Because when you’re dealing with measurements that are in the billions or trillions, you start working with orders of magnitude instead of specific numbers. A difference of a million miles is insignificant when the galaxy you’re measuring is 500 trillion miles away.
I think you’ve heard that trivia wrong. NASA uses 15 decimals of pi. The curiosity is that they don’t need to use more decimals even if many more are known.
I can’t think of any good reason to use 10 instead. The consequence would be if the galaxy is 157 trillion miles or 500 trillion miles away. That’s alot of space to disregard for no good reason.
Really depends on the situation. If you have to land an aircraft on the moon, you better get the value of π right.
However when estimating the distance to another galaxy, you’re not gonna fly there so you just want to know the order of magnitude: is it 10^9 or 10^15 miles away?
Just wait until you find out astronomy uses pi=10.
What?! Why?
In the presence of a supermassive black hole, pi gets bend.
Because when you’re dealing with measurements that are in the billions or trillions, you start working with orders of magnitude instead of specific numbers. A difference of a million miles is insignificant when the galaxy you’re measuring is 500 trillion miles away.
I think you’ve heard that trivia wrong. NASA uses 15 decimals of pi. The curiosity is that they don’t need to use more decimals even if many more are known.
I can’t think of any good reason to use 10 instead. The consequence would be if the galaxy is 157 trillion miles or 500 trillion miles away. That’s alot of space to disregard for no good reason.
Really depends on the situation. If you have to land an aircraft on the moon, you better get the value of π right.
However when estimating the distance to another galaxy, you’re not gonna fly there so you just want to know the order of magnitude: is it 10^9 or 10^15 miles away?
It may be a joke from xkcd, but I am not sure anyone in their right mind would bother using 10 instead of 3 or whatever.
https://xkcd.com/2205/
possibly relevant in the context: https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/2205:_Types_of_Approximation
Holy shit a site that explains xkcd jokes. You just made my whole week.
Let’s not pretend none of us have ever not understood an xkcd comic.
Then why not use 1? It’s closer to pi than 10 and even easier to calculate with.
Amateurs, in MY field I use pi=100
In MY field, I use pie = tasty
calculations become a lot easier when you use pi=0