Why is there no equation for the perimeter of an ellipse‽

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • Applications for paid internships at Jane Street are open! www.janestreet.com/join-jane-...
    A Podcast of Unnecessary Detail is out now: festivalofthespokennerd.com/p... Come for the Unnecessary Detail, stay for the A Podcast Of.
    These are my approximation equations:
    perimeter ≈ π[53a/3 + 717b/35 - √(269a^2 + 667ab + 371b^2)]
    perimeter ≈ π(6a/5 + 3b/4)
    If you can do better, submit it to Matt Parker's Maths Puzzles.
    • MPMP: What is the opti...
    www.think-maths.co.uk/ellipse...
    This was my pervious video featuring ellipsoids:
    • Ellipsoids and The Biz...
    You can buy the ellipse from this video on eBay. I've written on my two new equations and signed it. All money goes to charity (the fantastic Water Aid).
    www.ebay.co.uk/itm/363096345270
    Bonus content and a deleted scene are available on my Patreon.
    / 41274351
    Huge thanks to all who sent in a recording of them singing "A total ellipse of the chart." Sorry I could not include everyone. These are the people in the video:
    Helen Arney
    Steve Hardwick
    Victoria Saigle
    Andrew McLaren
    Fractal
    Macey
    Sören Kowalick
    It all started because of a request I put out on twitter.
    / 1301252952930299904
    CORRECTIONS:
    - So far the only times (I've noticed that) I say "eclipse" instead of "ellipse" are 5:01 and 05:26 which was just after talking about my wife who is a solar physicist. So I think we split the blame 50/50.
    - It seems everyone but me recognised the Root Mean Square. I think I only associate that with current for some reason! Thanks all.
    - Let me know if you spot any other mistakes!
    Thanks to my Patreons who meant I could spend about a week trying to find approximations for the length of ellipses. "Are you still working on that?" Lucie would - rightfully - ask over the weekend. "I'm going the extra mile for my patreon people!" I would reply. Here is a random subset of those fine folks:
    Benjamin Richter
    Louie Ruck
    Matthew Holland
    Morgan Butt
    Rathe Hollingum
    Jeremy Buchanan
    Sjoerd Wennekes
    Barry Pitcairn
    James Dexter
    Adrian Cowan
    / standupmaths
    As always: thanks to Jane Street who support my channel. They're amazing.
    www.janestreet.com/
    Filming and editing by Matt Parker
    Additional camera work by Lucie Green
    VFX by Industrial Matt and Parker
    Music by Howard Carter
    Design by Simon Wright and Adam Robinson
    MATT PARKER: Stand-up Mathematician
    Website: standupmaths.com/
    US book: www.penguinrandomhouse.com/bo...
    UK book: mathsgear.co.uk/collections/b...
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @ayrtonsenna6311
    @ayrtonsenna6311 3 года назад +7212

    " if ramanujan made 1 major mistake with their mathematical career, it was having it in the past" -matt parker, everybody

    • @yuvalne
      @yuvalne 3 года назад +166

      Unappreciated joke

    • @John73John
      @John73John 3 года назад +397

      I think the mistake I made with my career as engineer on a starship is not having my career hundreds of years in the future.

    • @SondreGrneng
      @SondreGrneng 3 года назад +14

      This is why I love Matt.

    • @casadelosperrosstudio200
      @casadelosperrosstudio200 3 года назад +128

      Did Ramanujan prefer "their" as a pronoun, or did you just disrespectfully choose the pronoun that was more comfortable for you? Oh, my... I shouldn't have assumed "you" to be the correct term either.... nevermind...

    • @pleaseenteraname4824
      @pleaseenteraname4824 3 года назад +14

      "The future is now old man"

  • @MrKalerender
    @MrKalerender 3 года назад +4702

    "I know just enough mathematics to be dangerous" - I feel this should be a tshirt.

    • @paulbennett772
      @paulbennett772 3 года назад +105

      I'd buy one

    • @damientonkin
      @damientonkin 3 года назад +84

      This week I worked out that 25 grams of antimatter has the potential energy of a Megaton of TNT. So I feel like I fit into that category.

    • @TechyBen
      @TechyBen 3 года назад +8

      It's a way of life, that's for certain.

    • @WriteRightMathNation
      @WriteRightMathNation 3 года назад +12

      ...with Einstein's silhouette and Matt Parker showing his square to Einstein...

    • @ClownOwO
      @ClownOwO 3 года назад +2

      I need that

  • @Inspirator_AG112
    @Inspirator_AG112 2 года назад +1839

    I actually discovered *4(a + b) - ln(4a + 1)* at ~10AM on 08/04/2021 as my own Approximation! It only ever reaches 1.6813% (-When b = 1) error and eventually approaches -0.0297% error- 0.000% error.

    • @Inspirator_AG112
      @Inspirator_AG112 2 года назад +425

      I found a more general Approximation of *4(a + b) - ln(4a/b + 1)b.* It always maxes at only 1.6813% error.

    • @OrigamiCL
      @OrigamiCL 2 года назад +96

      @@Inspirator_AG112 That's very clean! Well done.

    • @liam3284
      @liam3284 2 года назад +42

      I think if you put 'h' inside the ln term, may be possible to find a better one.

    • @nordicexile7378
      @nordicexile7378 2 года назад +131

      No pi in the equation? That makes it even more awesome!

    • @Inspirator_AG112
      @Inspirator_AG112 2 года назад +78

      It actually approches perfection. (Correction 7 months later.)

  • @suomeaboo
    @suomeaboo 11 месяцев назад +580

    If I had a nickel for every time Matt Parker called an ellipse an "eclipse", I'd have two nickels. Which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice.

    • @SteveMcGreen
      @SteveMcGreen 10 месяцев назад +5

      they rehearsed that song too often before recording ;)

    • @anastassiosperakis2869
      @anastassiosperakis2869 10 месяцев назад +4

      I thought he did this more than twice, but I was not counting.

    • @amandahugankiss4110
      @amandahugankiss4110 8 месяцев назад +4

      Anyone count lipses? Lips'? Lips's? Yeah, yeah. Anyone count lips's?

    • @yakovsannikov3909
      @yakovsannikov3909 7 месяцев назад +8

      Definitely more than twice - he did it twice just between 5:00 and 5:30. Using Keppler's approximation and the duration of this video (21 min), I'd say, he could've confused ellipses with eclipses as many as 84 times.

    • @baxter77piano
      @baxter77piano 7 месяцев назад +3

      I blame Bonnie Tyler.

  • @JacekJurewicz
    @JacekJurewicz 3 года назад +3818

    My lazy approximation would be 4a :) The more eccentric the ellipse, the more accurate it gets.

    • @MaoDev
      @MaoDev 2 года назад +698

      on average it's better than any, but it's practically useless

    • @theglitch312
      @theglitch312 2 года назад +828

      @@MaoDevHow aliens would describe me in one sentence after studying the human species.

    • @CamTechBricks
      @CamTechBricks 2 года назад +92

      4a is the lower limit for the circumference perimeter of an ellipse.
      C or 1, the circle circumference is the upper limit.

    • @paracetamol256
      @paracetamol256 2 года назад +18

      @@theglitch312 hahaha!

    • @alexdemoura9972
      @alexdemoura9972 2 года назад +45

      6:42 It is a *quadratic mean* also (very well) known as *RMS* (Root Mean Square) by Electrical & Electronics Engineers.
      The quadratic mean is popular closer to the highest value (Max) or greater than the centered arithmetic mean. The geometric mean, lesser than the arithmetic mean, is near the lowest value (Min), and the harmonic mean is even closer.
      The error graph of those means drives us to conclude that the larger axis *_b_* has more influence on the perimeter of an ellipse than the minor axis *_a_* , mainly as eccentricity increases.
      We also can realize that such means are the main trunk line in the search for the perimeter of an ellipse:
      - The first Ramanujan approximation and the first Parker approximation are some kinds of playing around with weighted arithmetic, quadratic and geometric means... yes, they can all be weighted by multiplier coefficients;
      - The second Ramanujan approximation, excellent by the way, is a combination of weighted arithmetic mean and the use of *_h_* has some relation to a weighted quadratic mean;
      - The second Parker lazy approximation is a weighted arithmetic mean, relatively good compared to the quadratic one.

  • @random6434
    @random6434 3 года назад +5455

    "Who's having an ellipse that is 75 times as long as it is wide?"
    An Oort Cloud comet has entered the chat.

