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  2. Chudnovsky algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chudnovsky_algorithm

    It was used in the world record calculations of 2.7 trillion digits of π in December 2009, [3] 10 trillion digits in October 2011, [4] [5] 22.4 trillion digits in November 2016, [6] 31.4 trillion digits in September 2018–January 2019, [7] 50 trillion digits on January 29, 2020, [8] 62.8 trillion digits on August 14, 2021, [9] 100 trillion ...

  3. Chronology of computation of π - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronology_of_computation...

    Verification of the binary digits: 64 hours (Bellard formula), 66 hours (BBP formula) Verification of the binary digits were done simultaneously on two separate computers during the main computation. Both computed 32 hexadecimal digits ending with the 4,152,410,118,610th. [51] 90 days 5,000,000,000,000 = 5 × 10 12: 17 October 2011 Shigeru ...

  4. Pi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi

    It produces about 14 digits of π per term [134] and has been used for several record-setting π calculations, including the first to surpass 1 billion (10 9) digits in 1989 by the Chudnovsky brothers, 10 trillion (10 13) digits in 2011 by Alexander Yee and Shigeru Kondo, [135] and 100 trillion digits by Emma Haruka Iwao in 2022. [136]

  5. The digits of pi extend into infinity, and pi is itself an irrational number, meaning it can’t be truly represented by an integer fraction (the one we often learn in school, 22/7, is not very ...

  6. Approximations of π - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Approximations_of_π

    In March 2019, Emma Haruka Iwao, an employee at Google, computed 31.4 (approximately 10 π) trillion digits of pi using y-cruncher and Google Cloud machines. This took 121 days to complete. [49] In January 2020, Timothy Mullican announced the computation of 50 trillion digits over 303 days. [50] [51]

  7. Swiss university claims it broke the record for Pi calculation

    www.aol.com/news/swiss-university-world-record...

    A team from the University of Applied Sciences Graubünden in Switzerland claims it has calculated for 62.8 trillion digits of Pi.

  8. y-cruncher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y-cruncher

    In the aftermath, Shigeru Kondo with the help of y-cruncher calculated to 5 trillion digits on 2 August 2010. [ 5 ] Next year, Yee and Kondo calculated 10 trillion decimal places and broke the then-valid world record for decimal places of π {\displaystyle \pi } . [ 6 ]

  9. Yasumasa Kanada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yasumasa_Kanada

    From 2002 until 2009, Kanada held the world record calculating the number of digits in the decimal expansion of pi – exactly 1.2411 trillion digits. [1] The calculation took more than 600 hours on 64 nodes of a HITACHI SR8000/MPP supercomputer. Some of his competitors in recent years include Jonathan and Peter Borwein and the Chudnovsky brothers.