no it is not. See Lindemann, 1882, that pi is transcendental.
pi
He proved that e, the base of natural logarithms is transcendental. From this, it follows that pi is also transcendental.
Ferdinand von Lindemann, in 1882 happy pi day!
Pi (approximately 3.14) is not an imaginary, but it is irrational and transcendental.
no it is not. See Lindemann, 1882, that pi is transcendental.
Carl Louis Ferdinand von Lindemann proved in 1882 that pi is transcendental.
Pi.
pi
pi
pi
He proved that e, the base of natural logarithms is transcendental. From this, it follows that pi is also transcendental.
Ferdinand von Lindemann, in 1882 happy pi day!
Since pi is transcendental, pi2 is also transcendental. So pi is the square root of the transcendental number pi2.
Pi.
From Wikipedia: "In 1882, German mathematician Ferdinand von Lindemann proved that π is transcendental, confirming a conjecture made by both Legendre and Euler"
Ferdinand von Lindemann proved, in 1882, that pi was transcendental.