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How Do You Calculate Pi with Sticks?

Published in Mathematical Approximation 1 min read

You can approximate pi using a method called Buffon's Needle problem. It involves dropping sticks (or needles) randomly onto a surface with parallel lines and using the proportion of sticks that cross a line to estimate pi.

Buffon's Needle Experiment Explained

Here's how the experiment works and the calculation:

  1. Prepare the Surface: Draw a series of parallel lines on a flat surface. The distance between each line should be consistent. Let's call this distance d.

  2. The Sticks: Obtain a collection of identical sticks (or needles). The length of each stick, l, must be less than or equal to the distance between the lines (l <= d).

  3. The Drop: Randomly drop the sticks onto the surface. Ensure that each stick's position and orientation are completely random.

  4. Count the Crosses: Count the number of sticks that land so that they cross one of the parallel lines. Let's call this number c. Also count the total number of sticks you dropped; we'll call that number s.

  5. The Calculation: Estimate pi using the following formula:

    π ≈ (2 l s) / (d * c)

    Where:

    • π is pi.
    • l is the length of each stick.
    • s is the total number of sticks dropped.
    • d is the distance between the parallel lines.
    • c is the number of sticks that cross a line.

Why This Works

The probability of a stick crossing a line can be mathematically derived using probability and integral calculus. This probability is directly related to pi. By performing the experiment many times (dropping a large number of sticks), the experimental result converges toward the theoretical probability, allowing for an approximation of pi.

Example

Let's say you have sticks of length 5 cm (l = 5), and the distance between the lines is 5 cm (d = 5). You drop 1000 sticks (s = 1000) and find that 637 sticks cross a line (c = 637). Then:

π ≈ (2 5 1000) / (5 * 637)
π ≈ 10000 / 3185
π ≈ 3.14

Accuracy

The accuracy of the approximation increases with the number of sticks dropped. The more sticks you drop, the closer the result will be to the actual value of pi.