    • @sergey1519
      @sergey1519 3 года назад +281

      @@danieljensen2626 they are much worse.
      edit: If i did my math correctly, then something traveling between Uranus and Earth will have that 75 ratio.
      But also i feel like at this point just calling it 4a is pretty accurate

    • @MmmVomit
      @MmmVomit 3 года назад +252

      And then left and won't be back for a few centuries.

    • @ecsodikas
      @ecsodikas 3 года назад +315

      Physicists would approximate this as a line.

    • @regulus2033
      @regulus2033 3 года назад +60

      An ellipse has totally entered the chart.

    • @Grimlock1979
      @Grimlock1979 3 года назад +138

      There's a comet called Ikeya-Seki. It has an eccentricity of 0.999915. If I calculated correctly, that's 77 times more long than wide. But I think most comets are not that bad. For Hale-Bopp it's 11 something.

  • @Alan_Stinchcombe
    @Alan_Stinchcombe 2 года назад +378

    Matt, engineers frequently use the "root mean square" to describe expressions like SQRT((a^2 + b^2)/2).

    • @KD-onegaishimasu
      @KD-onegaishimasu Год назад +13

      I think statisticians use it to calculate things like variance, too!
      Iirc cuberoot( (a^3 + b^3) / 2) helps get the skew (of a sample of size n=2). I wonder what the skew of a "radius" would be like

    • @josephbrandenburg4373
      @josephbrandenburg4373 9 месяцев назад +3

      I see "root mean square" in a lot of audio plugins, as a way of detecting peaks in the audio (or as an alternative? I donno. It's usually a choice between "peak" and "RMS")

    • @JacklynnInChina
      @JacklynnInChina 9 месяцев назад +2

      Very useful in machine learning - most models (mostly neural nets) are trained by taking the derivative of the "mean squared error" and following the gradient in the direction that lowers the error. Mean squared error is nice because it's differentiable - well, I guess the absolute value of the error is differentiable when the error is nonzero, but I think you'd be likely to overshoot using gradient descent on absolute value of the error.

    • @V-for-Vendetta01
      @V-for-Vendetta01 8 месяцев назад +3

      kinda surprised he didn't know that considering he studied mechanical engineering in college.

    • @Azide_zx
      @Azide_zx 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@josephbrandenburg4373 "RMS" in an electrical context is often a way of getting some sort of "average" because arithmetic mean in a sinusoid (AC signal) doesn't work and it ends up being useful in some areas. considering a lot of audio equipment is analog (and in odd waveforms) it would make sense to use RMS as sort of an average loudness

  • @mixbaal0
    @mixbaal0 2 года назад +328

    I am almost 60 years old. I love mathematics and I never, never imagen if somebody could make me laugh watching a math video. Well you did. Mathematics are so amazing, fun and funny too. Thank you so much for this 20 mins. Cheers!

    • @hassegreiner9675
      @hassegreiner9675 2 года назад +10

      Same here, born 1951

    • @jupitahr
      @jupitahr 2 месяца назад

      you sound like my grandpa lol!

  • @misterguts
    @misterguts 3 года назад +1285

    15:36 3 Blue 1 Brown's pi is sort of like the Clippy of mathematics:
    "It looks like you're trying to find the perimeter of an ellipse!"

    • @omarziada5
      @omarziada5 2 года назад +56

      now I want someone to make a 3B1B digital assistant

    • @alexcwagner
      @alexcwagner 2 года назад +36

      If Clippy were anywhere near that useful, I'd have never turned him off!

    • @hoebare
      @hoebare 2 года назад +1

      Proud to be your 666th upvote :)

    • @misterguts
      @misterguts 2 года назад +1

      @@hoebare Beast Mode! So to speak...

    • @asheep7797
      @asheep7797 2 года назад +1

      @@hoebare devil

  • @mingxizhang3280
    @mingxizhang3280 3 года назад +894

    15:30 Matt: *slaps Pi”
    “This bad boy can fit an infinite series of fractions in it’

  • @Astromath
    @Astromath 2 года назад +139

    13:06 Well, because an object in free fall isn't really tracing out a parabola but instead a highly eccentric elliptic orbit around the earth's gravitational centre, you might in fact need such high eccentricity

    • @jackys_handle
      @jackys_handle 2 года назад +39

      I never thaugh about that. It's only a parabola if the force feild is an infinite plane, but on a sherical one, it's an extroardinaraly eccentricical elipse. My whole life is a lie.

    • @carultch
      @carultch Год назад +17

      @@jackys_handleFor most human-scale projectile motion, the difference is so insignificant that it doesn't make a difference. Local gravitational anomalies, like a mountain or heavy mineral deposit nearby, are going to be more significant, than accounting for the difference between an ellipse and a parabola as the shape of its trajectory.

    • @sleepycritical6950
      @sleepycritical6950 4 месяца назад +1

      I wonder if we flatten out an ellipse, since those simple calculations usually tends to treat earths surface as flat, will we actually find a parabola?

    • @LincolnDWard
      @LincolnDWard 7 дней назад

      @@jackys_handle it's a difference between an eccentricity of 1.0 (parabola) and .9999 (very long ellipse)

  • @edoardoferretti5493
    @edoardoferretti5493 2 года назад +471

    The interesting fact I noticed about the "bouncing" approximation is that for certain values of ratio they give a 0% error

    • @fi4re
      @fi4re 2 года назад +247

      A broken clock is correct twice a day

    • @fi4re
      @fi4re 2 года назад +198

      Also, the sine function perfectly approximates the value of 0 infinitely many times, but that doesn’t make it a good approximation of 0

    • @BeauDiddley87
      @BeauDiddley87 2 года назад +21

      I would venture to guess that those certain values would be irrational?

    • @diegoalvarez8403
      @diegoalvarez8403 2 года назад +35

      @@BeauDiddley87 and transcendental, going on a limb here

    • @ToTheStars327
      @ToTheStars327 2 года назад +38

      @@fi4re Sadly that just works for analog clocks lol. Digital ones have a more nihilistic approach.

  • @ujustinree2987
    @ujustinree2987 3 года назад +658

    That moment of realization for 2*pi*r where he says "wait a minute!" is so well timed with the realization for the viewer.

    • @Bibibosh
      @Bibibosh 3 года назад +8

      100th like :)
      ...send me money

    • @nelsblair2667
      @nelsblair2667 3 года назад +3

      BibiBosh rounded to 100? Approximately 100th? Was it 100. ? ( #BadRounding)

    • @Bibibosh
      @Bibibosh 3 года назад +1

      It was exzactly 100

    • @ChrisShawUK
      @ChrisShawUK 3 года назад +1

      Classic parker

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi 3 года назад

      Amazing

  • @ghyuty17
    @ghyuty17 3 года назад +2434

    People in 100 years: if Matt Parker made one major mistake, it was having his mathematical career in the past.

    • @motazfawzi2504
      @motazfawzi2504 3 года назад +156

      And with his mathematical insight, I've got something he didn't have, I've got a quantum computer.
      ................................................
      so even though I only know juuust enough mathematics to be hazardous I can outsource alot of it to this machine.

    • @andrerenault
      @andrerenault 3 года назад +66

      That's a Parker Square of a career timing

    • @endersdragon34
      @endersdragon34 3 года назад +13

      ONE major mistake?

    • @kingofgrim4761
      @kingofgrim4761 3 года назад +19

      @@motazfawzi2504 I love the idea of this, and hope things like this persist like memes online for centuries LOL

    • @MATHalino1
      @MATHalino1 2 года назад +4

      you nailed it.

  • @vmgs100
    @vmgs100 Год назад +35

    Another approach is to use the integral formula for the curve length. This integral can't be presented as a well-defined function, so you have to use a Simpson rule, for instance.
    With the Simpson rule, you can also estimate an error.

    • @JosephEaorle
      @JosephEaorle 8 месяцев назад +4

      That was my solution, the antiderivative ends up being pretty complicated.

    • @ghffrsfygdhfjkjiysdz
      @ghffrsfygdhfjkjiysdz 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@JosephEaorle but it would be exact, so the claim that there is no exact equation is false; there is no simple, exact equation; but there is an exact equation.

    • @DILFDylF
      @DILFDylF 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yeahhhhhh maybe, but with the Simpson rule you'd get dragged down by having to write it over and over on a chalkboard.

