27 pointsby freediver4 hours ago11 comments
  • olooney40 minutes ago
    I like the 4-5-6 theorem:

        pi^4 + pi^5 = e^6
    
    Well, to five decimal places, anyway. Some other good ones:

        e^pi - pi = 20
    
        sqrt(2) ln pi = phi
    
    There are also famous "almost integers" such as this one discovered by Ramanujan:

        e^(pi sqrt(163))
    
    Which is is almost an integer to 12 decimal places.
  • lifthrasiir3 hours ago
    The second fact, pi^2 ~= g, is famous enough that it has a separate section in Wikipedia [1].

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_coincidence#Gravi...

  • renyicircle3 hours ago
    My first thought was "well of course it is, since pi is a little larger than 3" but it was cool to see an actual derivation of how much pi squared differs from 10 as a nice, closed form series.
  • verzali2 hours ago
    I remember discovering that pi x 10^7 is very close to the number of seconds in a year while at uni.

    One of my tutors was convinced this had to be more than coincidence, but I always figured it was just chance and a nice but sometimes useful shortcut...

    • tzsan hour ago
      You might be able to send someone down an amusing (to observers) rabbit hole of wrongness by telling them it is not exact because Earth’s orbit is not perfectly circular.
      • GTPan hour ago
        You're such an evil person :D
    • Hnrobert42an hour ago
      Get enough numbers, accept wide error bars, and some of them are going to overlap.
  • leni5362 hours ago
    This first became apparent to me when I got a slide rule. Pi is often marked on the various scales and an x^2 scale is often nearby the x scale.
  • awinter-py37 minutes ago
    need a countdown for when it gets there
  • Dweditan hour ago
    If you don't unblock scripts from cdn.jsdelivr.net.cdn.cloudflare.net, the math code won't work.
  • amelius15 minutes ago
    Pi^0 is exactly 1.
  • Lerc2 hours ago
    I was a little disappointed that the upper range of gravity on earth only goes to 9.8337. Just a little more and there would have been somewhere on earth that was an exact match.

    It would have been the ideal (if chilly) place to start a cult.

  • BrandoElFollito2 hours ago
    As an ex-physicist, pi^2 is 10. Like g.

    I get it that this is a nice calculation with the Zeta function and everything, but 3 and a small something squared will be near 10 so it is 10.

  • smitty1e3 hours ago
    The author wants tau=2*pi, but in the Greek alphabet, tau has one vertical stroke, and pi has two.

    So, visually in Greek, pi=2*tau would seem an improvement.

    Oh, well.