• bazzargh 5 days ago

    That approximation is only used in the USA, Liberia, and Myanmar tho. In the rest of the world, we use the metric maritime approximation,

    π * φ km = e nm

    • justinl33 5 days ago

      historically, maritime navigation has always required much higher precision since a small error compounds into missing an island entirely. land-based measurements could afford to be fuzzier because you can course-correct using visible landmarks. this is also why maritime measurements standardized globally much earlier than land measurements.

      • tiffanyh 5 days ago

        That was a super long post to just say “the ratio of mph/knots ≈ π/e … and it’s not very useful, but a cool coincidence.”

        • Philpax 4 days ago

          It's about the journey, not the destination.

          • tiffanyh 4 days ago

            There’s not much of a “journey” though … because both mile and knot are just arbitrary assigned measurements.

            ——-

            mile = 1,000 paces (as defined by Romans)

            knot = how many logs would pass by in 30 seconds.

            There’s no mathematical reason why their value is what it is.

            Unlike π and e that do.

            • ianburrell 4 days ago

              The nautical mile came first. It is one minute of longitude or latitude at equator.

              The speed was measured with knots at specific lengths.

        • cb321 5 days ago

          Interesting to see xkcd's Randall Munroe's live tour linked!