Connect with us

Published

on

Here at Live Science, we love numbers. And on Pi Day — March 14, or 3/14 — we love to celebrate the world’s most famous irrational number, pi, whose first 10 digits are 3.141592653. 

As the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter, pi is not just irrational, meaning it can’t be written as a simple fraction. It is also transcendental, meaning it’s not the root, or solution, to any polynomial equation, such as x+2X^2+3 = 0.

Pi may be one of the best-known numbers, but for people who are paid to think about numbers all day long, the circle constant can be a bit of a bore. We asked several mathematicians to tell us their favorite non-pi numbers. Here are some of their answers.Tau

People often eat pie on pi day. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

You know what’s cooler than one pie? … Two pies. In other words, two times pi, or the number “tau,” which is roughly 6.28.

“Using tau makes every formula clearer and more logical than using pi,” said John Baez (opens in new tab) , a mathematician at the University of California, Riverside. “Our focus on pi rather than 2pi is a historical accident.”

Tau is what shows up in the most important formulas, he said.

While pi relates a circle’s circumference to its diameter, tau relates a circle’s circumference to its radius — and many mathematicians argue that this relationship is much more important. Tau also makes seemingly unrelated equations nicely symmetrical, such as the one for a circle’s area and an equation describing kinetic and elastic energy.

But tau will not be forgotten on Pi Day! As per tradition, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will send out decisions at 6:28 p.m. today. A few months from now, on June 28, it will be Tau Day.Natural log base

The natural log is expressed as the symbol “e.” (Image credit: Shutterstock)

The base of natural logarithms — written as “e” for its namesake, the 18th-century Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler — may not be as famous as pi, but it also has its own holiday. So, while 3.14 is celebrated on March 14, natural log base — the irrational number beginning with 2.718 — is lionized on Feb. 7.

The base of natural logarithms is most often used in equations (opens in new tab) involving logarithms, exponential growth and complex numbers.

“[It] has the wonderful definition as being the one number for which the exponential function y = e^x has a slope equal to its value at every point,” Keith Devlin (opens in new tab) , emeritus professor and former director of the Stanford University Mathematics Outreach Project in the Graduate School of Education, told Live Science. In other words, if the value of a function is, say, 7.5 at a certain point, then its slope, or derivative, at that point is also 7.5. And, “like pi, it comes up all the time in mathematics, physics and engineering,” Devlin said.Imaginary number i

The imaginary number i. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Take the “p” out of “pi,” and what do you get? That’s right, the number i. No, that’s not really how it works, but i is a pretty cool number. It’s the square root of -1, which means it’s a rule breaker, as you’re not supposed to take the square root of a negative number.

“Yet, if we break that rule, we get to invent the imaginary numbers, and so the complex numbers, which are both beautiful and useful,” Eugenia Cheng (opens in new tab) , a mathematician at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, told Live Science in an email. (Complex numbers can be expressed as the sum of both real and imaginary parts.)

The imaginary number i is an exceptionally weird number because -1 has two square roots: i and -i, Cheng said. “But we can’t tell which one is which!” Mathematicians have to just pick one square root and call it i and the other -i.

“It’s weird and wonderful,” Cheng said.i to the power of i

The number i raised to the power of i is actually a real number roughly equal to 0.207. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Believe it or not, there are ways to make i even weirder. For example, you can raise i to the power of i — in other words, take the square root of -1 raised to the square root of -1 power.

“At a glance, this looks like the most imaginary number possible — an imaginary number raised to an imaginary power,” David Richeson, a professor of mathematics at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania and author of the book “Tales of Impossibility: The 2,000-Year Quest to Solve the Mathematical Problems of Antiquity (opens in new tab) ” (Princeton University Press, 2019), told Live Science. “But, in fact, as Leonhard Euler wrote in a 1746 letter, it is a real number!”

Finding the value of i to the i power involves rearranging Euler’s identity, a formula relating the irrational number e, the imaginary number i, and the sine and cosine of a given angle. When you solve the formula for a 90-degree angle (which can be expressed as pi over 2), you can simplify the equation to show that i to the power of i equals e raised to the power of negative pi over 2.

It sounds confusing (here’s the full calculation (opens in new tab) , if you dare to read it), but the result equals roughly 0.207 — a very real number. At least, in the case of a 90-degree angle.

