A `lost' chapter in the calculation of \(\pi\): Baron Zach and MS Bodleian 949 (Q492787): Difference between revisions

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Property / cites work: Birth, growth and computation of pi to ten trillion digits / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 15:47, 10 July 2024

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A `lost' chapter in the calculation of \(\pi\): Baron Zach and MS Bodleian 949
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    A `lost' chapter in the calculation of \(\pi\): Baron Zach and MS Bodleian 949 (English)
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    21 August 2015
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    From the summary we learn that: ``The Bodleian library holds a manuscript containing mathematical tables and a calculation of \(\pi\) to 154 decimal places, last described (in part) in 1802.'' The paper under review provides an outline of the manuscript's contents and relates it to developments in the computation of \(\pi\), not only to those from the 19th century but also with a glance to that of the 20th century. The contents of the paper yield a vision on an (almost forgotten) way how to calculate digits from the decimal expansion of \(\pi\). A rich list of references closes the paper. Due to Baron Franz Xaver von Zach (1754--1832), Hungarian astronomer and scientific intelligencer, the hidden manuscript came to live. There is much to get from the author's investigations.
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    mathematical tables
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    pi
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    Baron Zach
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    evaluation of constants
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