
Today is March 14 — also known as Pi Day.
Why?
Because the date written as 3/14 matches the first digits of one of the most famous numbers in mathematics:
π = 3.1415926535…
Pi describes the relationship between a circle’s circumference and its diameter. But this simple number appears almost everywhere in science — including the universe itself.
Astronomers use π when calculating the orbits of planets, the size of stars, the motion of galaxies, and even the geometry of space.
Without π, we wouldn’t be able to predict eclipses, send spacecraft across the Solar System, or understand the shape of the cosmos.
In a way, this mysterious number connects circles on Earth with the motion of worlds across the universe.
And the most fascinating part?
Pi never ends.
Its digits go on forever, without repeating.
A number that never ends… describing a universe that may be just as infinite.
Happy Pi Day.
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22/7 =3.14
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Ya kpọtụba!
Ya gazie.
Ụmụ nne Abrahamụọgụ Aṅụsịobi Madụ.