and tea set up in the Exploratorium was the extent of the festivities.Over the years, it grew to include a celebration of Albert Einstein (who’s birthday is conveniently also March 14) and a parade through the museum culminating at the “Pi Shrine.” Its popularity grew outside of the museum, and it became a national U.S. holiday in 2009.
[pi^(1/3)]^2 * pi = pi^(2/3) * pi = pi^(5/3) The answer is the cubic root of pi to the fifth power.
(pi + pi + pi) = 3 pi = roughly 9.4248 (rounded) Well, if you use the common shortened version of pi which is 3.14 and add that 3 times, you get 9.42.
becase it can be
The letter Pi (π) came from the Greek language (Greece) - it is the sixteenth letter of the Greek alphabet.
The value of pi is one of two things. 1. The Area divided by the Circumference. (I think, it could be the other way around.) 2. The fraction 22 over 7.
It has been represented by the Greek letter "π" since the mid-18th century.
(pi)(1/pi)=1.4396 ...
the same as pi squared, which is 9.86960440109
The square root of pi times pi is simply pi. Because pi*pi=pi squared, the squared and the square root will cancel each other, leaving just pi.
Pi to the 5th power is approximately 306.019684785
Pi Day (March 14, a.k.a. 3.14, like the first three digits in pi) was first celebrated by the staff of the Exploratorium museum in San Francisco. In 1988, a member of the staff named Larry Shaw linked pi to March 14, and that first Pi Day was a subdued affair—a table of fruit pies and tea set up in the Exploratorium was the extent of the festivities.Over the years, it grew to include a celebration of Albert Einstein (who’s birthday is conveniently also March 14) and a parade through the museum culminating at the “Pi Shrine.” Its popularity grew outside of the museum, and it became a national U.S. holiday in 2009.
[pi^(1/3)]^2 * pi = pi^(2/3) * pi = pi^(5/3) The answer is the cubic root of pi to the fifth power.
Um, reality check. pi is pi. pi is 3.1415. There is no separate Transformer pi.
(pi + pi + pi) = 3 pi = roughly 9.4248 (rounded) Well, if you use the common shortened version of pi which is 3.14 and add that 3 times, you get 9.42.