Declared Record: 206,158,430,000 Decimal Digits



                                                          20th September 1999
                                                Adding Info. 4th October 1999
Dear folks,

Our latest record was established as the followings;

Declared record:
 206,158,430,000 decimal digits

 Two independent calculation based on two different algorithms generated
206,158,430,208 (=3*2^36) decimal digits of pi and comparison of two generated
sequences matched up to 206,158,430,163 decimal digits, e.g., 45 decimal digits
difference.  Then we are declaring 206,158,430,000 decimal digits as the
new world record.

Optimized Main program run:
 Job start    : 18th September 1999 19:00:52 (JST)
 Job end      : 20th September 1999 08:21:56 (JST)
 Elapsed time : 37:21:04
 Main memory  : 865 GB (= 6.758 GB * 128)
 Algorithm    : Gauss-Legendre algorithm

Optimized Verification program run:
 Job start    : 26th June 1999 01:22:50 (JST)
 Job end      : 27th June 1999 23:30:40 (JST)
 Elapsed time : 46:07:10
 Main memory  : 817 GB (= 6.383 GB * 128)
 Algorithm    : Borwein's 4-th order convergent algorithm

200,000,000,000-th digits of pi and 1/pi:
 pi  : 90828 20114 56238 31042
 1/pi: 79556 96122 88268 33356
                             ^
              200,000,000,000-th
 (First digit '3' for pi or '0' for 1/pi is not included in the above count.)

Frequency distribution for pi-3 up to 200,000,000,000 decimal places:

 '0' : 20000030841; '1' : 19999914711; '2' : 20000136978; '3' : 20000069393
 '4' : 19999921691; '5' : 19999917053; '6' : 19999881515; '7' : 19999967594
 '8' : 20000291044; '9' : 19999869180; Chi square = 8.09

Frequency distribution for 1/pi up to 200,000,000,000 decimal places:

 '0' : 19999945794; '1' : 20000122770; '2' : 20000060451; '3' : 20000182235
 '4' : 19999876817; '5' : 19999977273; '6' : 19999911742; '7' : 20000001035
 '8' : 19999927489; '9' : 19999994394; Chi square = 4.18

206,158,430,000-th digits of pi and 1/pi;
 pi  : 22144 96687 55157 30964
 1/pi: 96680 12734 08711 53514
                             ^
              206,158,430,000-th
 (First digit '3' for pi or '0' for 1/pi is not included in the above count.)

Some of interesting digits sequences;

   01234567891  : from  26,852,899,245-th of pi
   01234567891  : from  41,952,536,161-th of pi
   01234567891  : from  99,972,955,571-th of pi
   01234567891  : from 102,081,851,717-th of pi
   01234567891  : from 171,257,652,369-th of pi

   01234567890  : from  53,217,681,704-th of pi
   01234567890  : from 148,425,641,592-th of pi

   432109876543 : from 149,589,314,822-th of pi
   543210987654 : from 197,954,994,289-th of pi

   98765432109  : from 123,040,860,473-th of pi
   98765432109  : from 133,601,569,485-th of pi
   98765432109  : from 150,339,161,883-th of pi
   98765432109  : from 183,859,550,237-th of pi

   09876543210  : from  42,321,758,803-th of pi
   09876543210  : from  57,402,068,394-th of pi
   09876543210  : from  83,358,197,954-th of pi

   10987654321  : from  89,634,825,550-th of pi
   10987654321  : from 137,803,268,208-th of pi
   10987654321  : from 152,752,201,245-th of pi

   27182818284  : from 45,111,908,393-th of pi

   01234567891  : from 173,036,790,762-th of 1/pi
   01234567891  : from 199,571,086,462-th of 1/pi

   01234567890  : from  50,494,465,695-th of 1/pi
   01234567890  : from  66,787,942,929-th of 1/pi
   01234567890  : from 132,217,072,915-th of 1/pi

  234567890123  : from 100,850,401,743-th of 1/pi

 5678901234567  : from 189,727,479,303-th of 1/pi

   09876543210  : from 125,310,799,184-th of 1/pi
   09876543210  : from 129,469,449,048-th of 1/pi
   09876543210  : from 168,614,433,523-th of 1/pi

   10987654321  : from   8,728,557,724-th of 1/pi
   10987654321  : from  40,852,015,448-th of 1/pi
   10987654321  : from 149,835,855,053-th of 1/pi

  654321098765  : from  53,699,510,337-th of 1/pi

   27182818284  : from  66,625,560,317-th of 1/pi
   27182818284  : from 181,276,557,577-th of 1/pi

   31415926535  : from  91,912,325,844-th of 1/pi
   31415926535  : from 115,040,878,310-th of 1/pi

 3333333333333  : from  55,172,085,586-th of 1/pi
 (First digit '3' for pi or '0' for 1/pi is not included in the above count.)

Programs are consisted of two sets of routines, e.g. calculation routines and 
message passing routines.  Calculation routines were written by Dr. Daisuke 
TAKAHASHI, a Research Associate at our Centre and rather speed sensitive 
message passing routines were written by myself.  Calculation routines used 
were more optimized than these used for the 51.5 billion record establishment.
For establishing this new record, high speed message passing routines were 
seriously used for both of programs, e.g. main program and verification 
program.  CPU used was HITACHI SR8000 at the Information Technology Center, 
Computer Centre Division (old Computer Centre,) University of Tokyo.  
Full of the total CPU, e.g. 128PE's (theoretical peak processing speed for 
the single PE is eight billion floating operations per second.  One trillion 
floating point operations per second for all PE's), were definitely used 
as single job and parallel processing for both of programs run.

Yasumasa KANADA
Information Technology Center, Computer Centre Division, University of Tokyo
(Old Computer Centre, University of Tokyo)
Bunkyo-ku Yayoi 2-11-16
Tokyo 113-8658 Japan
Fax   : +81-3-3814-7231 (office, G3 & Super G3)
E-mail: [email protected]

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