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After Dinner, a Tiny Slice of Pi

Applying Dad's lessons.

By Deborah Pan ’03

March/April 2008

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One evening, after the dinner dishes had been cleared and our kitchen table had made its nightly transformation into a laboratory for mathematical exploration, I proclaimed my dad a true magician. How else could he have proved, before my very eyes, that the area of a circle was indeed πr2? As a 10-year-old, I was enraptured by Dad's showmanship, which cleverly disguised a lesson in basic geometry.

Credit: Deborah Pan ’03

By my third birthday, Dad--an electrical engineer--had instilled in me a fascination and familiarity with numbers. At eight, having grown bored with my schoolwork, I began sitting at the table and looking on as my father helped my older sister, Caroline, with calculus. In that kitchen I learned about algebra, geometry, and precalculus years before I would encounter them in school. A proud immigrant and doting father, Dad dreamed of his two daughters' attending MIT. His dream came true, but our science careers were not nearly as long and storied as his has been. We paved our own paths after graduating from MIT: Caroline attended Harvard Business School, and I left organic chemistry for medical writing.

At the kitchen table on the night of the magic trick, Dad had asked, "Do you remember how to find the area of a circle?"

"Pi ... something," I stammered. Dad proceeded to use a compass to draw a large circle on a sheet of thick white paper. Next, he asked me to imagine that the circle was a pie with many slices. He looked on intently as I drew 20 or 30 "slices." Then he produced a pair of scissors, and I cut out the triangular wedges. Absorbed in the task, I soon forgot about geometry. When I finished, I looked up expectantly.

Dad held up one of the slices--long and skinny, with a short curved crust. "What is the length of this slice in relation to the circle?" he asked.

"R!" I exclaimed, to Dad's approving nod. "That length is the radius."

"Okay, that was the warm-up," he said. "Now for the challenge: if you add up the length of all the curved parts of the slices, what do they sum up to in relation to the circle?"

The curved parts made up what was originally the outside of the circle before I had cut it into pieces. "The circumference!" I responded triumphantly.

"And what is the circumference in relation to the radius?" he probed further.

Story continues below

"It's pi times the diameter," I recalled, "which is twice the radius. Two pi r. That's easy. So what?"

"You grossly underestimate my mathe­matical abilities," he said in a grandiose manner. "Assemble these slices into a rectangle."

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Comments

  • Wow
    Even I was also amazed at your dad's demonstration. No wonder you reached MIT. This is really awful stuff, that makes a complicated thing appear plain and dumb simple.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    ajifocus
    08/19/2008
    Posts:1

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