    • @user-yq7jn9we1s
      @user-yq7jn9we1s Месяц назад

      For further Reference on the subject one should consider the Extensively studied field of Elliptic Integrals [ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliptic_integral ] and for Numerical Calculation of the Integrals one could use Adaptive Gaussian Quadrature schemes like Patterson methods [ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_quadrature ] which provides Much Better results than Simpson Rule, or for a simply Naive but much Better than Simpson calculation one could take Romberg Integration schemes.

  • @Intrafacial86
    @Intrafacial86 Год назад +151

    I remember stumbling upon this unfortunate fact when wanting to know the perimeter of a rubber gasket used for an elliptical hole at my workplace. I ultimately ended up just using a string to wrap around the edge so I could straighten it out and measure it, but still.

    • @doodledibob
      @doodledibob Год назад +90

      That's engineering vs. math in a nutshell. The mathematician will spend 18 months trying to find a better formula, the engineer will take 10 minutes to find a piece of string so they can move on with their life.

    • @Mr_Smith_369
      @Mr_Smith_369 Год назад +10

      Thats what NASA does

    • @Intrafacial86
      @Intrafacial86 Год назад +4

      @@Mr_Smith_369 lol damn

    • @________dQw4w9WgXcQ
      @________dQw4w9WgXcQ Год назад +36

      @@Mr_Smith_369 really big strings to measure orbits

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 Год назад +4

      There are tables for the elliptical integral(formula for arc length as an integral). Values for specific lengths can be interpolated using the table values for k, ( k^2 which is (a^2-b^2)). See Cal 2 texts for details

  • @vikraal6974
    @vikraal6974 3 года назад +1254

    Whenever Mathematicians are scratching their heads on a problem, a wild Ramanujan appears

    • @thebiggestcauldron
      @thebiggestcauldron 3 года назад +3

      Wild?

    • @rahimeozsoy4244
      @rahimeozsoy4244 3 года назад +6

      @@thebiggestcauldron he is wild (commentor)

    • @thebiggestcauldron
      @thebiggestcauldron 3 года назад +3

      @jocaguz18 Yes.

    • @RockBrentwood
      @RockBrentwood 3 года назад +20

      And ... then an even wilder Ramanujan appears. This formula C = π(a+b) ((12 + h)/8 - √((2 - h)/8)) fits much better than Ramanujan's (which is C = π(a+b) (3 - √(4 - h)), when expressed in terms of h). We're onto his game!

    • @achtsekundenfurz7876
      @achtsekundenfurz7876 3 года назад +10

      @@dgarrard100 Gotta catch both of 'em!

  • @SavageGreywolf
    @SavageGreywolf 3 года назад +730

    "Ignore what happens a lot further that way. It's not relevant."
    *disapproves in Big O Notation*

    • @macicoinc9363
      @macicoinc9363 3 года назад +19

      Theta(n!) is so fast it even beats Theta(2n)!, if are range is 0 to 3 hehe

    • @jamieg2427
      @jamieg2427 3 года назад

      @@macicoinc9363 What is theta? Are you using it to mean Big O?

    • @t0mstone581
      @t0mstone581 3 года назад +24

      Oversimplified, Big O means "grows not as fast as", little o means "grows faster than" and theta means "grows roughly the same as"

    • @jamieg2427
      @jamieg2427 3 года назад +2

      @@t0mstone581 Thanks!

    • @tomgraham7168
      @tomgraham7168 3 года назад +1

      T0mstone wooo computational mathematics is so fun...

  • @hederahelix8332
    @hederahelix8332 Год назад +7

    I am NO mathematician, but programming, while accidentally seeing this.
    The information density of your beautyful feature is high AND entertaining, while i can learn in ease.
    I was browsing 20 unnecessary Sites to veryfy a typo in a book of Physics and found this comprehensive while deep and refreshing channel of yours.
    THANKS a LOT for occupying my screen, talking with purpose. I secretly like Maths in awe and i see you love it too. Being rewarded.

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 2 года назад +18

    Excellent, Excellent reporting! Wow! Ramanujen's brilliance was in finding something that freaking simple to do such a fantastic job. That kind of accuracy is good enough to land a probe on a comet. I enjoyed your improved lazy approximation, and I REALLY enjoyed the nice vocalist who sang Total Elipse of the Chart.

  • @sproga_265
    @sproga_265 3 года назад +802

    Loved the little 3Blue1Brown reference.

    • @jpe1
      @jpe1 3 года назад +46

      For those who missed it, see 15:38

    • @TheMrvidfreak
      @TheMrvidfreak 3 года назад +39

      Yeah, what a cutie-pi :3

    • @NStripleseven
      @NStripleseven 3 года назад +1

      Lol

    • @SP-qi8ur
      @SP-qi8ur 3 года назад

      @@6872elpado what u mean

    • @cainau
      @cainau 3 года назад +7

      Saw the reference, came to the comments section looking for this comment. Now back to the rest of the video :)

  • @nashsok
    @nashsok 3 года назад +3499

    Take a shot every time Matt calls an ellipse an eclipse :p

    • @conflictchris
      @conflictchris 3 года назад +83

      makes me wanna do a parker square...

    • @SumNutOnU2b
      @SumNutOnU2b 3 года назад +64

      Only twice though, so you won't get many shots.

    • @wolframstahl1263
      @wolframstahl1263 3 года назад +328

      @@SumNutOnU2b Well, it's a Parker drinking game. It works somewhat okay, but not great.

    • @LukeAmaral
      @LukeAmaral 3 года назад +47

      An eclipse is a parker ellipse

    • @SumNutOnU2b
      @SumNutOnU2b 3 года назад +22

      @@wolframstahl1263 brilliant!

  • @siten1
    @siten1 Год назад +1

    The quality in this video is amazing! Thank you.

  • @MrPoornakumar
    @MrPoornakumar 2 года назад +72

    For that, first we need to delve into the nature of "π". What is π? It is the ratio of circumference to the diameter in a "Circle"(only). Now, Conics are defined by their "eccentricity"(ε) values, which too is a ratio. Conics are, the Circle (ε = 0), Ellipse (0 < ε < 1), Parabola (ε = 1) & lastly Hyperbola (1 < ε < ∞). In these only the circle & Parabola have fixed ε, each (0 or 1). It implies there is only one circle (that can be scaled up to look big) and one Parabola, while there can be an infinite number of Ellipses or (infinite number of) Hyperbolae each of a different eccentricity (ε).
    Just as for the definition of π (ratio of circumference to the diameter) that is valid for circle, there can be no such a thing for Ellipse. The ratio of circumference to semi-major or minor axis is a continuous variable. So there can be no π, for an Ellipse. Then why do we involve π, in the definition of circumference of an Ellipse (as some would want us to believe)? We don't need π.

  • @kruks
    @kruks 3 года назад +1446

    There aren't enough comments about how wonderful that 3Blue1Brown π cameo was.

    • @YambamYambam2
      @YambamYambam2 3 года назад +12

      Yes! :D

    • @billowen3285
      @billowen3285 3 года назад +20

      I think he may be using 3b1bs open source animation software

    • @a.georgopoulou
      @a.georgopoulou 3 года назад +2

      In which second is that?

    • @YambamYambam2
      @YambamYambam2 3 года назад +17

      @@a.georgopoulou (: at 15:36

    • @a.georgopoulou
      @a.georgopoulou 3 года назад +1

      @@YambamYambam2 but there is no brown i don't get itt

  • @Maseiken
    @Maseiken 3 года назад +968

    "So what are the traits of an ellipse?"
    "Oh well there's the major and minor axes, two focal points, an eccentricity and h."
    "What's h?"
    *leaves*

    • @PeterVJaspersFayer
      @PeterVJaspersFayer 3 года назад +49

      @1:50

    • @queenofshred
      @queenofshred 3 года назад +25

      *Insert h meme here

    • @TlalocTemporal
      @TlalocTemporal 3 года назад +6

      Incredibly incorrect and flippant answer here, but I think it's some inverse of the hypotenuse between the ends of a and b.

    • @Eftkud
      @Eftkud 3 года назад +22

      Considering the weight of the problem, probably Plancks constant

    • @dbaznr
      @dbaznr 3 года назад +5

      if put a=kb then h = (k-1)² / (k+1)² for (k>=1)

  • @yakovsannikov3909
    @yakovsannikov3909 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks, Matt for being so MATTematically precise in your videos.

