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880,780 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Kalkun's profile picture
Kalkun1 year ago

In reality it doesn't make clicking sound

Brian Roemmele's profile picture
Brian Roemmele1 year ago

COMMUNITY NOTES☝️🤟

Edu ◬'s profile picture
Edu ◬1 year ago

It's crazy how people overcomplicate this It's just the circumference of a circle with 1 of diameter That's why ancient Egyptians have constructions with measures based on pi They were using a wheel to measure distances

nino - " Love your enemies. " The King of the Jews's profile picture
nino - " Love your enemies. " The King of the Jews1 year ago

@BrianRoemmele Moses also hid Phi several times in Genesis 1.1 ❤️🖖

𝕏 Analyst's profile picture
𝕏 Analyst1 year ago

Pi (π), the mathematical constant, has been known for thousands of years and is crucial in various fields such as mathematics, physics, and engineering. Pi represents the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, making it fundamental in geometry. It is an irrational number, meaning it cannot be exactly expressed as a simple fraction, and it continues indefinitely without repeating any sequence of digits. The first few digits of Pi are 3.14159, but it has been calculated to over a trillion digits beyond the decimal point. This constant appears in formulas involving circles and spheres, including the area of a circle (A = πr²) and the volume of a sphere (V = 4/3πr³). Its applications extend beyond geometry, impacting areas like trigonometry, calculus, and even cosmology, showcasing its versatile role in understanding the universe.

Fred Schure's profile picture
Fred Schure1 year ago

As close as I’ve ever been to understanding this, thanks

Char's profile picture
Char1 year ago

Makes so much more sense than words

12SK7 🇺🇸's profile picture
12SK7 🇺🇸1 year ago

Actually, the visualization needs the diameter length first.

Brian D. Meeks's profile picture
Brian D. Meeks1 year ago

Okay, this was brilliant. Have you done any others with regards to understanding geometry and trigonometry? I would watch them all.

Manu Soman's profile picture
Manu Soman1 year ago

This visualization is totally unnecessary and confusing. You can just say, the perimeter of a circle of unit diameter is π.

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