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Coincidence in mathematics From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A mathematical coincidence is said to occur when two expressions with no direct relationship show a near-equality which has no apparent theoretical explanation.
For example, there is a near-equality close to the round number 1000 between powers of 2 and powers of 10:
Some mathematical coincidences are used in engineering when one expression is taken as an approximation of another.
A mathematical coincidence often involves an integer, and the surprising feature is the fact that a real number arising in some context is considered by some standard as a "close" approximation to a small integer or to a multiple or power of ten, or more generally, to a rational number with a small denominator. Other kinds of mathematical coincidences, such as integers simultaneously satisfying multiple seemingly unrelated criteria or coincidences regarding units of measurement, may also be considered. In the class of those coincidences that are of a purely mathematical sort, some simply result from sometimes very deep mathematical facts, while others appear to come 'out of the blue'.
Given the countably infinite number of ways of forming mathematical expressions using a finite number of symbols, the number of symbols used and the precision of approximate equality might be the most obvious way to assess mathematical coincidences; but there is no standard, and the strong law of small numbers is the sort of thing one has to appeal to with no formal opposing mathematical guidance.[citation needed] Beyond this, some sense of mathematical aesthetics could be invoked to adjudicate the value of a mathematical coincidence, and there are in fact exceptional cases of true mathematical significance (see Ramanujan's constant below, which made it into print some years ago as a scientific April Fools' joke[1]). All in all, though, they are generally to be considered for their curiosity value, or perhaps to encourage new mathematical learners at an elementary level.
Sometimes simple rational approximations are exceptionally close to interesting irrational values. These are explainable in terms of large terms in the continued fraction representation of the irrational value, but further insight into why such improbably large terms occur is often not available.
Rational approximants (convergents of continued fractions) to ratios of logs of different numbers are often invoked as well, making coincidences between the powers of those numbers.[2]
Many other coincidences are combinations of numbers that put them into the form that such rational approximants provide close relationships.
In music, the distances between notes (intervals) are measured as ratios of their frequencies, with near-rational ratios often sounding harmonious. In western twelve-tone equal temperament, the ratio between consecutive note frequencies is .
with the last accurate to 14 or 15 decimal places.
The speed of light is (by definition) exactly 299792458 m/s, extremely close to 3.0×108 m/s (300000000 m/s). This is a pure coincidence, as the metre was originally defined as 1 / 10000000 of the distance between the Earth's pole and equator along the surface at sea level, and the Earth's circumference just happens to be about 2/15 of a light-second.[39] It is also roughly equal to one foot per nanosecond (the actual number is 0.9836 ft/ns).
As seen from Earth, the angular diameter of the Sun varies between 31′27″ and 32′32″, while that of the Moon is between 29′20″ and 34′6″. The fact that the intervals overlap (the former interval is contained in the latter) is a coincidence, and has implications for the types of solar eclipses that can be observed from Earth.
While not constant but varying depending on latitude and altitude, the numerical value of the acceleration caused by Earth's gravity on the surface lies between 9.74 and 9.87 m/s2, which is quite close to 10. This means that as a result of Newton's second law, the weight of a kilogram of mass on Earth's surface corresponds roughly to 10 newtons of force exerted on an object.[40]
This is related to the aforementioned coincidence that the square of pi is close to 10. One of the early definitions of the metre was the length of a pendulum whose half swing had a period equal to one second. Since the period of the full swing of a pendulum is approximated by the equation below, algebra shows that if this definition was maintained, gravitational acceleration measured in metres per second per second would be exactly equal to π2.[41]
The upper limit of gravity on Earth's surface (9.87 m/s2) is equal to π2 m/s2 to four significant figures. It is approximately 0.6% greater than standard gravity (9.80665 m/s2).
The Rydberg constant, when multiplied by the speed of light and expressed as a frequency, is close to :[39]
This is also approximately the number of feet in one meter:
As discovered by Randall Munroe, a cubic mile is close to cubic kilometres (within 0.5%). This means that a sphere with radius n kilometres has almost exactly the same volume as a cube with side length n miles.[43][44]
The ratio of a mile to a kilometre is approximately the Golden ratio. As a consequence, a Fibonacci number of miles is approximately the next Fibonacci number of kilometres.
The ratio of a mile to a kilometre is also very close to (within 0.006%). That is, where m is the number of miles, k is the number of kilometres and e is Euler's number.
A density of one ounce per cubic foot is very close to one kilogram per cubic metre: 1 oz/ft3 = 1 oz × 0.028349523125 kg/oz / (1 ft × 0.3048 m/ft)3 ≈ 1.0012 kg/m3.
The ratio between one troy ounce and one gram is approximately .
The fine-structure constant is close to, and was once conjectured to be precisely equal to 1/137.[45] Its CODATA recommended value is
is a dimensionless physical constant, so this coincidence is not an artifact of the system of units being used.
The number of seconds in one year, based on the Gregorian calendar, can be calculated by:
This value can be approximated by or 31,415,926.54 with less than one percent of an error:
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