“As Euler pointed out, i to the i power does not have a single value,” Richeson said, but rather takes on “infinitely many” values depending on the angle you’re solving for. (Because of this, it’s unlikely we’ll ever celebrate an “i to the power of i day.”)Belphegor’s prime number

Belphégor’s prime number, named after a demon, is a palindromic prime with a 666 hiding in the middle. (Image credit: Louis Le Breton/Dictionnaire Infernal)

Belphegor’s prime number is a palindromic prime number with a 666 hiding between 13 zeros and a 1 on each side. The ominous number can be abbreviated as 1 0(13) 666 0(13) 1, where the (13) denotes the number of zeros between the 1 and 666.

Although he didn’t “discover” the number, scientist and author Cliff Pickover (opens in new tab) made the sinister-looking number famous when he named it after Belphegor (or Beelphegor), one of the seven demon princes of hell in the Bible.

The number apparently even has its own devilish symbol, which looks like an upside-down symbol for pi. According to Pickover’s website, the symbol is derived from a glyph in the mysterious Voynich manuscript, an early-15th-century compilation of illustrations and text that no one seems to understand.2^{aleph_0}

There are many types of infinities, and 2^{aleph_0} is a number that describes the size of a particular infinite set.

Harvard mathematician W. Hugh Woodin (opens in new tab) has devoted many years of research to infinite numbers. It’s no surprise, then, that his favorite number is an infinite one: 2^{aleph_0}, or 2 raised to the power of aleph-naught, also called aleph-null. Aleph numbers are used to describe the sizes of infinite sets, where a set is any collection of distinct objects in mathematics. (So, for example, the numbers 2, 4 and 6 can form a set of size 3.)

As for why Woodin chose the number, he said, “Realizing that 2^{aleph_0} is not aleph_0 (i.e., Cantor’s theorem (opens in new tab) ) is the realization that there are different sizes of infinite. So that makes the conception of 2^{aleph_0} rather special.”

In other words, there’s always something bigger: Infinite cardinal numbers are infinite, so there is no such thing as the “largest cardinal number.”Apéry’s constant

Apéry’s constant is an irrational number that begins with 1.2020569 and continues infinitely and shows up in physics equations describing magnetism and the electron. (Image credit: Ian Cuming/Getty Images)

Harvard mathematician Oliver Knill (opens in new tab) told Live Science his favorite number is the Apéry’s constant (zeta(3)), “because there is still some mystery associated with it.” In 1979, French mathematician Roger Apéry proved that a value that would come to be known as Apéry’s constant is an irrational number. (It begins with 1.2020569 and continues infinitely.) The constant is also written as zeta(3), where zeta(3) is the Riemann zeta function when you plug in the number 3.

One of the biggest outstanding problems in math, the Riemann hypothesis, makes a prediction about when the Riemann zeta function equals zero and, if proven, would allow mathematicians to better predict how the prime numbers are distributed.

Riemann’s Zeta function. (Image credit: Furfur)

Of the Riemann hypothesis, renowned 20th-century mathematician David Hilbert once said (opens in new tab) , “If I were to awaken after having slept for a thousand years, my first question would be, ‘Has the Riemann hypothesis been proven?'”

So what’s so cool about this constant? It turns out that Apéry’s constant shows up in fascinating places in physics, including in equations governing the electron’s magnetism and orientation to its angular momentum.The number 1

The number 1 has many interesting properties, such as being the only number that is neither prime nor able to be factored into two numbers. (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Ed Letzter (opens in new tab) , a mathematician at Temple University in Philadelphia (and father of former Live Science staff writer Rafi Letzter), had a practical answer:

“I suppose this is a boring answer, but I’d have to choose 1 as my favorite, both as a number and in its different roles in so many different more abstract contexts,” he told Live Science.

One is the only number by which all other numbers divide into integers. It’s the only number divisible by exactly one positive integer (itself, 1). It’s the only positive integer that’s neither prime nor composite.

In both math and engineering, values are often represented as between 0 and 1: “100%” is just a fancy way of saying 1. It’s whole and complete.

And, of course, throughout the sciences, 1 is used to represent basic units. A single proton is said to have a charge of +1. In binary logic, 1 means yes. It’s the atomic number of the lightest element, and it’s the dimension of a straight line.Euler’s identity

Leonhard Euler was a Swiss mathematician, and his identity ties together three fascinating numbers: pi, natural log and i. (Image credit: Jakob Emanuel Handmann/Wikimedia Commons)

Euler’s identity, which is actually an equation, is a real mathematical jewel, at least as described by the late physicist Richard Feynman. It has also been compared to a Shakespearean sonnet.

In a nutshell, Euler’s identity ties together a number of mathematical constants: pi, natural log e and the imaginary unit i.

