Photo by Bryan Goff on Unsplash

Of the Curved Universe and Pi

A Cockroach’s Approach

Dmitry Zinoviev
4 min readNov 22, 2022

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Is our Universe curved? Who knows. I’ll tell you who: someone who knows how to measure the value of π.

Let me start by reminding the reader that, by definition, π is the ratio of a circle’s circumference C and its diameter D: π = C/D = C/2R. Also, a circle is a set of points located at the same distance from another point, Z. Point Z is called the circle’s center. The said distance is the circle’s radius, half of the circle’s diameter. I hope we are on the same page.

To measure the π, one needs to draw a perfect circle, perfectly measure its circumference and diameter or radius, and divide one by the other. Problem solved. (Except that drawing and measuring the circle are outside this article’s scope.)

<Enters a Sceptisict.> But why would we want to measure the value of π if it is a constant and can be calculated to 62,831,853,071,796 decimal digits?

<Enters the Author.> Because it is a constant only if the Universe is flat. If the Universe is curved, not only is π not a constant anymore, but we can use its variation to estimate the curvature.

For presentability, let us assume that our Universe is two-dimensional, like a piece of paper. We move on it, not unlike cockroaches, and do not know or do not care that the piece of paper is embedded into a higher-dimensional space. If we draw a circle on a piece of paper, its circumference would be π0 times its diameter. (Here, π₀ is the value of π as we know it, 3.14159 and 62,831,853,071,791 more digits.)

A cockroach in a Flat Universe

Now, let us pretend that the Universe is curved (say, uniformly in two directions) and looks like a ball of radius 1/k. The Universe still looks flat for cockroaches because they “bend” together with it. But not so for the π.

A cockroach in a Curved Universe

Imagine an inquisitive cockroach that was charged with measuring the value of π. The cockroach selects a random point, Z, and carefully marks all the points that are precisely R units away from Z. The cockroach then follows the circle, carefully measures its circumference C, and divides C by 2R to obtain π. To the cockroach’s shock, the value of π depends on R.

How is that possible? When the Universe is curved (not a piece of paper but a ball), the radius of a circle is not R (the surface distance from Z) but R0, as shown in the picture: C = 2π₀R₀.

However, from the cockroach’s point of view, it is still C=2πR, by the definition of π. Since we are talking about the same circle, naturally, 2πR = 2π₀R₀ and, hence, π = π₀R₀/R.

R₀ can be calculated using high-school trigonometry: R₀ = 1/k sin(a) = 1/k sin(R / (1/k)) = sin(Rk)/k. Combining this with the previous equation, we get π = π₀sin(Rk)/(Rk). By the way, k is the curvature of the Universe, and it is the reciprocal of the curvature radius Rc: k = 1/Rc.

As one can see, the measured value of π depends on the radius of the circle used for the measurement. The cockroach has no reason to be surprised.

For the flat Universe, k=0, and the equation becomes π = π₀sin(R×0)/(R×0) = π₀sin(0)/0 = π₀×0/0, a nightmare in algebra but merely a minor annoyance in calculus. Taking the limit as k tends to 0, we get that π = π₀sin(x)/x = π₀∎

As the Universe curves, k increases, and π and π₀ become different from each other (though probably not significantly different). Knowing the “true” value of π₀ and measuring R and π, the inquisitive cockroach can calculate the curvature as the solution to the non-linear equation π/π₀ = sin(Rk)/(Rk). Solving this equation is outside this article’s scope, too, and trust me, it is the least of the cockroach’s problems.

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Dmitry Zinoviev

Dmitry is a prof of Computer Science at Suffolk U. He is loves C and Python programming, complex networks, computational soc science, and digital humanities.