Important Numbers
The Number Pi
The original definition of the number pi, or

, is that it is the
ratio of the circumference of a circle (the distance around) to
its diameter (the distance across the circle).
Here is the number

to 1000 decimal places according to the
symbolic math program Maple:
Thanks to J.M. Borwein (of Simon Fraser University) and his
brother P.B. Borwein and D.V.Chudnovsky and his brother
G.V.Chudnovsky, the value of

is now known to several billion
decimal places.
Click
here to link to a site that gives several algorithms that can
be used to calculate

to many decimal places.
The number e
Consider the function
y=2
x, which is
graphed to the right. This type of function is known as an
exponential function because the variable
x is in the
exponent. Notice that the higher up the curve one goes, the
steeper the curve becomes. Other exponential functions with other
bases such as
y=3
x and
y=4
x have similar shapes.
Question: Is there an exponential function with the
property that the slope (steepness) of the function exactly
equals the height of the function at every
point?
Answer: Yes. It is the exponential function
y=ex, where the base
e is
approximately 2.718.
Here is the number
e to 1000 decimal places according to
the symbolic math program Maple:

This graph of the exponential function
y=ex shows that at the point where the height
is 1 the slope is 1; at the point where the height is 5 the slope
is 5; at the point where the height is 10 the slope is 10;
etc.
In the field of calculus, which is concerned with slopes and the
rates of change of things, a function with the property that the
slope equals the height will obviously play a fundamental
role.
The exponential function
y=ex can be written
in the form of an infinite power series:
The 3 dots indicate that the series goes on forever.
The exclamation mark ! denotes the
factorial function. If the
series is truncated (cut off) after a few terms then we get a
reasonable approximation for the function. For example if we let
x=1 and keep just 5 terms of the series then this
becomes:
which already gives
e to within ½
%.
Written by Eric Hiob,
Sunday, December 22, 1996 - 4:54:20 PM