  • @gengis737
    @gengis737 3 года назад +168

    I just realized that my math teachers frightened me in knowing formulas of perimeter, area and volume of nearly anything, omitting to tell that one was missing.

    • @sauercrowder
      @sauercrowder 3 года назад +8

      They shielded you from a dark truth you were not yet ready to accept, that would have shattered your nascent mind

  • @thenumber1penseller
    @thenumber1penseller 3 года назад +1006

    What we learned today: Ramanujan was hot stuff

    • @altrag
      @altrag 3 года назад +41

      You just learned that? :D He's well up there with some of the other greats. There's even a "documentary" (more of a dramatization but regardless) of his life called "The man who knew infinity." Wouldn't say its a classic but its not terrible either.

    • @enginerdy
      @enginerdy 3 года назад +21

      Speak for yourself there! So brilliant and original that the Brits had to teach him to speak math like they do just so they could understand him

    • @altrag
      @altrag 3 года назад +29

      @@enginerdy You mean speak maths? :D

    • @guadalupealvarez9500
      @guadalupealvarez9500 3 года назад

      You made my day bro

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS 3 года назад +7

      I swear he must have had a mathematical IQ of like 200 or more!

  • @sebastienmorel2950
    @sebastienmorel2950 Год назад +7

    Great video. I didn't know there was no exact formula. When I was at engineering school, a student in my class needed to calculate the perimeter of an ellipse for a software he was coding. I thought about it and came with a (wrong) solution, considering an ellipse is the intersection of a plane and a cylinder (of radius b. The angle between the plane and the cylinder depending on a). Then, "unwrapping" this cylinder (as it was made of paper) to put it flat and measuring the previous intersection as it was (actually, it is not) the hypotenuses of a pair of right-angle triangles, this leads to P=2*sqrt[(pi^2-4)*b^2+4*a^2]. I have just checked this formula against an online calculator that uses Ramanujan's second approximation and found a divergence around 3%.

  • @MrJohnBos
    @MrJohnBos 2 года назад +40

    Who knew there was no single equation. This is a fascinating examination of the perimeter of an ellipse. I am in awe of your wife's performance, well done. Thank you for your insights into this interesting puzzle.

  • @dottormaelstrom
    @dottormaelstrom 3 года назад +496

    If you actually want the answer to "why don't we have a formula", it is simply that the perimeter of an ellipse is the line integral of its parametrisation: an ellipse is the set {(a cos(t), b sin(t)): 0

    • @qborki
      @qborki 3 года назад +9

      The real question here is: How do you define which functions are "usual". That's subjective.

    • @nikospagonas
      @nikospagonas 3 года назад +69

      @@qborki no it isn't. It's pretty much well defined.

    • @tomasstana5423
      @tomasstana5423 3 года назад +8

      @@qborki Well, I am going to make an assumption here, because I do not know this with absolute certainty, but from what I do know, its math we are talking about. I am pretty sure there is an exact definition of the "usual" function. Its probably just the one you wont understand unless you have a certain level of math knowledge.

    • @SM321_
      @SM321_ 3 года назад +13

      The linear integral, which gives you the length the ellipse is unsolvable... This does not mean that there isn't a formula for the perimeter...

    • @daca8395
      @daca8395 3 года назад +22

      @@tomasstana5423 I think he ment elementary functions? Idk, as far as I'm aware of, there are no "usual functions"

  • @peetiegonzalez1845
    @peetiegonzalez1845 3 года назад +1214

    Title: Why is there no equation for the perimeter of an ellipse?
    Trick answer: There is, but it involves an infinite series.
    Plot Twist Just like the equation for the perimeter of a circle.

    • @geshtu1760
      @geshtu1760 3 года назад +94

      This is where I ended up in my reasoning as well, which I guess was the point of the video. My intuition was telling me that pi was to circles what some other unknown constant would be to ellipses, and then my intuition also wondered if each ellipse might have its own unique "pi"-like constant.

    • @guillermogarciamanjarrez8934
      @guillermogarciamanjarrez8934 3 года назад +21

      Best plot twist on RUclips's history

    • @MrCrashDavi
      @MrCrashDavi 3 года назад +1

      @@guillermogarciamanjarrez8934 this

    • @jacobladder5556
      @jacobladder5556 3 года назад +2

      @@geshtu1760 So, given a/b [which is consistent with his setting b=1, and by the way it makes more sense to use b/a -- and set a=1 -- because b can go to zero, unless you prefer that a can go to infinity] -- okay, given a/b, the perimeter equals 2*pilike(a/b)*avg(a,b)? Or perhaps 2*pilike(a/b)*a? Then the complications of figuring out the formula for pilike(a/b) are exactly the complications that he walks thru in the video. So, yes.

    • @wbcc3388
      @wbcc3388 3 года назад +3

      Ok. But is there an equation that "hides" the infinite series for an ellipse? If not, then I have a suggestion for a sequel.

  • @eekee6034
    @eekee6034 2 года назад +15

    I got interested in this when making bridges with geometrical shapes in a 3D program. Making a fence out of many overlapping shapes, (half-ellipses, but that's irellevant,) I wanted to know how to space them evenly on a bridge surface which was also half an ellipse. Unable to find a good lazy method, I was thankful that particular program approximated the ellipse with a relatively small number of straight segments no matter how large the ellipse was. Thus, I could easily space the fence-bits evenly on each straight section and do the turns by eye. If I do this again on a program which makes smoother ellipses, (which is most of them,) I'll certainly want to try the Parker lazy method in this video, especially because the ratio of such a bridge-ellipse can easily be 10 or more.
    (Y'know, I'm slightly sad because this post will spoil the number of comments. It was 5,555 before I posted this.)

  • @darlingdarling2943
    @darlingdarling2943 2 года назад +14

    Just did some math with a friend of mine lol. It’s 11pm, but we did some good work in my opinion. There are 2 equations, one simple, one more complicated. One where n = 1.5, and one where n = 1 / log(2, pi/2), or approximately 1.53493, where P = 4b((a/b)^n + 1)^(1/n). Not sure if I did the error accuracy thing right, but if I did, we should have under 0.4% error throughout with the complicated equation, and it only gets better as the ellipse becomes longer. Would love if someone wanted to recheck and let me know if I’m right lol

    • @jahirpabon1219
      @jahirpabon1219 Год назад +4

      Interesting. I just saw this interesting video yesterday. After that, decided to try a family of solutions: 2*pi*((a^n)+b^n)/2)^(1/n). Started with n=1 and n=2. Noticed that one underestimates, the other overestimates the right answer. So, tried n=1.5. Noticed that it reduced the error to under 1% over the entire eccentricity range.
      Then I focused on the value that gives the exact answer as the eccentricity goes to infinite. Found exactly the same n you found. That is, n is the reciprocal of the log base 2 of (pi/2). The error is zero when b=a and when b goes to infinity. And it stays under 0.4% over the entire range.

  • @KrazyKyle-ij9vb
    @KrazyKyle-ij9vb 3 года назад +474

    8:35 "His mistake was doing math in the past."
    Honest mistake, we'll try to do better next time.

    • @PerthScienceClinic
      @PerthScienceClinic 3 года назад +5

      One of the few mathematicians in the western canon that you can say that about. I feel that your joke is underappreciated.

    • @jansamohyl7983
      @jansamohyl7983 3 года назад +12

      Unfortunately, Ramanujan's mistake was deadly.

    • @jaredjones6570
      @jaredjones6570 3 года назад +4

      @@jansamohyl7983 being born leads to death... so we all made the mistake

    • @jessehammer123
      @jessehammer123 3 года назад

      @@jaredjones6570 I mean, I haven’t made that mistake yet, and I’d be kind of freaked out if you have.

    • @Kori114
      @Kori114 3 года назад +1

      Actually there were no gendered pronouns used in the video. It's hard to miss. Everything is "they".

  • @vaibhavchandra5897
    @vaibhavchandra5897 3 года назад +607

    6:45 thats called the 'root mean squared' value. Read the words in opposite order and you will know why. Very useful in kinetic theory of gases as well as calculations of alternating current.

    • @alephnull4044
      @alephnull4044 3 года назад +75

      Or 'quadratic mean.' It's interesting to note that we always have QM>=AM>=GM (quadratic, arithmetic, geometric).

    • @fares8005
      @fares8005 3 года назад +36

      @@alephnull4044 >=HM harmonic mean: 2/(1/a + 1/b) >= min(a,b)
      :P

    • @anuragjuyal7614
      @anuragjuyal7614 3 года назад +33

      I was surprised that be didn't know that

    • @alephnull4044
      @alephnull4044 3 года назад +10

      @@fares8005 Yeah. So HM would be even worse of an approximation than GM.

