- Mar 24, 2011
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Going full circle for math and pastries on a special Pi Day
By SETH BORENSTEIN
By SETH BORENSTEIN
FILE - In this March 13, 2007 file photo, students from the Maurice J. Tobin School makes a human Pi symbol at the school in Boston during a celebration of Pi Day. Saturday is the day when love of math and a hankering for pastry come full circle. Saturday is Pi day, a once-in-a-year calendar date that this time squares the fun with a once-in-a-century twist. Saturday is 3-14-15, the first five digits of the mathematical constant Pi: 3.141592653. So the best time to celebrate is at 9:26 and 53 seconds. The next time that happens is in March 2115. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Saturday is the day when love of math and a hankering for pastry come full circle. Saturday is Pi Day, a once-in-a-year calendar date that this time squares the fun with a once-in-a-century twist.
Saturday is 3-14-15, the first five digits of the mathematical constant pi: 3.141592653. The best times to celebrate are at 9:26 and 53 seconds, morning and evening. The next time that happens is in March 2115.
"It's a portal into this magical mysterious world of mathematics," said University of California Berkeley mathematician and author Edward Frenkel. "Pi is special."
Pi is the constant used to calculate the area of a circle, as in pi times the radius squared, but it appears all over other parts of mathematics. It "is kind of a basic atomic building block" for math, said Temple University mathematician and author John Paulos, who was interviewed at precisely 3:14:15 p.m.
In some places, Pi Day is celebrated with the edible type of pie.
"It's a real exciting moment for math enthusiasm," said Nathan Kaplan, a Yale University math professor, who called it a time for people to "remember how much fun they found some of the stuff in school."
Kaplan acknowledged that most people don't really recall math as fun, blaming that on how it's taught: "There's fun stuff out there in the quantitative world."
One interesting aspect of pi is that it is irrational, which means the decimals after 3 go on to infinity with no repeating patterns. Yet in 1897, a bill before the Indiana legislature tried to round it up to 3.2. It fell flat.
"We cannot change it. It's not subject to opinion or taste or time," Frenkel said. "How many things like this in the universe mean the same thing to everyone through time and space?"
This pi story goes full circle, with exactly 314 words.