“[It] connects these three constants with the additive identity 0 and the multiplicative identity of elementary arithmetic: e^{i*Pi} + 1 = 0,” Devlin said.The number 0

Zero may have many useful properties, but it was a surprisingly late concept to emerge. (Image credit: Fernando Trabanco Fotografía/Getty)

If we’re already talking about how awesome 1 is, then why not throw in the even weirder and cooler number 0? For most of written human history, the concept of zero wasn’t all that important. Clay tablets from ancient Babylonian times didn’t always distinguish between numbers like 216 and 2106, according to the University of St. Andrews in Scotland (opens in new tab) . 

The ancient Greeks began to develop the idea of using zero as an empty place indicator to distinguish numbers of different magnitudes, but it wasn’t until roughly the seventh century that Indian mathematicians, like Brahmagupta, began describing the modern idea of zero. Brahmagupta wrote that any number multiplied by zero is zero, but he struggled with division, saying that a number, n, divided by zero just comes out as n/0, rather than the modern answer, which is that the result is undefined. (The Maya had also independently derived the concept of zero by A.D. 665.) 

Zero is extremely useful, but it is a very tricky concept for many people to wrap their heads around. We have examples such as 1 horse or 3 chickens in our day-to-day lives, but using a number to represent nothing is a larger conceptual leap. “Zero is in the mind but not in the sensory world,” the late Robert Kaplan, a Harvard math professor, told Vox (Kaplan died in 2021). Still, without 0 (and 1), we wouldn’t be able to represent all of the digital binary code that makes our contemporary world run. (Data on computers is represented by strings of 0s and 1s.)The square root of 2

This painting by Raphael depicts philosophers from the school of Athens, including Plato, Aristotle and Pythagoras, who was credited with discovering the square root of 2. (Image credit: mikroman6/Getty)

Perhaps the most dangerous number ever conceived, the square root of 2 supposedly led to the first mathematical murder in history. The Greek mathematician Hippasus of Metapontum is credited with discovering it in the fifth century B.C., according to the University of Cambridge (opens in new tab) . While working on a separate problem, Hippasus is said to have stumbled on the fact that an isosceles right triangle whose two base sides are 1 unit in length will have a hypotenuse that is √2, which is an irrational number. 

According to legend, Hippasus’ contemporaries, members of the quasi-religious order known as the Pythagoreans, threw him into the sea after hearing about his great discovery. That’s because the Pythagoreans believed that “all is number” and the universe only contained whole numbers and their ratios. Irrational numbers like √2 (and pi), which can’t be expressed as a ratio of whole numbers and go on forever after the decimal place, were seen as an abomination. 

These days, we’re a little calmer about √2, often calling it Pythagoras’ constant. It starts off as 1.4142135623 … (and, of course, goes on forever). ) Pythagoras’ constant has all sorts of uses. Besides proving the existence of irrational numbers, it is used by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) to define the A paper size. The 216 definition (opens in new tab) of the A paper states that the sheet’s length divided by its width should be 1.4142. This means that a piece of A1 paper divided in half by width will yield two A2 pieces of paper. Divide an A2 in half again, and it will produce two A3 pieces of paper, and so on.Slice of pi

NASA uses a truncated estimate of pi that only includes 15 places after the decimal point. That’s all the agency needs to get everywhere they want to go in space. (Image credit: NASA/JPL)

Sometimes, the number cooler than pi is…a truncated version of pi. At least, that’s the case for NASA and scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California. For interplanetary navigation, JPL uses the number 3.141592653589793, according to JPL’s Chief Engineer for Mission Operations and Science, Marc Rayman (opens in new tab) . At that level of accuracy, Rayman said, NASA can get everything it builds wherever it needs to go.

To see why, it’s helpful to do some number-crunching. The most distant spacecraft from Earth is the Voyager 1 spacecraft, which is more than 14.6 billion miles (23.5 billion kilometers) distant from us. At this distance, you can calculate a circumference of a circle that is roughly 94 billion miles (more than 150 billion km) around, yet adding extra decimal places to pi only shaves off a half-inch (1.2 centimeters) of error from the calculation, Rayman said.

Even if scientists wanted to calculate the radius of a circle the size of the known universe to the accuracy of a width of a hydrogen atom, it would only need 37 digits after the decimal point to reach that accuracy, Rayman said.

So what’s cooler than pi? A slice of pi.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sources: Dodgers’ Betts out due to fractured toe

Published

on

By

Sources: Dodgers' Betts out due to fractured toe

LOS ANGELES — Mookie Betts stubbed a toe in his left foot during an off-the-field incident and missed the opener of the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ highly anticipated series against the New York Yankees on Friday.