    • @niklaskoskinen123
      @niklaskoskinen123 3 года назад +35

      @@anuragjuyal7614 I guess since RMS is more common in physics and engineering. And not so much in pure maths.

  • @BigMonMulgrew
    @BigMonMulgrew 2 года назад +1

    I have no idea why but this has really hooked me in. I am not a mathnetician. I spent all of sunday and several hours this morning drawing elipses and circles on desmos and playing with different equations.

  • @jonginder5494
    @jonginder5494 Год назад +14

    One of the approximations is the RMS value of a & b. The root of mean of squares one.

  • @Toschez
    @Toschez 3 года назад +664

    “But what about orbits?” That’s when you know you married a right partner.

    • @tashkiira7838
      @tashkiira7838 3 года назад +67

      Sorta helps his wife is a physicist involved in satellite science. :P

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge 3 года назад +4

      @spim randsley Dammit, if only Earth had a moon as marker - save all that chalky maths stuff.

    • @pluto8404
      @pluto8404 3 года назад +2

      What about the perimeter of a testee?

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge 3 года назад +1

      @@pluto8404 Test these.

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge 3 года назад +3

      @spim randsley Bread + moon cheese squared. That's gotta be the solution.

  • @scyyyy8366
    @scyyyy8366 3 года назад +716

    Engineers be like "Ehh, it's close enough. Who cares....."

    • @massiveheadwoundharry6833
      @massiveheadwoundharry6833 3 года назад +34

      I can confirm this.

    • @MarkMettler
      @MarkMettler 3 года назад +23

      The correct observation; “It’s over engineered so it’ll work if we just let it ride.”

    • @jasonspudtomsett9089
      @jasonspudtomsett9089 3 года назад +40

      I have tried numerous ways of modeling complex curves for flat spring designs in SolidWorks CAD and failed miserably at defining them with formulae. I could use ellipses to draw segments, but trying to connect them into one poly-line with parametric segment lengths made the model geometry "blow up." In one particularly frustrating design I ended up just freehanding my desired curve and setting that as the definition for the spring shape. I was able to use the brute-force freehand curve to design bending mandrels which made just what I needed. Sometimes real-life is too complicated for computers. It bugged me that I couldn't tell my production people exactly how much flat spring material they needed to build the spring.

    • @scyyyy8366
      @scyyyy8366 3 года назад +11

      @@jasonspudtomsett9089 When modelling/simulating it is usually the norm to be as simple and ideal as possible. But well, all that matters is if it works lol

    • @matthiasoc7141
      @matthiasoc7141 3 года назад +21

      Wouldn't it be so much easier if Pi was 3? How accurate do we need this result? An order of magnitude? Great, Pi = 3.

  • @kktech04
    @kktech04 2 месяца назад

    Delightful, awesome video, greatly enjoyed it!

  • @rvdnagel1963
    @rvdnagel1963 2 года назад +1

    I actually do like the shape of your calculation!😀It looks so happy!

  • @Notadragon621
    @Notadragon621 3 года назад +349

    The way he connects the whole thing together by stating reminding us that pi is an infinite series at the end is phenomenal

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 2 года назад +12

      Yeah, I loved that bit. :)

    • @joshschoonover2645
      @joshschoonover2645 2 года назад +14

      Makes me wonder if we could get a nicer equation is we took away pi and put a and b into the pi series....

    • @notabene7381
      @notabene7381 2 года назад +14

      Pi is an infinite series if you live in world of integers. Integers are infinite series if you live in a world of Pis.

    • @rohangeorge712
      @rohangeorge712 2 года назад +4

      @@notabene7381 tf

    • @bloxorzwizard7931
      @bloxorzwizard7931 2 года назад +10

      Considering the quality and amount of output, with very little formal training, and dying way too young, Ramanujan must be the greatest mathematician of all time.

  • @LeifurHakonarson
    @LeifurHakonarson 3 года назад +2799

    Doesn't he say "eclipse" numerous times when referring to an "ellipse"? Maybe I'm just going crazy :-)

    • @bogdanbotezan7162
      @bogdanbotezan7162 3 года назад +144

      He does, I caught that too:))

    • @vishwaksenan5035
      @vishwaksenan5035 3 года назад +19

      Well everyone, atleast most of us do it.

    • @mjdRx
      @mjdRx 3 года назад +109

      5:00 one example I found

    • @JonathanLaRiviere
      @JonathanLaRiviere 3 года назад +39

      I wonder if it was on purpose 🧐

    • @chasduff8186
      @chasduff8186 3 года назад +2

      It’s weird I saw this comment and I found a few

  • @csuporj
    @csuporj Год назад +38

    I think you can make a pretty accurate one with conditionals. 1-2 range use formula A, 2-4 use formula B, 4-8 use formula C, 8-infinite use formula D.

    • @lolzhunter
      @lolzhunter 9 месяцев назад +3

      Hell if you're clever enough and have too much time on your hands you could build one mega equation that cancels out the other formulas depending on what number range you're using, mixing in functions to give it properties rather than for any mathematical purpose just to say you have an all in one approximation lol

  • @vikassharma-mr7xf
    @vikassharma-mr7xf Год назад

    I like your work... And way of explaining thanks man..

  • @YuureiInu
    @YuureiInu 3 года назад +330

    "He knows maths. Enough to be dangerous. Matt Parker in Parker Eclipse."

    • @allmycircuits8850
      @allmycircuits8850 3 года назад +4

      Parker Duck! Let's get dangerous!

    • @witerabid
      @witerabid 3 года назад +1

      *maths 🙈

    • @DynestiGTI
      @DynestiGTI 3 года назад +1

      5:00

    • @YuureiInu
      @YuureiInu 3 года назад +2

      @@witerabid I'm using a mix of British and American English, whatever I feel like :D but I'll change it just for you.

    • @witerabid
      @witerabid 3 года назад +1

      @@YuureiInu 😅 I was just preempting the Brits. I usually say "math" too. 😉

  • @htfx11
    @htfx11 3 года назад +59

    8:33 "I know just enough mathematics to be dangerous" this surely enters my top five best statements ever to be stated

  • @grahamlyons8522
    @grahamlyons8522 2 года назад +5

    So interesting. A small point: I would have liked a quick reminder of the formula for 'h'.

  • @impulse6436
    @impulse6436 Год назад +4

    Idk if this works but when finding the perimeter of planetary orbits, you can use Kepler's equations (with true anomaly) to produce a speed-time function, and then integrate it from the bounds 0 to T, getting total distance traveled in one orbit. This is what I did for my high-school math project and it worked quite well for the planets.

  • @StanSays
    @StanSays 3 года назад +454

    I expected at least a mention of an integration approach

    • @TheDude-lr6mb
      @TheDude-lr6mb 3 года назад +42

      Yeah, I was waiting for it too...a bit disappointed that he didn't mention it

    • @mitchwyatt9230
      @mitchwyatt9230 3 года назад +49

      The origin of the elliptic integral.

    • @araujo_88
      @araujo_88 3 года назад +41

      I thought I was the only one disappointed after watching it. No mention whatsoever of the elliptic integral.

    • @MichaelRothwell1
      @MichaelRothwell1 3 года назад +17

      I was expecting this too, before the infinite series (like, where does that come from?)

    • @victorscarpes
      @victorscarpes 3 года назад +2

      Me too

  • @mazer1310
    @mazer1310 3 года назад +399

    "And who's having an ellipse which is 75 times as wide as it is high?"
    As it turns out, there is the Hale-Bopp comet which, according to Wikipedia:
    Semi major axis = 186 AU
    eccentricity = 0.995086
    Semi major / Semi minor = 203.5
    Incidentally, Haley's Comet is pretty eccentric, but still below 75:
    Semi major axis = 17.834 AU
    eccentricity = 0.96714
    Semi major / Semi minor = 30.4

    • @marcochimio
      @marcochimio 3 года назад +40

      Glad you said this. When he made that comment, I shouted "COMETS" at the screen.

    • @favesongslist
      @favesongslist 3 года назад +4

      TY so much for this as I was wondering about comets eccentricity's.

    • @laurgao
      @laurgao 3 года назад +2

      How did you calculate the Semi major / Semi minor ?

