Wolf in the Fold
Kristen Carreira
In any circle, the product of pi and the diameter will be the circumference. That is because pi is the ratio of the diameter of a circle to its circumference. Here is the equation: c = pi x d
The Radius of the Star is 10 KM. Now we need to find the diameter. Circumference equals pi times the Diameter. That is twice the Radius, which is 20. Now we need to get the Diameter. We multiply the diameter by pi. 20 times 3.1416. 20 * 3.1416 = 62.838. Now we multiply the circumference in kilometers by the speed. 62.832 * 642 = 40,338. Now we take the speed of light, 299,997 per second and divide it into the speed of a point on the equator of our star going 40,338 kilometers per second. 40338 / 299997 = 0.1345
the fraction 22/7 is often used as an approximation for the value of pi. it is off from the actual value by about 0.04 percent (1 in 2500). This would be like measuring a football field and being off by about 1.5 inches on your measurement. The fraction 355/113 is amazingly close, better than 1 part in 10 million
pi IS real. It's irrational, but not unreal.
Star Trek.
Star Trek
"Star Trek: The Next Generation" featured an episode called "Remember Me" where the character Dr. Crusher gets trapped in a warp bubble created by an experiment involving the number Pi.
It was on the original Star Trek tv show. The computer was programmed to find the final digit of pi. As pi has no end, the computer was endlessly working on that which could not be solved. Credit to Mr. Spock, who was the Science Officer on board the Enterprise, and a Vulcan.
Star trek
Star Trek
The episode where Spok Crashes the Computer by saying:is called Wolf in the Fold.
Spock from star trek
star strek
The TV show "Mr. Robot" used a repeated sequence of the number pi to crash a computer system. The sequence of pi caused a buffer overflow in the targeted system, which resulted in a crash.
Episode 321: The Togepi Mirage
Pokémon the movie 2000 also in the episode "the Pi-kahuna"