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Draft:Square root of 10

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In mathematics, the square root of 10 is the positive real number that when multiplied by itself gives 10. The approximation 117/37 (≈ 3.1621) can be used for the square root of 10. Despite having a denominator of only 37, it differs from the correct value by about 1/9000 (approx. 1.1×10−4).

It is an irrational algebraic number. The first sixty significant digits of its decimal expansion are:

3.162277660168379331998893544432718533719555139325216826857504... (sequence A010467 in the OEIS)

As of December 2013, it numerical value in decimal has been computed to at least ten billion digits.[1]

Because of its closeness to the mathematical constant π, it was used as an approximation for it in some ancient texts.[2]

Continued fraction

10 can be expressed as the continued fraction

(sequence A040006 in the OEIS)

Relation to π

10 is approximately equal to π to 0.66%, and 310 is approximately equal to π - 1 to 0.6%. This is because π2 is approximately 9.87 (off of 10 by about 1.32%), and (π - 1)3 is approximately 9.82 (off of 10 by about 1.81%)[1]

Zhang Heng and Brahmagupta used 10 to approximate π in 130 and 640 AD, respectively. Some Indian sources from 150 BC treat π as 10.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "Computations | Łukasz Komsta".
  2. ^ a b Arndt & Haenel 2006, p. 169.