Pi Day 2026 focuses on mathematics and hope

Pi Day, observed annually on March 14, honors the mathematical constant π and its applications. In 2026, International Mathematics Day's theme is 'Mathematics and hope,' emphasizing math's universal role in understanding reality. UNESCO states that mathematics supports shared frameworks and solutions for the common good.

Pi Day falls on March 14 because the first three digits of π, 3.14159, align with the date 3/14. The constant π represents the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter and is used to compute areas and volumes of circular and spherical objects. As an irrational number denoted by the Greek letter π, it appears in numerous formulas in mathematics and physics.

The Greek letter π was adopted in 1706 by Welsh mathematician William Jones, derived from Greek words for 'periphery' and 'perimeter.' Over centuries, mathematicians like Archimedes calculated π using various methods. The first Pi Day observance occurred in 1988, organized by American physicist Larry Shaw at the San Francisco Exploratorium. On March 12, 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution recognizing March 14 as National Pi Day. The date also marks the birth anniversary of physicist Albert Einstein.

A common tradition involves eating pie, a homophone for pi, symbolizing the circular shape. March 14 is also International Mathematics Day, proclaimed by UNESCO in November 2019 to highlight math's role in addressing real-world challenges and advancing science and technology.

For 2026, the theme is 'Mathematics and hope.' UNESCO explains that 'mathematics enables a deeper understanding of reality, supports the development of shared frameworks and definitions, and strengthens collaboration across disciplines and societies. Through responsible use of data and rigorous reasoning, mathematics contributes to solutions that serve the common good.' It aids in navigating uncertainty, building trust in knowledge, and fostering inclusive futures, while enhancing social cohesion and resilience.

To commemorate the day, Google released an interactive Doodle featuring Archimedes' method of approximating π by inscribing a circle between two 96-sided polygons. The Doodle notes, 'This Doodle celebrates the numerical constant pi (π), highlighting the foundational geometry first used to calculate its limits.'

関連記事

More than 2,300 mathematicians from nearly 80 countries have signed a petition to move the 2026 International Congress of Mathematicians out of Philadelphia, US. They cite visa barriers, safety concerns, and US policies that they say undermine global science inclusiveness. A co-organiser urges Chinese mathematicians to support the boycott.

AIによるレポート

Addis Ababa, May 1, 2026 – Ethiopia observes International Workers' Day annually on May 23. The day honors workers' sacrifices and rights.

Start-ups including Axiom Math and Harmonic are attracting hundreds of millions in funding to create AI tools that solve advanced mathematics and verify their own results.

AIによるレポート

Earth Overshoot Day falls this Saturday in Sweden, earlier than last year and coinciding with Easter. Known in Swedish as the ecological debt day, it marks the point when the country has exhausted its share of Earth's renewable resources for the year. Author Johanna Flood calls for reduced consumption during the holiday.

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否