Posted on 03/14/2015 9:25:51 AM PDT by PapaNew
Pacific Standard Time's turn...
3...2...1...
HAPPY π DAY!!! (Actually, it's Happy π Infinite Second.)
Now what?
I perfer cake over pi...
What’s an “Infinite Second?”
I perfer caek....
When trying to achieve light speed in a large spacecraft, one must let the butter melt slowly, and not get so hot it bubbles.
I have absolutely no idea. It's the closest thing I could come with to calling a point in time that is infinitely small - a number that has no end. If you try to convert a number with no end into time you've got a point in time that is infinitely small.
The Pi Song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDiSYp_51iY
Pi Song - 1 Hour Version
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1UC6ZZGKR3c
Well, I don’t know. Like Einstein, I believe in infinity because I believe in God and He has no beginning and no end. As far as time goes, maybe you could call that “macro infinity”.
Here, we’re talking about something more like “micro-infinity”. Maybe our numbers and math can only take us so far. It’s probably in a dimension beyond our three-dimensional universe. I suppose in that sense, maybe you are right that it may not “physically” exist, at least in our three dimensional universe. Maybe it’s like trying to come up with an equation for a black hole.
3/14/2015
Once-in-a-century Pi Day.
Pi, like e the base of natural logarithms is a transcendental number. It’s not a rational number it can’t be expressed as a ratio of two integers. Pi’s exact value has an infinite number of decimal places.
Twice today, the date & time was 3/14/15 9:26:53 . . . The numerical string representation of the date & time matched the first ten digits of Pi.
Let’s say we have a perfectly calibrated digital clock that displays the precise time to an arbitrary level of precision (decimal places). Also, the clock “ticks” in increments of the smallest time interval that has any meaning in the physical world (explained below).
During the one second between 9:26:53 and 9:26:54, at an infinitesimally brief point, the digital clock display will match exactly the value of Pi, to an arbitrarily long string of decimal places.
From classical & nuclear physics, the smallest possible physical elapsed time is the time it takes for the fastest thing in the universe (light) to travel the shortest possible distance in the universe (”diameter” of a neutron or proton). Distance = rate * time. Time = distance / rate. So that’s about (1.65*10^-13 cm) / (3*10^10 cm / second) = 5.5*10^-24 seconds; mighty quick. That’s 5.5 yoctoseconds. (One yoctosecond = 1/1000 of a zeptosecond.)
However, from quantum physics, the briefest physically meaningful span of time is the [too small to be named] time required for light to travel one Planck wave length; that’s 10^-44 seconds. 100 quintillion of those ticks in a yoctosecond. The Planck wave length can be thought of as the essential fabric of the space-time continuum.
Let’s define 10^-44 seconds = one FReepersecond. Our digital clock ticks in FReepersecond increments.
So between 9:26:53 and 9:26:54 for one brief shining FReepersecond moment our digital clock display will equal Pi to 44 decimal places. At some hypothetical fraction of a FReepersecond, the display would equal Pi to any number of decimal places.
Is clear, yes?
Interesting stuff.
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