Is there such a thing as a perfect circle?we are talking perfection here and perfect circles and what not.
First off she ruined this entire video by stating Pi is a Constant.
Meaning pi = 3.14159265.... and so on and so on. Thats it. Stop thinking. Pi is Pi it is nothing more nothing less than that.
Now when we take this Constant and throw it into equations Pi is still what it is. Just pi = 3.14159265. How you use Pi is up to you.
Shuch as the equation Pi=r^2 or Pi equals the radius squared.
From what I seen of the video she is ether confused or trying to confuse others or trying to sound intellegent.
That 2*pi thing she was talking about. Is an equation of sorts that gives you radians. 360degrees/2*pi = one radian or about 57.2957......
Now the Radian is a way to measure angles. The degree in which we measure angle normally does not really give a TRUE measurement in the higher end of mathematics. The radian will havever give a a more acurate measurement of an angle.
Now that being said the use of the radian in the field of communications. I can see the radian being used highly in satellite communication. But at the same time we are talking perfection here and perfect circles and what not.
The Radian
If you are building a round porch Pi and angles will prolly suit you just fine. If you are wanting to do something very specific and with great percision is required then switch over to radians. And will encompass more complicated equations then the simple one I showed. Because Satellites dont travel in perfect circles and the earth isnt a perfect sphere.
I probably confused someone even more.
Is there such a thing as a perfect circle?
Sure. By definition, a circle is the locus of all points equidistant from a given point. Period.
First off she ruined this entire video by stating Pi is a Constant.
Meaning pi = 3.14159265.... and so on and so on. Thats it. Stop thinking. Pi is Pi it is nothing more nothing less than that.
Now when we take this Constant and throw it into equations Pi is still what it is. Just pi = 3.14159265. How you use Pi is up to you.
Shuch as the equation Pi=r^2 or Pi equals the radius squared.
From what I seen of the video she is ether confused or trying to confuse others or trying to sound intellegent.
That 2*pi thing she was talking about. Is an equation of sorts that gives you radians. 360degrees/2*pi = one radian or about 57.2957......
Now the Radian is a way to measure angles. The degree in which we measure angle normally does not really give a TRUE measurement in the higher end of mathematics. The radian will havever give a a more acurate measurement of an angle.
Now that being said the use of the radian in the field of communications. I can see the radian being used highly in satellite communication. But at the same time we are talking perfection here and perfect circles and what not.
The Radian
If you are building a round porch Pi and angles will prolly suit you just fine. If you are wanting to do something very specific and with great percision is required then switch over to radians. And will encompass more complicated equations then the simple one I showed. Because Satellites dont travel in perfect circles and the earth isnt a perfect sphere.
I probably confused someone even more.
So an infinte number of points connected by an infinte number of lines creates a perfect circle?
On a piece of paper, but can a perfect circle actually be produced? Can you actually have a perfect circle?
BTW, if you are dealing with equidistant points you are dealing with lines, so how can lines between points create a perfect circle?