    • @TlalocTemporal
      @TlalocTemporal 3 года назад +1

      @@laurgao -- Using the eccentricity.

    • @IamGrimalkin
      @IamGrimalkin 3 года назад +5

      Where did you get your major/minor from?
      I was under the understanding that a/b=(1-e^2)^-0.5 , which gives me 10.0 and 3.93.

  • @tylerflint8989
    @tylerflint8989 2 года назад +42

    There is a well defined equation for the perimeter! Parameterize an ellipse and apply some vector calculus. It isn't workable by hand, but it is literally the perimeter. It is also the circumstance of a circle because of how squareroots of squares of trig functions. Take the line integral and you will get your answer.

    • @angeldude101
      @angeldude101 2 года назад +9

      I was expecting to find an integral that would give the path length and was surprised when none were mentioned.

    • @badbeardbill9956
      @badbeardbill9956 2 года назад +2

      Yeah but to my knowledge there’s no analytical solution

    • @georgegeorgopoulos1861
      @georgegeorgopoulos1861 2 года назад

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipse#Metric_properties
      The ellipse circumference in general is not an elementary function.

    • @leonidfro8302
      @leonidfro8302 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@badbeardbill9956 Correct. And pi is irrational number, so does it mean there's no number of length of circle?

    • @sillymesilly
      @sillymesilly 9 месяцев назад

      @@leonidfro8302pi is a number a transcendental number. Means it is not countable.

  • @caroliensche13
    @caroliensche13 Год назад +15

    For me i often define ellipses in pretty much the same way, but a=1 and b= cos(ß). Since in my application, an ellipse can often be understood as a circle with radius a, seen from an incidence angle ß. For example a rake angle. Really simple. But indeed it's weird that there is no easy approach to circumference!

    • @user-by1xn7hc9v
      @user-by1xn7hc9v 4 месяца назад

      Your vision is usefull for area of an ellipse but didn't help for the circumference.

    • @jan_Eten
      @jan_Eten 12 дней назад

      why is eszett here

  • @Gildofaal
    @Gildofaal Год назад +21

    I found these by integrating a bezier curve:
    a * [ sqrt(4 + (4 * b/a)² ) + 2 ] --Max 5.682% error
    a * [ sqrt(2pi + (4 * b/a)² ) + (3+pi)/4 ] -- Max 3.237% error
    a * [ sqrt(4.905 + (4 * b/a)² ) + pi/2 ] -- Max 3.200% error
    Edit: Found an even better one
    For a = 1 and 0

  • @StuffBudDuz
    @StuffBudDuz 3 года назад +1191

    Parker: "And who's having an ellipse which is seventy-five times as wide as it is high?"
    Halley: "Hold my slide rule."

    • @IamGrimalkin
      @IamGrimalkin 3 года назад +24

      Halley's comet isn't that eccentric though....

    • @ntrgc89
      @ntrgc89 3 года назад +97

      I thought this too, but Halley's comet has an eccentricity of 0.967, which means that its orbit is only 3.93 times wider than it is high.

    • @Trevor21230
      @Trevor21230 3 года назад +37

      Also, my orbits in Kerbal Space Program...I'm usually too lazy to use the rocket equation properly, and really, *really* like solid fuel boosters for the first stage of my rockets.

    • @joel_rigby
      @joel_rigby 3 года назад +9

      C= Tau•R
      Wonder if some of the complexity drops if we adopt Tau instead of Pi?

    • @ATemplarIGuess
      @ATemplarIGuess 3 года назад +2

      @@Trevor21230 same

  • @web4639
    @web4639 3 года назад +161

    Best part of this: "I stopped searching for a function when I found that Kepler had developed an approximation."

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge 3 года назад +9

      Yup, smiled also. Einstein should've stopped searching after Newton told us what's what. But there was always a a clever-guts Albert in every schoolroom.

    • @kitemanmusic
      @kitemanmusic 3 года назад

      Nothing serious, I hope?

    • @kitemanmusic
      @kitemanmusic 3 года назад

      ​@@Mrbobinge Einstein's formula? What about Epstein's formula? Very successful for a long time. A lot of travelling on a plane. Also, a lot of curved surfaces.

  • @PhilippeAdAstra
    @PhilippeAdAstra 2 года назад +6

    It would be interesting to do a similar video (area and circumference) of super-ellipse/squircle, super-shapes, lemniscate, etc. (With the infinite series for a corresponding “pi”)

  • @AlexeyFilippenkoPlummet
    @AlexeyFilippenkoPlummet 9 месяцев назад

    wtf, how can a math video be so captivating that I randomly and willingly put 20 minutes to watch it fully

  • @SocksWithSandals
    @SocksWithSandals 3 года назад +381

    I laughed so hard when Matt swept the infinite expansion under the π.

    • @DarkRedZane
      @DarkRedZane 3 года назад +16

      pi = 3, why bother with those stupid fractions

    • @YambamYambam2
      @YambamYambam2 3 года назад

      lmao me too

    • @YambamYambam2
      @YambamYambam2 3 года назад +7

      for anyone else who sees this, it happens at 15:16

    • @MalachiTheBowlingGod
      @MalachiTheBowlingGod 3 года назад +1

      Best Matt Parker moment ever!

    • @BlackTablewood
      @BlackTablewood 3 года назад +1

      However, PI is incomplete without its LE.

  • @huhneat1076
    @huhneat1076 3 года назад +841

    He said "Ratio", "Major", and "Minor" in the same sentence and it wasn't about music

    • @TheYahmez
      @TheYahmez 3 года назад +110

      Music ⊆ Maths ?

    • @tehalexy
      @tehalexy 3 года назад +44

      @@TheYahmez yeah, i always laught inside me when someone says "i love music but hate math" :D

    • @ali709aliali
      @ali709aliali 3 года назад +45

      Everything is just applied maths

    • @gileee
      @gileee 3 года назад +29

      @@ali709aliali And math is applied philosophy

    • @RecursiveTriforce
      @RecursiveTriforce 3 года назад +9

      @@gileee No, it's the other way around.

  • @Inspirator_AG112
    @Inspirator_AG112 2 года назад +5

    My Approximation is *4(a + b) - ln(4a/b + 1)b.* I found this Approximation with calculus and the help of Desmos.

  • @seriouslee4119
    @seriouslee4119 Год назад

    Fiiiiiiiine your videos are entertaining enough for me to put up another one while I do the dishes just now...

  • @meghanchilders2180
    @meghanchilders2180 3 года назад +171

    "I know just enough math to be dangerous" Lol
    I love this. These videos are so much fun to watch (even if my friends think I'm crazy for watching maths videos in my free time)

    • @malbacato91
      @malbacato91 3 года назад +15

      your friends are crazy for not watching maths videos in their spare time. or, maybe they've just never tried before, cause as 3b1b discussed many times before, often people just don't know how much they love maths

    • @eL_K_Dee
      @eL_K_Dee 3 года назад +3

      I spat my meds out upon hearing that..... note to self: dont watch Parker when taking your meds

    • @Shrooblord
      @Shrooblord 3 года назад +1

      I love Matt's identity as 'StandupMaths' -- literally making Maths enjoyable to the wider public by making it into comedy. Pure genius.

    • @eL_K_Dee
      @eL_K_Dee 3 года назад +1

      @@Shrooblord doesnt it come from him doing that math/science comedy show with Steve Mould?

  • @Ruby-eq1qg
    @Ruby-eq1qg 3 года назад +992

    I'm never not astounded at the genius of Ramanjan wow he was able to do with his just his head what a laptop was only able to do 2 times more accurate... we're talkin margin of errors in the hundredths of a percent as well jeez this guy was a beast
    edit: just saw his 2nd equation LMAO wtf how was that guy human

    • @godofthunder4242
      @godofthunder4242 3 года назад +105

      It's the difference between solving analytically and solving numerically. Not to say that Ramanujan wasn't brilliant but the two methods just have completely different outcomes, as shown by the error comparisons here.

    • @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559
      @johnjonjhonjonathanjohnson3559 3 года назад +10

      he was a human
      you are not

    • @josiper6662
      @josiper6662 3 года назад +36

      @@sachinnandakumar1008 by numerically he means computationally making a close approximation through iterative processes, whereas analytically he means solve for a somewhat exact solution by 'traditional' mathematical methods, like algebra and calculus (not that numerical methods don't use those, of course, but that's slightly different).

