No one created pi. It is a natural value - the ratio of circumference of a circle to it's diameter. By subdividing a cicle into ever decreasing sectors and calculating the dimensions using pythagarus theorem a better and better approximation of the value of pi can be arrived at. The exact value of pi has not yet been calculated (possibly does not exist). All we have (made available by very very accurate computers) is a better and better approximation.
Pythagarus
Archimedes, a famous Greek mathematician, born about 287 B.C.
the circumference of a circle is pi time the diameter
No, Pi was discovered, not created. Albert Einstein started the idea of Pi, where you multiply 3.14 with the diameter of a circle to get the circle's circumference, and where you multiply 3.14 squared with a circle's radius to get the circle's area, etc.
You are probably thinking about Rahmanujan. However, he didn't really "create pi" - God created pi. Nor did he discover it, pi was known well before Rahmanujan. What he did do was to find some very efficient formulae to calculate pi to many decimal places - formulae that are still used today.
If you draw a circle and then create a square around it so all four sides touch, pi is the number that represents the ratio of the sizes of the two shapes.
Yes because you can create pivot charts and pi charts as well
(pi)(1/pi)=1.4396 ...
the same as pi squared, which is 9.86960440109
Storytelling in "Life of Pi" serves as a way for the protagonist, Pi, to cope with his traumatic experiences. It allows him to find meaning and create a sense of order in an otherwise chaotic and uncertain situation. Through storytelling, Pi explores themes of faith, resilience, and the power of imagination.
The square root of pi times pi is simply pi. Because pi*pi=pi squared, the squared and the square root will cancel each other, leaving just pi.
Pi to the 5th power is approximately 306.019684785