Pi is considered one of the most important mathematical constants. However, there is a growing movement that suggests that a different constant may be easier to use and easier to teach.
We've already computed trillions of digits of pi. Don't make me restart.
(Photo: Chris Blakeley on Flickr)
Commentary
The value of pi is a constant that relates the circumference of a circle (length around the circle) to its diameter (length through the center). In 2000, Bob Palis wrote a short article called Pi is Wrong! where he outlined arguments for a different circle constant: one that relates the circumference to the radius (length from the center to any point on the circle). In June 2010, Michael Hartl published Palis' arguments as The Tau Manifesto where he suggested that the new circle constant be represented by the Greek letter tau.
The main arguments are as follows:
- While pi appears in many equations, it most frequently appears as 2pi. All instances of 2pi can be replaced by tau.
- Measuring angles in radians is much more straightforward because there are tau radians in a circle (rather than 2pi radians).
- The relationship between the trigonometric functions and the unit circle is easier to grasp.
- Euler's identity ends up sounding even more powerful: eit = 1 (A rotation by one turn in the complex plane is 1.)
- The area of a circle is in quadratic form similar to many other physical phenomena where two values are proportional to each other. Examples:
- Falling in a uniform gravitational field (velocity is proportional to time)
- Potential energy in a linear spring (force is proportional to distance)
- Energy of motion (force is proportional to acceleration)
The arguments are persuasive and merit thought, especially for the pedagogical benefits tau provides. I suspect it will be some time before anyone adopts this constant as a matter of course, but I have no problem writing "tau = 2pi" and moving on from there.
See Also
- Pi is Wrong! by Bob Palis for the original paper.
- The Tau Manifesto by Michael Hartl for why tau ought to be the new circle constant.
- Turn at Wikipedia for a historical discussion of using a turn as a unit of rotation.
1 comment:
Also: A circle is defined by its radius, not its diameter. Tau makes that relationship clearer.
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