Betts is not expected to go on the injured list, according to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, but he will not start against the Yankees on Saturday or Sunday. Roberts said the hope is that Betts will return to the lineup shortly thereafter.

“For me, right now, it’s just day-to-day,” Roberts said after the Dodgers’ 8-5, come-from-behind win.

The incident, which affected the tip of Betts’ second toe, was believed to have occurred late Wednesday night, after the Dodgers returned from a six-game road trip, when Betts banged his toe against a piece of furniture at his house. Betts called Roberts to inform him about his toe on Friday morning, then underwent X-rays at Dodger Stadium later that afternoon.

Those X-rays revealed a fracture, a source told ESPN, confirming what Betts told the Los Angeles Times after Friday’s game. The Dodgers’ training staff will spend the weekend attempting to get the swelling down on his toe. At this point, the Dodgers don’t believe he can make the injury any worse by playing on it.

Said Roberts: “It’s going to be one of those situations per his [pain] tolerance.”

Betts’ injury isn’t the Dodgers’ most serious at the moment. Late-inning reliever Evan Phillips, who was rehabbing a forearm injury, didn’t feel right playing catch earlier this week and will undergo Tommy John surgery next week, knocking him out for all of 2025 and most of 2026.

Phillips, 30, was released by the Baltimore Orioles in August 2021 and designated for assignment by the Tampa Bay Rays less than two weeks later. The Dodgers picked him up and turned him into a valuable late-game option. From 2022 to 2024, Phillips posted a 2.21 ERA and 0.92 WHIP, saved 44 games and struck out 206 batters in 179 regular-season innings.

But Phillips dealt with arm issues during last year’s postseason run and was left off the team’s World Series roster. He then went on the IL because of a rotator cuff strain in the middle of March, returned a month later, notched seven scoreless appearances, then went back on the IL on May 7 because of what the team called forearm discomfort. Platelet-rich-plasma injections did not take. Phillips never got better.

“As we started getting into it, it wasn’t really responding,” Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said. “We felt like this could be a possibility, so as he got deeper into the process and it wasn’t really getting better, the decision to do it was pretty much evident with our information.” The loss of Phillips is coupled with the Dodgers having four other high-leverage relievers on the IL — Brusdar Graterol, Blake Treinen, Kirby Yates and Michael Kopech, all of whom are right-handed.

The Dodgers tried to backfill some of that depth by trading for former All-Star closer Alexis Diaz on Thursday. But Diaz, who struggled so badly this season that the Cincinnati Reds optioned him to Triple-A, will initially work out of the Dodgers’ spring training complex in Glendale, Arizona.

The Dodgers also have three starting pitchers — Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Roki Sasaki — recovering from shoulder injuries, with Shohei Ohtani not expected to join the rotation until sometime after the All-Star break.

The lineup, at least, had been healthy. Until now.

Betts, 32, got off to a slow start but was still slashing .254/.338/.405 with eight home runs and five stolen bases while slotting between the hot-hitting Ohtani and Freddie Freeman in the No. 2 spot. More notably, Betts had proved to be a capable major league shortstop after working during the offseason at the position.

The hope is that the toe injury doesn’t set him back much longer than the rest of this weekend.

In the meantime, Miguel Rojas will continue to get starts at shortstop.

“It’s a good part about having depth,” Gomes said. “Keep the train moving.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Trout returns in new spot, has hit in Angels’ win

Published

on

By

Trout returns in new spot, has hit in Angels' win

CLEVELAND — Mike Trout originally expected to return to the Los Angeles Angels‘ lineup Monday in Boston.

But the timeline was moved up one series and three days.

Trout was activated off the injured list and went 1-for-5 as the designated hitter in Friday night’s 4-1 win over the Cleveland Guardians. The Angels slugger missed 26 games because of soreness in his left knee that was eventually diagnosed as a bone bruise. The three-time American League MVP had two operations last year on the knee after tearing his meniscus.

“Felt good. Struck out on two at-bats, but other than that, felt all right,” said Trout, who batted fifth for the first time in 1,532 starts.

Trout lined a base hit to left-center in the fourth inning. He thought he had a hit in his first at-bat in the second inning, but Cleveland third baseman José Ramírez made a nice grab on a low line drive.

“I thought he had some good at-bats, considering that he hadn’t seen live pitching in a while,” Angels manager Ron Washington said. “He hit the ball hard three times today. They made some good pitches when he struck out. But welcome back, Mike.”

Trout’s return also helped the Angels snap a five-game losing streak and improve to 28-30.

It was the first time since Sept. 26, 2011, Trout’s rookie season, that he started a game hitting lower than third.

