
pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter,
has been called "the world's most mysterious number"
its value is 3.1415926535897932384 . . . and thus far
it has been calculated to 1.24 trillion places to the right of
the decimal point, with no end in sight
this is amazing enough, but perhaps
pi's most mysterious
quality is that it seems to pop up everywhere in physics
and mathematics
Wikipedia, for example, displays more than 50 formulas
containing
pi - formulas that seem to have little relation to
geometry - for example,
the cosmological constant
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle 
and
Einstein's field equation of general relativity 
the mysterious ubiquitousness of
pi is the focus of the
video below
the soundtrack of the above is an excerpt from a
BBC Radio 4
5 Numbers podcast
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