    • @abhinavchauhan6863
      @abhinavchauhan6863 3 года назад +9

      I mean, he was known for pioneering achievements in sequence and series. Pretty much expected.

    • @FiltyIncognito
      @FiltyIncognito 3 года назад +3

      Creativity unbound by the labor and limitations of programming.

  • @Utkarsh1997tripathi
    @Utkarsh1997tripathi Год назад

    Great stuff!!!

  • @norvegicusbass
    @norvegicusbass Год назад +25

    At 14:20 in the video Matt shows an exact solution using an infinite series. How were those numbers generated?

    • @Kai-K
      @Kai-K Год назад +2

      Can't tell you the top, but the bottom looks like a Fibonacci sequence but multiplied instead of added

    • @svergurd3873
      @svergurd3873 Год назад +8

      @@Kai-K Yes, the denominators are 2 raised to these exponents: 0, 2, 6, 8, 14, so it seems like kind of doubled Fibonacci numbers. And why is it suddenly 25 in the numerator?? I have searched a lot and I can not find anything about this series expansion. It is a big shame that he just throws out something like this without telling what it is. 😠We shall not guess riddles. Matt, if you read this, please explain!

    • @aloneitan3819
      @aloneitan3819 Год назад +8

      @@svergurd3873 @norvegicusbass The series is found on the Wikipedia page for ellipse. It contains the ratio between successive double factorials, which explains the powers of 2 at the bottom

    • @svergurd3873
      @svergurd3873 Год назад +1

      @@aloneitan3819 Thank you very much! Now it is clear.

    • @holysecret2
      @holysecret2 4 месяца назад

      @@Kai-K Huh interesting, in the MMO "Warframe"'s latest update there is an NPC called Fibonacci, and also something called the Kalymos sequence.

  • @fakexzvo9479
    @fakexzvo9479 3 года назад +263

    0:26 Matt - “It’s a more generalised version”
    and like all good mathematicians
    “And my goodness, is it lovely!”

    • @luisramos123
      @luisramos123 3 года назад +21

      3:31 Also, like all good mathematicians, he completely disregarded the actual usefulness of the focal points "light, mirrors, bla bla bla"

    • @PaulMab9
      @PaulMab9 3 года назад +1

      @@luisramos123 I'd have it no other way!

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 3 года назад +235

    There's actually some deeper math hiding beneath the surface here. The elliptic integral (which is a non-elementary integral that calculates the circumference exactly) is related to elliptic functions and elliptic curves (which were used to prove Fermat's last theorem).

    • @revcrussell
      @revcrussell 3 года назад +19

      I was going to comment Matt was wrong. You don't need an infinite series, just integrals.

    • @danieljensen2626
      @danieljensen2626 3 года назад +72

      @@revcrussell Right, an integral who's solution can only be written as an infinite series... You can also write an integral equation for Pi, but that doesn't really get you anywhere.

    • @anteroinen4239
      @anteroinen4239 3 года назад +78

      @@danieljensen2626 Even further: what are integrals in general, but succinctly notated limits of infinite series.

    • @iankrasnow5383
      @iankrasnow5383 3 года назад +10

      @@anteroinen4239 Good point, although some of the ones we like to use converge to algebraic or even rational numbers.

    • @Vikash137
      @Vikash137 3 года назад +1

      Wrong

  • @gerardoeltico1028
    @gerardoeltico1028 2 года назад

    I like your show, very and with good taste. Thank you for the singing and piano playing. Gracias

  • @robertbrummayer4908
    @robertbrummayer4908 2 года назад

    Awesome video!

  • @rehpotsirhic
    @rehpotsirhic 3 года назад +64

    When I was doing my GCSEs, I was doing Graphic Design, and I was building my design, a diorama using concentric elliptical curves of clear plastic with designs drawn on them to create an interesting parallax image. I ran into an issue though, I didn't know how long I needed to cut my plastic sheets. I knew how I would work it out if they were half-circles, but not if they were half-ellipse. So I asked my teacher how to work out the circumference of an ellipse, and tbh, he was stumped - so together we looked it up, and we discovered that it was a lot harder to do than we first thought it would be

  • @goodmaro
    @goodmaro 3 года назад +414

    The term you're looking for at 6:46 is "root mean square" or rms, and is used a lot in AC electricity voltage computations.

    • @ethanyap8680
      @ethanyap8680 2 года назад +29

      Huh, I always called it the quadratic mean

    • @sun4502
      @sun4502 2 года назад +21

      Also molecular velocity

    • @RakibHossain-mq7qv
      @RakibHossain-mq7qv Год назад +5

      Yaap...it’s also used to equate kinetic energy of gas.
      It’s a incredible way of getting rid of negative value when finding a average.

    • @SaftTechnologies
      @SaftTechnologies Год назад +1

      I was looking to see if someone made this very common. Thank you.

    • @renhaiyoutube
      @renhaiyoutube Год назад +4

      Encountered it in molecular kinetics, average speed of particles in a gas

  • @lucrayzor9657
    @lucrayzor9657 Год назад +2

    6:43 did some thinking on this one, it actually makes a ton of sense!! The key thing is to split the square root so that the numerator and denominator are rooted separately. The numerator is the Pythagorean theorem applied to the major and minor axes, so the value you get is the hypotenuse for the right triangle formed by the axes. Then, that gets divided by square root of 2… where’ve we seen that before? Sin(45) and cos(45)! Dividing by root 2 basically gives us the x and y components of the hypotenuse, ultimately averaging the axes in a very unique way. I’m impressed by the cleverness of this approximation, if I could choose which one was the exact formula for perimeter it’d be this one!

    • @Tom-vu1wr
      @Tom-vu1wr 6 месяцев назад

      It's called the root mean squared

  • @megacarls9894
    @megacarls9894 2 года назад +3

    15:36 - that 3blue1brown reference killed me

  • @royalninja2823
    @royalninja2823 3 года назад +126

    I'm actually incredibly impressed by your lazy approximation, it'd seem like such a simple solution multiplying the two axes by fractional constants would have been found earlier. Great work!

    • @niklaskoskinen123
      @niklaskoskinen123 3 года назад +19

      I mean it's just a compromise. Sacrifice some accuracy at first for more accuracy later. But I guess in general mathematicians are more interested in symmetry.

    • @Ikkarson
      @Ikkarson 3 года назад +5

      And it is easy to remember as well, once you write 3, 4, 5, 6 in an appropriate circle thing and « fill in the gaps » with a, b, and fraction bars!

    • @andrewjohnston6631
      @andrewjohnston6631 3 года назад +5

      The fact that it gives the circumference of a circle as 1.95pi radians is bad starting point, but it *is* very #ParkerMaths

    • @flatfingertuning727
      @flatfingertuning727 3 года назад +1

      How would "4a - (2pi-4)b" do? I think the derivation on that one should be fairly obvious. One thing it would have been nice to see Matt Parker mention would be how the approximations do as eccentricities get large.

    • @letMeSayThatInIrish
      @letMeSayThatInIrish 3 года назад +1

      I agree, Parker showed himself from his best mathematical side there. I'm still not sure I'll remember this one the day I need it, but it seems the best candidate for those who want to memorize something.

  • @Asrudin
    @Asrudin 3 года назад +138

    "When are you going to get a job!"
    ...
    "In the future... I'm not gonna make the same mistake as Ramanujan..."

  • @ianbarnes6682
    @ianbarnes6682 Год назад +8

    Cute, but if I'm not mistaken, he never actually explains *why* there is no exact formula.

    • @AdeshBenipal
      @AdeshBenipal 21 час назад

      the integral's too hard, as simple as that

  • @Username86753
    @Username86753 Год назад

    love ya man i just love ya thanks for the video it was great

  • @tomatosoup44
    @tomatosoup44 3 года назад +221

    That's a Parker Approximation right there. #ParkerSquare

    • @robinw77
      @robinw77 3 года назад +26

      We don't need to keep making these jokes any more, because I've generalised it:
      "This is a Parker N"

    • @malignusvonbottershnike563
      @malignusvonbottershnike563 3 года назад +10

      Parker approximations... that's two layers of haphazardness!

    • @devincetee5335
      @devincetee5335 3 года назад +5

      This is a Parker Joke

    • @servvo
      @servvo 3 года назад +3

      @@robinw77 that was a parker reply

    • @llKirosll
      @llKirosll 3 года назад +2

      I paused the video just to look up for this XD

  • @srarun1996
    @srarun1996 3 года назад +44

    I read the title by mistake as perimeter of an eclipse. And I was like “that’s a silly mistake to make”
    But then noticed 5:00 and I’m like okay, great, I’m not the only one.