Washington is happy to have Trout back, especially because he noted Trout wasn’t aggressive in rushing in his return. Washington also knows that Trout isn’t ready to return to his normal spot batting second or third.

“He hasn’t seen anything. So when you look at what we have, that’s where he sits,” Washington said before the game. “It doesn’t make sense for him to protect [Logan] O’Hoppe. So, I’ll put Mike behind him to protect O’Hoppe. He’s not ready to be at the top of the lineup, especially with those guys up there. As we go along the next couple of days, he’s not going to remain fifth.”

The 33-year-old Trout is hitting .180 with 9 home runs, 18 RBIs and a .712 OPS in 30 games. He will be the designated hitter for the weekend series against the Guardians before possibly returning to right field when the Halos head to Boston on Monday for a three-game series.

Even though Trout has shied away from wanting to be the designated hitter, he has done well in that spot. In eight games this season, he is 9-for-33 (.273) with 6 home runs and 9 RBIs.

Trout said whether he plays more games than originally planned at DH the remainder of the season is something that remains to be seen.

“Bone bruises are tricky. I know I am going to be sore, but I can deal with it,” he said. “I definitely have to be cautious, especially the first couple games.”

Trout has missed 404 of the Angels’ 665 games — almost 60% — since May 17, 2021, when he tore his calf muscle against Cleveland and was sidelined for the rest of that season. This is the fifth straight year he has had a stint of at least 25 games on the IL.

He missed five weeks of the 2022 season because of a back injury, and all but one game after July 3, 2023, after he broke a bone in his hand on a foul ball. Trout played in 29 games last season before the meniscus injury.

“There’s so many games that any sense of newness or something to make you excited is something that you’d latch on to. So, today is definitely a moment like that,” O’Hoppe said about Trout’s return. “He’s the heart of this organization. So, we’re happy to have our heart beating again for sure.”

Continue Reading

Business

Ministers to kick off hunt for successor to Ofcom chair Lord Grade

Published

on

By

Ministers to kick off hunt for successor to Ofcom chair Lord Grade

Ministers are to kick off the hunt for a new chair of the communications regulator as Lord Grade of Yarmouth prepares to bow out after a single term at the helm.

Sky News has learnt that the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) – which now leads oversight of Ofcom in Whitehall – is drawing up proposals to launch a recruitment process in the coming months.

Lord Grade, the veteran broadcast executive who held senior posts at the BBC, ITV and Channel 4, has served as Ofcom chair since May 2022.

His four-year term is not due to end for another 11 months, and there was no suggestion this weekend that he would leave the role ahead of that point.

Insiders said, however, that there was little prospect of him seeking to be reappointed for a second term in the job.

The now non-affiliated peer’s appointment to the post in 2022 came after a controversial recruitment process and was signed off by Nadine Dorries, the then Tory culture secretary.

Responsibility for Ofcom board appointments has switched since then from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

More from Money

Peter Kyle, the science secretary, authorised the recruitment of Tamara Ingram, an advertising industry stalwart, as Ofcom’s deputy chair, last November.

The search for a new Ofcom chair will come after a significant extension of its remit to encompass areas such as online harms.

Both DCMS, which has responsibility for the media industry, and the Department for Business and Trade also have substantial engagement with Ofcom.

As well as a role in appointing directors to the board of state-owned Channel 4, which is hunting both a chair and chief executive, Ofcom regulates companies such as Royal Mail, as well as the BBC.

This week, the watchdog said it was pursuing action against the formerly publicly owned postal services company over its failure to hit statutory delivery targets.

Ofcom also regulates the UK telecoms industry, making it one of the largest economic regulators in Britain.

Mr Kyle said this week that Ofcom should also prepare to be given regulatory oversight of the fast-growing data centre industry.

One of the tasks of Lord Grade’s successor is likely to be long-term executive leadership succession planning.

Dame Melanie Dawes, Ofcom’s chief executive, has held the role since 2020, although there is no indication that she intends to step down in the short term.

It was unclear this weekend whether any of Ofcom’s existing board members might seek to take over from Lord Grade.

Its slate of non-executive directors includes recently appointed Lord Allan of Hallam, a former MP, and Ben Verwaayen, the former BT Group chief executive.

Mr Verwaayen is due to step down from the Ofcom board at the end of the year.

The hunt for Ofcom’s next chair will come amid a push led by Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves to shake up Britain’s economic regulators as they seek ways to remove red tape from the private sector.

DSIT has been contacted for comment, while Ofcom declined to comment.

Continue Reading

Trending