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Akira Haraguchi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Akira Haraguchi (原口 證, Haraguchi Akira) (born 1946, Miyagi Prefecture), is a retired Japanese engineer known for memorizing and reciting digits of pi.

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Transcription

Memorization of pi

Haraguchi holds the current unofficial world record for reciting 100,000 digits of pi in 16 hours, starting at 9:00 a.m. (16:28 GMT) on October 3, 2006. He equaled his previous record of 83,500 digits by nightfall and then continued until stopping with digit number 100,000 at 1:28 a.m. on October 4, 2006. The event was filmed in a public hall in Kisarazu, east of Tokyo, where he had five-minute breaks every two hours to eat onigiri to keep up his energy levels. Even his trips to the toilet were filmed to prove that the exercise was legitimate.

His previous world record of 83,431 places was performed on 2 July 2005, itself an improvement on the earlier record he set of 54,000.[1]

On Pi Day, 2015, he claimed to be able to recite 111,701 digits.[2]

Despite Haraguchi's efforts and detailed documentation, the Guinness World Records have not yet accepted any of his records set.

Haraguchi views the memorization of pi as "the religion of the universe",[3] and as an expression of his lifelong quest for eternal truth.

Haraguchi's mnemonic system

Haraguchi uses a system he developed, which assigns kana symbols to numbers, allowing for the memorization of pi as a collection of stories. The same system was developed by Lewis Carroll to assign letters from the alphabet to numbers, and creating stories to memorize numbers. This system preceded the system above which developed.[citation needed]

Example[2]

[3]

0 => can be substituted by o, ra, ri, ru, re, ro, wo, on or oh;
1 => can be substituted by a, i, u, e, hi, bi, pi, an, ah, hy, hyan, bya or byan;

The same is done for each number from 2 through 9.

References

  1. ^ Man recites pi from memory to 83,431 places, NBC News, 4 July 2005
  2. ^ a b Bellos, Alex (2015-03-13). "He ate all the pi : Japanese man memorises π to 111,700 digits". The Guardian. Retrieved 2015-08-14.
  3. ^ a b Otake, Tomoko (2006-12-17). "How can anyone remember 100,000 numbers?". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2023-12-11.

External links

This page was last edited on 17 May 2024, at 00:15
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