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None, since pie is not a number. However, there are 100230 threes in the first 1 million digits of pi.
5
The square root of 5 is approximately 2.236. It is an irrational number meaning we can not calculate its value no matter how many digits we can find. At one point a NASA computer was used to calculate the first million digits of the number.
100,106 (At one point, it should be noted, I came to 100,010 instead, but the first number should be correct.)
Have a look at the related link - it shows the first million digits !
None, since pie is not a number. However, there are 100230 threes in the first 1 million digits of pi.
There are 100230 '3's in the first million digits of pi.
The record passed one million digits in 1999, earning a $50,000 prize. In 2008 the record passed ten million digits, earning a $100,000 prize and a Cooperative Computing Award from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Additional prizes are being offered for the first prime number found with at least one hundred million digits and the first with at least one billion digits. The current record as of 2013 is over 17 million digits.
Go to the Related Links below this window for the first million digits
You can get up to 100 million digits here:http://pi.is.online.fr/
there are 29 zeros in the first 200 digits of pi.
There are 70,674 3's in the first million digits of pi. * * * * * There are 100,230 3s and 100,106 9s. Since the decimal representation of pi is essentially random, the number of times any digit appears should be approximately 10% of the total number of digits. So, for a million digits, there should be around 100,000 of any digit so it should have been immediately apparent that the previous answer was extremely unlikely. In fact it was incorrect to a very large degree!
See below-
See below-
561
5
well the first 9 digit number is 100 million 100,000,000 the last 9 digit number is 999 million 999,999,999 just minus the two numbers and you get... 899,999,999 so there are around 900 million 9 digit numbers.