Student mathematicians spent Saturday crunching numbers and solving equations at Maria Carrillo High School’s library as part of an academic tournament celebrating Pi Day, March 14.
It’s deliciously reliable, like cherry pie: Divide the circumference of any circle in the universe by its diameter, and you will always get the same number, pi, aka the Greek letter π. In fact, NASA ...
Divide any circle’s circumference by its diameter and you get pi. But what, exactly, are its digits? Measuring physical ...
For many students, math carries a reputation that makes palms sweat before a single number appears on the board. Pi Day flips that script on ... Read moreThe post On ...
Applying basic algebra skills and a healthy dose of logic, some University of Wyoming students recently took a crack at solving some challenging math problems. Twenty-eight UW students participated in ...
University of Wyoming students, like many around the world, celebrated Pi Day with fun and challenging math problems. Twenty-five UW students participated in Wyoming Pi Days, a series of three “Pizza ...
March 14 circles back on the calendar, and Pi Day gives Americans a reason to smile at math instead of stress over it. What started ... Read moreThe post Pi ...
Yesterday marked the confluence of round baked goods (sweet and savory), iconic slapstick, the Greek alphabet and the best known and most widely mystifying mathematical constant: “Pi Day.” ...
Come spring, everyone's a joker about math. That's because every March 14 — 3.14, that is — is Pi Day, so named for the set of numerals that make up its date. Sure, pi is technically the ratio of the ...
Brighton, N.Y. — Monday marked the final celebration of Pi Day for a longtime math teacher at The Harley School.