Main Page
Welcome to the explain xkcd wiki!
We have an explanation for all 3022 xkcd comics,
and only 17
(1%) are incomplete. Help us finish them!
Latest comic
The Maritime Approximation |
Title text: It works because a nautical mile is based on a degree of latitude, and the Earth (e) is a circle. |
Explanation
This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: Created by a SEMICIRCULAR SAILOR - Please change this comment when editing this page. Do NOT delete this tag too soon. |
MPH, or Miles Per Hour, and Knots are both units used to calculate the speed of vehicles. Miles per hour are typically used in the US for the speed of cars and other similar vehicles, while Knots are used by some sailors or pilots to describe the speed of ships or aircraft. Novice sailors or sailors who spend a lot of time on land may find it helpful to quickly convert between MPH and Knots. Usually, this is the form of 1 knot = 1.2 MPH, or 1 MPH = 0.87 knots, however Randall has numerously noticed that π MPH= e Knots. This is a coincidence[citation needed] despite the claim of the title text, since even though Knots are based on nautical miles which are related to degrees of latitude (and thus to π, which is used to describe the circumference of a circle) miles per hour have no relation to either e or π. Randall has made similar observations of different dimensions that equal each other in the past in the past with comics such as 687: Dimensional Analysis, where he compares Plank Energy, the pressure at the earth's core, the gas mileage in a Prius, and the width of the English channel to Pi. In addition, in What If?, he has compared the mass of Earth to be Pi "miliJupiters," or Pi times the mass of Jupiter divided by 1000, and noted that the volume of a cube with side lengths of one mile is roughly similar to the volume of a sphere with a radius of 1 kilometer.
The equality shown in this strip consists of several different parts:
- The mile per hour (mph) is a unit of speed common for motor vehicles in a few countries, such as the United States and United Kingdom.
- The knot is a unit of speed that is one nautical mile (1 852 m) per hour, used in nautical contexts.
- π is a number equal to the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, about 3.14159.
- e is Euler's number, the base of the natural logarithm, about 2.71828.
π mph × (1609.344 meters/statute mile ÷ 1852 meters/nautical mile) ≈ 2.72996 knots. The result is only about 0.43% larger than e knots ≈ 2.71828 knots.
The joke is that it is not exact, but only correct to a certain percentage, unlike Euler's Identity, which is exact and that's what makes the latter truly remarkable. It isn't helped by the fact that it carries the implication that this neat, easy to remember identity is actual useful for sailors but indeed, being easy to remember is all it has going for it. Otherwise it doesn't make calculations any easier and is impossible to do without a calculator or paper, and doing it on paper is much harder than other conversions, given that pi and e are both irrational, and transcendental.
Transcript
This transcript is incomplete. Please help editing it! Thanks. |
- [Equation inside a frame with a footnote:]
- π mph = e knots*
- *Correct to <0.5%
- [Caption below the panel:]
- The sailor's version of eiπ=−1
Is this out of date?
.New here?
Last 7 days (Top 10) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
You can read a brief introduction about this wiki at explain xkcd. Feel free to sign up for an account and contribute to the wiki! We need explanations for comics, characters, themes and everything in between. If it is referenced in an xkcd web comic, it should be here.
- If you're new to wiki editing, see the explain xkcd:Editor FAQ for a specific guidance to this Wiki and the more general help on how to edit wiki pages. There's also a handy wikicode cheatsheet.
- Discussion about the wiki itself happens at the Community portal.
- You can browse the comics from List of all comics or by navigating the category tree at Category:Comics.
- There are incomplete explanations listed here. Feel free to help out by expanding them!
Rules
Don't be a jerk!
There are a lot of comics that don't have set-in-stone explanations; feel free to put multiple interpretations in the wiki page for each comic.
If you want to talk about a specific comic, use its discussion page.
Please only submit material directly related to (and helping everyone better understand) xkcd... and of course only submit material that can legally be posted (and freely edited). Off-topic or other inappropriate content is subject to removal or modification at admin discretion, and users who repeatedly post such content will be blocked.
If you need assistance from an admin, post a message to the Admin requests board.