PostHole
Compose Login
You are browsing eu.zone1 in read-only mode. Log in to participate.
rss-bridge 2022-10-31T21:00:00+00:00

The problem of infinite Pi(e)

Pi is the ratio between a circle’s diameter and its circumference. Sounds dull – but pi turns out to have astonishing properties and crop up in places you would never expect. For a start, it goes on forever and never repeats, meaning it probably contains your name, date of birth, and the complete works of Shakespeare written in its digits.

Maths comedian Matt Parker stuns Adam with his ‘pie-endulum’ experiment, in which a chicken and mushroom pie is dangled 2.45m to form a pendulum which takes exactly 3.14 seconds per swing.

Mathematician Dr Vicky Neale explains how we can be sure that the number pi continues forever and never repeats - despite the fact we can never write down all its digits to check! She also makes the case that aliens would probably measure angles using pi because it’s a fundamental constant of the universe.

Nasa mission director Dr Marc Rayman drops in to explain how pi is used to navigate spacecraft around the solar system. And philosopher of physics Dr Eleanor Knox serves up some philoso-pi, revealing why some thinkers have found pi’s ubiquity so deeply mysterious.


Homepage

Accessibility links

BBC World Service

Discovery

Main content

Listen now

The problem of infinite Pi(e)

Discovery

How did we discover Pi? How do we know that it’s infinite and never repeats?” asks Alex.

Pi is the ratio between a circle’s diameter and its circumference. Sounds dull – but pi turns out to have astonishing properties and crop up in places you would never expect. For a start, it goes on forever and never repeats, meaning it probably contains your name, date of birth, and the complete works of Shakespeare written in its digits.

Maths comedian Matt Parker stuns Adam with his ‘pie-endulum’ experiment, in which a chicken and mushroom pie is dangled 2.45m to form a pendulum which takes exactly 3.14 seconds per swing.

Mathematician Dr Vicky Neale explains how we can be sure that the number pi continues forever and never repeats - despite the fact we can never write down all its digits to check! She also makes the case that aliens would probably measure angles using pi because it’s a fundamental constant of the universe.

Nasa mission director Dr Marc Rayman drops in to explain how pi is used to navigate spacecraft around the solar system. And philosopher of physics Dr Eleanor Knox serves up some philoso-pi, revealing why some thinkers have found pi’s ubiquity so deeply mysterious.

###

####

Higher quality (128kbps)

Lower quality (64kbps)

Available now

26 minutes

Last on

Tue 1 Nov 2022
18:32GMT

BBC World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only

More episodes

Previous

The suspicious smell

Next

The Riddle of Red-Eyes and Runny-Noses

See all episodes from Discovery

Broadcasts

Mon 31 Oct 2022
20:32GMT

BBC World Service Americas and the Caribbean, UK DAB/Freeview, Europe and the Middle East & Online only

Mon 31 Oct 2022
21:32GMT

BBC World Service Australasia, News Internet, South Asia & East Asia only

Tue 1 Nov 2022
04:32GMT

BBC World Service Americas and the Caribbean, Australasia, South Asia & East Asia only

Space

The eclipses, spacecraft and astronauts changing our view of the Universe

The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry

[The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry]

A pair of scientific sleuths answer your perplexing questions. Ask them anything!

Podcast

Discovery

Explorations in the world of science.

Similar programmes

By genre:

  • Factual > Science & Nature

By format:

Magazines & Reviews

[BBC World Service homepage]

Online schedule

Help & FAQs

Contact us

News in more than 40 languages


Original source

Reply