silverpig
Lifer
- Jul 29, 2001
- 27,703
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Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: jhu
what if we lived in a universe where pi was different number?
We'd have pi equaling 100.3423, and we'd be asking "what if we lived in a universe where pi was a different number?"
Laws of physics and geometry would have to be radically different.
Pi isn't always constant!
General relativity allows for the bending of space. For example: If you measured out 100 million km (~2/3 of the earth's distance from the sun) from the sun, and then drew a perfect circle around the sun, you'd have a circle with diameter 200 million km, but the circumference of this circle would be LESS THAN pi * 200 million km. This is because the sun curves space around it so it'd be like measuring the diameter of a bowl along it's bowled surface as the diameter, and then measuring the circumference around the bowl's lip as you'd expect.
This curvature is only very prominent in large gravitational fields; we'd be hard pressed to find any examples without the use of lasers and interferometers here on earth, but it is still measurable.
This situation where the circumference of a circle is less than pi*d happens in a positively curved space, or when space looks like a bowl. You can in fact have a situation where c > pi*d as well, and this occurs in negatively curved space, where space looks sort of like a pringle. Like this.
As for the overall curvature of the universe, well that's still yet to be fully determined, but despite local fluctuations due to massive objects, it appears that the universe is nearly perfectly flat, with a very very very very slight negative curvature to it.