Re: Compute this?
- From: "jay1bala@xxxxxxx" <jay1bala@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 16:49:48 -0700
On Oct 29, 6:58 pm, Dweeb <dweebgoo...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
David W. Cantrell wrote:
Ray Vickson <C6...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On Oct 29, 1:46 pm, "jay1b...@xxxxxxx" <jay1b...@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Could anyone try this...
10*((Pi*Phi/2)!!)/36*Pi=1.000...?
Ok, so using David's suggestions we could refine the equation to be
Gamma(1+Gamma(1+Pi*Phi/2))*1268/(4569*Pi)
and get 0.999999936...
which is closer to 1
But, why are we doing this?
Good question!
I just wanted to see if there is any interger solution. Its all
started with just the Phi*Pi/2 which is very close to 2.54... and its
a "constant" in centimeter*2.54=inch. I think its coincidence.
Why did I even get to that? I was looking for number (unitless) to
quantify the speed of light, c. Yes, I know speed has to have a unit,
but look at it this way... its like saying the curcumfrance of a
circle is "pi inches".
Could the constant "c" be expressed interms of some other function to
a point we end up with a "natural" unit-less constant?
Also, time (seconds) is man-made. Length (inch, cm, etc) is man-made
too. But obviously, dividing one man-made unit by another, does not
create a natural number tho.
Regards,
Jay Bala.
.
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