This is a story about love. About inscrutable complexity and remarkable
simplicity, about the promise of forever. It is about obsession and devotion,
and grand gestures and 4,000-word love letters.
It is about a curious group
of people with an almost religious zeal for a mind-numbing string of numbers.
Actually one number, made up of a chain that is known — so far — to
be more than one trillion digits long.
Associated Press (as appeared on
Yahoo! News)
By ERIN McCLAM, AP
National Writer
Sun Mar 11, 7:23 PM ET
They are the acolytes of the church of pi.
And once a
year many of them gather to talk about pi, rhapsodize about it, eat pi-themed
foods (actual pie, sure, but so much more), have pi recitation contests and,
just maybe, feel a little less sheepish about their unusual
passion.
That day falls on Wednesday this year: March 14. Or 3.14.
Obviously.
The question is why, of course. And if you ask the fans of
pi why, a startling number of them will come back with the same question: "Why
climb
Mount
Everest?" Because it's there.
But then they start talking
about some very simple ideas. Like the beauty of a number that seems to go on
forever and yet has no discernible pattern to it. Or about the valor of the
memorization gymnastics, challenging oneself always to know
more.
This is how Akira Haraguchi, a 60-year-old mental health
counselor in Japan, puts it: "What I am aiming at is not just memorizing
figures. I am thrilled by seeking a story in pi."
He said this one day last
fall after accurately reciting pi to 100,000 decimal places. It took him 16
hours. He does not hold the Guinness world record, only because he has not
submitted the required documentation to Guinness. But he has his
story.
(Incidentally, the world record belongs to Chao Lu, a Chinese
chemistry student, who rattled off 67,890 digits over 24 hours in 2005. It took
26 video tapes to submit to Guinness.)
A brief math refresher: Pi a
simple concept, the relationship between a circle's circumference and diameter:
Multiply the diameter by pi — 3.14159, to use a crude approximation that
would make many of the people in this story blanch — and you get the
circumference.
Supercomputers have computed pi to more than a
trillion decimal places, looking always for a pattern to unlock its mystery. And
for centuries the number has fascinated mathematicians.
And then there are
people like Marc Umile. Twelve years ago, while working as an usher at a
Philadelphia opera house, he picked up a book on curiosities of math and read
about pi's seemingly infinite, random string.
He wondered about
applying the way we absorb music to the mystical number. An obsession was born.
In 2004 Umile read the digits of pi into a tape recorder. He did it a thousand
at a time and gave it a rhythm — some numbers high-toned, some
low.
He listened to the tape constantly. This went on for two years.
A two-year trance.
"To and from work, in my quiet time, on my lunch
break — and when I didn't have the tape I would recite in the shower," he
says. "Probably 40 percent of the time there was an earphone in my ear. I said,
`Oh my God, what have I created?'"
What he created was what is
believed to be U.S. record for pi memorization — 12,887 digits. He typed
them into a spreadsheet at a Philadelphia law office — three-and-a-half
hours, 1,000 numbers at a time, with two smoke breaks.
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