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This book contains 1 million digits of pi on 371 pages (Decimal Places from 1 to 1,000,000) and is the perfect gift for everyone who loves math, especially on Pi day and for birthdays!ESTIMATED NUMBERS PER PAGE: 2714NUMBER OF PAGES: 371 pagesPAPER / TRIM SIZE: 6" x 9" (15,24cm x 22,86 cm)PAPER COLOR: White paperCOVER: Softcover paperback - glossy finishBOOK BINDING: Perfect bound
5 MILLION DIGITS OF PI VOLUME 1 DECIMAL PLACES FROM 1 TO 5,000,000 This book has 625 pages containing the first 5 million digits of Pi, from 1 to 5,000,000, after the decimal point. Each page has 80 rows with 100 digits of Pi for a total of 8,000 digits per page. Each row has 10 groups of 10 digits of Pi. Each 10 digit group is separated by a space. The column header on each page indicates every 10th digit of Pi. The end of each row has a colon (:) followed by the decimal place location in Pi of the last digit on the row. Thus, the first row ends with ": 100" while the last row ends with ": 5000000" on page 625. The row and column header information can be used to help you determine the exact location in Pi of each digit. A table of contents provides the page number for every 500,000th decimal place of Pi. NUMBER OF PAGES: 628 pages PAPER / TRIM SIZE: 8.5" x 11" (21.6 cm x 27.9 cm) PAPER COLOR (COLOUR): White paper PAGE NUMBERS: YES COVER: Softcover paperback - glossy finish BOOK BINDING: Perfect bound OTHER PI BOOKS IN SERIES We have 5 books in this series. Each has 5 million digits of Pi and the design is the same for all books. Use the 13 digit ISBN below to search for each book. You may need to remove the dash in the ISBN when searching. 5 Million Digits of Pi - Volume 1- Digits from 1 to 5,000,000 - ISBN: 978-1986263825 5 Million Digits of Pi - Volume 2 - Digits from 5,000,001 to 10,000,000 - ISBN: 978-1986263870 5 Million Digits of Pi - Volume 3 - Digits from 10,000,001 to 15,000,000 - ISBN: 978-1986263955 5 Million Digits of Pi - Volume 4 - Digits from 15,000,001 to 20,000,000 - ISBN: 978-1986264068 5 Million Digits of Pi - Volume 5 - Digits from 20,000,001 to 25,000,000 - ISBN: 978-1986264150
Have you been looking to learn and memorise pi to 100,000 digits? Or just looking for a gift for your friend? Then this book of Pi is perfect for you! This book contains information of how Pi is derived, where it is used in calculations and a short history on how it got to 34.1 trillion decimal places found! Click 'Buy Now' to get this at a good value.
Pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, has been know to exist for thousands of years. Since Pi is irrational, it goes on forever. This book gives the first million digits of pi.
"Not A Wake" is a collection of poetry, short stories, a play, a movie script, crossword puzzles and other surprises, constructed according to a unique principle: counting the number of letters in successive words of the text (the first word has 3 letters, the next word has 1 letter, the next word has 4 letters, and so on) reveals the first 10,000 digits of the famous mathematical number pi (3.14159265358979...). Fans of the number pi, constrained writing (such as Georges Perec's "La Disparition"), wordplay, puzzles, or experimental prose and poetry will find much to savor in this, the first book-length work based on the pi constraint.
Traces the history of the mathematical constant pi from the stone age through the computer age, discussing the background of the times when pi progressed, and when it did not.
Our intention in this collection is to provide, largely through original writings, an ex tended account of pi from the dawn of mathematical time to the present. The story of pi reflects the most seminal, the most serious, and sometimes the most whimsical aspects of mathematics. A surprising amount of the most important mathematics and a signifi cant number of the most important mathematicians have contributed to its unfolding directly or otherwise. Pi is one of the few mathematical concepts whose mention evokes a response of recog nition and interest in those not concerned professionally with the subject. It has been a part of human culture and the educated imagination for more than twenty-five hundred years. The computation of pi is virtually the only topic from the most ancient stratum of mathematics that is still of serious interest to modern mathematical research. To pursue this topic as it developed throughout the millennia is to follow a thread through the history of mathematics that winds through geometry, analysis and special functions, numerical analysis, algebra, and number theory. It offers a subject that provides mathe maticians with examples of many current mathematical techniques as weIl as a palpable sense of their historical development. Why a Source Book? Few books serve wider potential audiences than does a source book. To our knowledge, there is at present no easy access to the bulk of the material we have collected.
Critical Acclaim for Pi and the AGM: "Fortunately we have the Borwein's beautiful book . . . explores in the first five chapters the glorious world so dear to Ramanujan . . . would be a marvelous text book for a graduate course."--Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society "What am I to say about this quilt of a book? One is reminded of Debussy who, on being asked by his harmony teacher to explain what rules he was following as he improvised at the piano, replied, "Mon plaisir." The authors are cultured mathematicians. They have selected what has amused and intrigued them in the hope that it will do the same for us. Frankly, I cannot think of a more provocative and generous recipe for writing a book . . . (it) is cleanly, even beautifully written, and attractively printed and composed. The book is unique. I cannot think of any other book in print which contains more than a smidgen of the material these authors have included.--SIAM Review "If this subject begins to sound more interesting than it did in the last newspaper article on 130 million digits of Pi, I have partly succeeded. To succeed completely I will have gotten you interested enough to read the delightful and important book by the Borweins."--American Mathematical Monthly "The authors are to be commended for their careful presentation of much of the content of Ramanujan's famous paper, 'Modular Equations and Approximations to Pi'. This material has not heretofore appeared in book form. However, more importantly, Ramanujan provided no proofs for many of the claims that he made, and so the authors provided many of the missing details . . . The Borweins, indeed have helped us find the right roads."--Mathematics of Computation
This book was a product of RAND's pioneering work in computing, as well a testament to the patience and persistence of researchers in the early days of RAND.
This book contains the World's Smallest Prime Number. Nothing more, nothing less. Please do not buy it.