No. the symbol for pi stems off of the Greek letter pi, probably due to the fact that the discoverer of pi was Greek.
There is no recorded single discoverer of the value of pi. Although, it has been recorded that the Egyptians were aware of pi.
[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.
Discoverer of a particular mathematical concept is hard to say as a certain concept is accepted or emerged after many researches.But for set theory as far as we know there is only a single discoverer named Georg Cantor.
No. the symbol for pi stems off of the Greek letter pi, probably due to the fact that the discoverer of pi was Greek.
There is no recorded single discoverer of the value of pi. Although, it has been recorded that the Egyptians were aware of pi.
The name of the one who invented pi is hypotenuse. LOL! No-one "invented" the ratio known as pi, but establishing its original discoverer is another matter. As for "Hypotenuse" - "he" is the name for the longest side of a right-angled triangle. It was never anyone's name.
A discoverer of salt is not known.
who is the discoverer of protein
That is the correct spelling of the noun "discoverer" (one who discovers or locates).You spelled discoverer correctly.
He was a great Discoverer
the discoverer is Carl Wilhelm Scheele, found in 1774
the world discoverer ship
the DISCOVERER OF WAT U WANT TO NO IS meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!have a good life!
The term is "discoverer" or "finder".
discoverer rhymes with recover that's the only real word it rhymes with