Happy Pi Day, the annual celebration of this incredible, mysterious, and irrational mathematical constant. Okay, so Pi — most commonly written as the Greek symbol π — is an essential mathematical ...
Calling all mathematicians, a day where math and food meet is finally here! March 14, National Pi Day, honors 3.14 (π) the ratio of the circumference of a circle. Whether you're challenging yourself ...
One of my favorite holidays is Pi Day. On March 14, people who love the math constant called pi celebrate by eating the other kind of pie. Like apple pie, pumpkin pie and even pizza pie. I talked ...
Divide the circumference of a baseball by its diameter and you get 3.14. Divide the circumference of Earth by its diameter and you get 3.14. Divide the circumference of a pizza, coin or, well, pie and ...
CHICAGO (WLS) -- March 14th is Pi Day: 3.14. While when most hear "pi" they think of pie or pizza, the day is truly a celebration of mathematics. Pi is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its ...
MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) - The calendar says it's time to dig into a popular dessert and celebrate math. Pi Day, March 14, honors the formula's starting numbers of 3.14. But it quite literally is more than ...
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 ...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Every March 14, mathematicians, scientists and math lovers around the world celebrate Pi Day, a commemoration of the mathematical sign Pi. That's because the date written numerically ...
Pi Day — March 14 in the United States — was first celebrated in 1988 and falls during Women's History Month. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s ...
Editor's note: A version of this story was published in March 2011. Get ready to roll out some dough, because it's Pi Day. What's that, you ask? Think back to geometry class. Pi represents the ratio ...
Pi, a mathematical constant denoted by the Greek letter π, is the ratio of a circle's circumference C to its diameter d: π = C/d. The circumference of a circle is, in turn, equal to 2πr, where r is ...