No one because the exact value of pi has never been finally determined because it is an irrational number
Aryabhatta did not discover pi - it was known long before him. He found a more accurate value and a method for calculating pi to greater accuracy than was previously known.
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.
The value of pi is found by dividing the circumference of a circle by its diameter and pi is an irrational number which means it can not be expressed as a fraction.
In ancient times the value of Pi was given as 3 but even today the exact value of Pi is not known because it is an irrational number.
People from ancient civilizations knew about the value of pi but as it was then as it is now the exact value of pi has never been conclusively found because it is an irrational number.
No one because the exact value of pi has never been finally determined because it is an irrational number
No one has ever found the exact value of pi because it is an irrational number that can't be expressed as a fraction and its value has been calculated to more than two trillion digits yet still not found exactly.
douchbag
Pythagoras
Aryabhatta did not discover pi - it was known long before him. He found a more accurate value and a method for calculating pi to greater accuracy than was previously known.
Archimedes of Syracuse is said to be the first mathematician to make a systematic attempt to estimate pi in the third century BC.
No one because the true value of pi can never be found because it is an irrational number that can't be expressed as a fraction.
The longest known value of pi is now into the hundreds of billions of digits.
The first written evidence that has been found of people finding the value of pi is in an Egyptian papyrus and Babylonian tablets about 1900 BC, however, some historians believe that the ratio of the perimeter to height of pyramids built in Egypt as early as 2613 - 2589 BC suggests that Egyptians already had made approximations of the value of pi at that time.
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.
The value of pi is found by dividing the circumference of a circle by its diameter and pi is an irrational number which means it can not be expressed as a fraction.