Completely happy Pi Day! March 14 is the date that in any other case rational folks have a good time this irrational quantity, as a result of 3/14 incorporates the primary three digits of pi. And hey, pi deserves a day. By definition, it’s the ratio of the circumference and diameter of a circle, however it exhibits up in every kind of locations that appear to have nothing to do with circles, from music to quantum mechanics.
Pi is an infinitely lengthy decimal quantity that by no means repeats. How do we all know? Nicely, people have calculated it to 314 trillion decimal locations and didn’t attain the tip. At that time, I’m inclined to just accept it. I imply, NASA makes use of solely the primary 15 decimal locations for navigating spacecraft, and that’s greater than sufficient for earthly functions.
The good factor, for me, is that there are lots of methods to approximate that worth, which I’ve written about up to now. As an illustration, you are able to do it by oscillating a mass on a spring. However possibly the craziest methodology of all was confirmed in 1777 by George Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon.
Many years earlier, Buffon had posed this as a likelihood query in geometry: Think about you may have a ground with parallel traces separated by a distance d. Onto this ground, you drop a bunch of needles with size L. What’s the likelihood {that a} needle will cross one of many parallel traces?
An image will assist you to perceive what’s taking place. To illustrate I drop simply two needles on the ground (be at liberty to switch the needles with one thing safer, like toothpicks). Additionally, simply to make issues simpler later, we will say that the needle size and line spacing are equal (d = L).
You may see that one of many needles crosses a line and the opposite would not. OK, however what are the possibilities? This isn’t essentially the most trivial drawback, however let’s take into consideration only one dropped needle. We solely care about two values—the gap (x) from the farther finish of the needle to a line, and the angle of the needle (θ) with respect to a perpendicular (see the diagram beneath). If x is lower than half the spacing between traces, we get a needle-crossing. As you possibly can see, you’d get a better likelihood with a smaller x or a smaller θ.
