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On the Area of a Circle

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2016

Extract

At the beginning of the seventeenth century π had already been calculated to 35 places of decimals by the Archimedean method of finding in succession the perimeters of inscribed and circumscribed polygons, each having twice as many sides as its predecessor.

But at this time several mathematicians, notably Snell, were seeking shorter methods of approximation, and finally Huygens in thirteen propositions proved or disproved the assumptions they made, and in three more propositions, making use of the known position of the centre of gravity of a parabolic segment and a theorem of his own on the centre of gravity of a segment of a circle, showed how to find a closer upper limit for π from any polygon than had yet been obtained, and by a seventeenth theorem “on centre of gravity”, of which he does not give the proof or even the enunciation, he found also a closer lower limit.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1932

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