    • @bozzigmupp510
      @bozzigmupp510 3 года назад

      Wdym?

    • @innertubez
      @innertubez 3 года назад +2

      @@bozzigmupp510 He says "eclipse" instead of "ellipse" at those times.

  • @stevegovea1
    @stevegovea1 2 года назад

    This was awesome.

  • @rookiebird9382
    @rookiebird9382 10 месяцев назад

    Your videos make me so interested in math.

  • @ericlefort
    @ericlefort 3 года назад +154

    For the physical interpretation of h: it’s a measure of flatness. It should lie within [0, 1] where 0 is a perfect circle (least “flat”) and 1 is a line (either horizontally or vertically, perfectly “flat”).

    • @yash1152
      @yash1152 3 года назад

      oww, it's that h from the standard equation of 2 degree in 2 variables??
      anyways, thanks for it

  • @MrQwint22
    @MrQwint22 3 года назад +332

    Looking at Matt's monstrosity of an equation next to Ramanujan's elegant simplicity makes me feel like there should be a sensor bar over it!

    • @stanislasflipo7214
      @stanislasflipo7214 2 года назад +5

      😂😂😂

    • @playerscience
      @playerscience Год назад +3

      Lmfao same here 😂😂

    • @TransistorBased
      @TransistorBased 7 месяцев назад +1

      What does the Wii have to do with this?

    • @dekippiesip
      @dekippiesip 6 месяцев назад

      And Ramanujan did it without the help of computers or calculators. Even without all these means he just smashes Matt's approximiation formula's. He truly was on another level entirely!

  • @yogoo0
    @yogoo0 Год назад +3

    If you think about it an ellipse is just a variation of a circle. If a circle is x^2+y^2 then an ellipse is the exact same with with modifiers ax^2+by^2. Because we know the x and y values and we know that a single quadrant can be described using a sin equation. From there we can trace the path of the function from x1 to x0. Each quadrant is identical so the path would be 4 times the length found in the sin transformation.

  • @hanshartmann8205
    @hanshartmann8205 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely great! I really had to laugh a lot!

  • @sebastienpaquin4586
    @sebastienpaquin4586 3 года назад +166

    "I only know juuuuust enough mathematics to be dangerous" - Matt Parker

  • @Owen_loves_Butters
    @Owen_loves_Butters 3 года назад +192

    2:33 “super extreme” is an understatement. It’s literally an ellipse where the ratio of a to b is infinite

    • @DavidSmith-vr1nb
      @DavidSmith-vr1nb 2 года назад +17

      That can be achieved by setting b to zero. Essentially it's a straight line of infinite length.

    • @Owen_loves_Butters
      @Owen_loves_Butters 2 года назад +13

      @@DavidSmith-vr1nb Or 2 straight lines if b is not zero
      My bad, I was wrong. It's actually a parabola.

    • @MaoDev
      @MaoDev 2 года назад

      @@Owen_loves_Butters lol

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 2 года назад +12

      @@DavidSmith-vr1nb Not of infinite lenght. If b=0, then the line is of lenght 2a.
      The perimeter is 4a, btw.

    • @sh06un1s
      @sh06un1s 2 года назад +3

      @@juanausensi499 the point was that the ratio is infinite, not the length
      Edit: my bad, misread the comment you replied to ....

  • @NeverSnows
    @NeverSnows 2 года назад +2

    9:40 your formula might seem weird for some, but for me it is incredible. just to think that you crossed the 0% wrror mark 4 times, is a win.

  • @kaziaftab9797
    @kaziaftab9797 2 года назад +5

    15:20 scene was great 🤣🤣😅😅

  • @kurtweinstein8450
    @kurtweinstein8450 3 года назад +460

    "Who has an ellipse 75 times long than it is high?"
    Laughs in comet inbound from the Oort cloud.

    • @irrelevant_noob
      @irrelevant_noob 3 года назад +6

      12:58

    • @cam-gv2gf
      @cam-gv2gf 3 года назад +5

      so you know how to steal from the comments section

  • @niklaskoskinen123
    @niklaskoskinen123 3 года назад +327

    Are you telling me nonelementary antiderivatives aren't neat equations?

    • @thedoublehelix5661
      @thedoublehelix5661 3 года назад +24

      Integrals for the win!!!

    • @priyanshupradhan4388
      @priyanshupradhan4388 3 года назад +6

      Yeah...neat

    • @jameshogge
      @jameshogge 3 года назад +42

      They're just as neat! We're just flawed that our "basic arithmetic operations" / "number system" struggle to deal with then.
      For want of a metaphor: we're trying to fit a square peg into a round hole. Neither the hole or the peg in isolation can be considered wrong. It's the pairing that is the issue

    • @niklaskoskinen123
      @niklaskoskinen123 3 года назад +21

      @@jameshogge Funny, how the metaphor actually goes deeper than I first thought. When you equate a line segment to an arithmetic operation, the square has a simple exact representation, whereas the circle can only be approximated.

    • @John73John
      @John73John 3 года назад +16

      @@niklaskoskinen123 Wow, that's... kind of deep. At least, deeper than the peg will go into the hole.

  • @Bry10022
    @Bry10022 2 года назад +1

    I love the editing on this…

  • @GuilleCHF
    @GuilleCHF 10 месяцев назад +1

    great job! It would be interesting if instead of looking for a general formula for the length of the ellipse, look for a generalization of the concept of pi (ratio between length and diameter a+b) and plot it as a function of h or e

  • @progger1986
    @progger1986 3 года назад +80

    My approximation: "4a".
    Work great if a is huge compared to b. The error goes to 0 then

    • @MrTomyCJ
      @MrTomyCJ 3 года назад +8

      I wonder at wich point it becomes better than the best approximation we have

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 года назад +21

      I have an approximation that works perfectly if a=0

    • @Nyerguds
      @Nyerguds 3 года назад +1

      Genius. Now try to sell it to NASA.

    • @Joffrerap
      @Joffrerap 3 года назад +2

      Oooh, you jusye made me realize how ridiculous it is to measure the approximation relatively to excentricity

    • @sFeral
      @sFeral 3 года назад

      (( 2rPi-4r)a/r)+4r where a is always smaller than r, wrong ?

  • @klikkolee
    @klikkolee 3 года назад +82

    7:00
    That is usually called "root-mean-square" (not usually hyphenated but I find it easier to read and more grammatically sensible with hyphens) and comes up in a lot of places. For example, the "voltage" number for the mains electricity in homes and buildings is the root-mean-square of the instantaneous voltages of waveform across one cycle (or equivalently across n cycles or, if you pretend the waveform is infinite, across the whole waveform).
    It is also the conceptual origin of least-squares regression. You want to minimize the root-mean-square of the errors. Since square-root is a monotonically increasing function, this is the same as minimizing the mean-square of the errors.
    In general, it is a computationally friendly and integration-friendly way to indicate something similar to average magnitude.

    • @rikwisselink-bijker
      @rikwisselink-bijker 3 года назад +2

      Many engineering programs even have an RMS function, even if in most of them it is trivial to define one yourself.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi 3 года назад

      Thanks, I hate it

    • @Mayank-mf7xr
      @Mayank-mf7xr 3 года назад +1

      when i first saw him being oblivious of the rms, i assumed he is joking. there is no way he doesnt know that an rms is well known average

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi 3 года назад

      @@Mayank-mf7xr it has nothing to do with maths, so, I'm not sure what you're expecting

    • @Mayank-mf7xr
      @Mayank-mf7xr 3 года назад +1

      @@YounesLayachi XD. there isn't a single universe where mathematicians, those too of caliber of Matt, wouldn't know of rms. that is something even a petty high schooler knows. Matt was obviously joking.

  • @DarkenRaul1
    @DarkenRaul1 11 месяцев назад +9

    Based on what I learned in this video, I just came up with an exact equation for all ellipses! It is:
    γπ(a+b)……
    Where γ is (1+(h/4)+((h^2)/64)+((h^3)/256)+…)

  • @henrygreen2096
    @henrygreen2096 3 года назад +15

    I was gobsmacked by Ramanujan's second equation. Never in my academic career have I seen it until know, wow. Would have helped so much in undergrad hahah
    Absolutely love the videos Matt Parker! brilliant, insightful, and helpful.