Comment by eigenket
1 year ago
Nope, it completely vanishes in other units. If you do all your distance measurements in feet, for example, the value of pi is still about 3.14 but the acceleration due to gravity at the earth's surface is about 32 feet s^(-2). If you do your distance measurements in furlongs and your time measurements in hours then the acceleration due to gravity becomes about 630,000 furlongs per hour squared and pi (of course) doesn't change.
Only because you're using metric seconds instead of "imperial seconds" (the time it takes for a 1 foot long pendulum to complete a full oscillation).
Sure, if you change either of the units you can always change the other one to fix the equation again.
But does it work when you use the right Imperial technique?
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