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All records from 1949 onwards were calculated with electronic computers. September 1949 G. W. Reitwiesner et al. The first to use an electronic computer (the ENIAC) to calculate π [25] 70 hours 2,037: 1953: Kurt Mahler: Showed that π is not a Liouville number: 1954 S. C. Nicholson & J. Jeenel Using the NORC [26] 13 minutes 3,093: 1957 George ...
calculating one year as 365.24281481 days, which is very close to 365.24219878 days as we know today. calculating the number of overlaps between sun and moon as 27.21223, which is very close to 27.21222 as we know today; using this number he successfully predicted an eclipse four times during 23 years (from 436 to 459). calculating the Jupiter ...
The 12 cells (0, ±5), (±5, 0), (±3, ±4), (±4, ±3) are exactly on the circle, and 69 cells are completely inside, so the approximate area is 81, and π is calculated to be approximately 3.24 because 81 / 5 2 = 3.24. Results for some values of r are shown in the table below: [90]
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In addition to calculating π, Shanks also calculated e and the Euler–Mascheroni constant γ to many decimal places. He published a table of primes (and the periods of their reciprocals) up to 110,000 and found the natural logarithms of 2, 3, 5 and 10 to 137 places. During his calculations, which took many tedious days of work, Shanks was ...
Google engineer Emma Haruka Iwao has calculated pi to 31 trillion digits, breaking the world record.
From 2002 until 2009, Kanada held the world record calculating the number of digits in the decimal expansion of pi – exactly 1.2411 trillion digits. [1] The calculation took more than 600 hours on 64 nodes of a HITACHI SR8000/MPP supercomputer. Some of his competitors in recent years include Jonathan and Peter Borwein and the Chudnovsky brothers.
Liu Hui's method of calculating the area of a circle. Liu Hui's π algorithm was invented by Liu Hui (fl. 3rd century), a mathematician of the state of Cao Wei.Before his time, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter was often taken experimentally as three in China, while Zhang Heng (78–139) rendered it as 3.1724 (from the proportion of the celestial circle to the diameter ...