The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

  • My badges

  • Twitter Updates

  • My Flickr Stream

  • Pages

  • All categories

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 1,861 other subscribers

Empirical units, π, 𝑒 and 𝜙 (pi, e, and phi)

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/01/09

Being a non-native English speaker and having monaural hearing¹, the first time visiting the USA I thought they mentioned Empirical Units² when they tried to explain miles, feet and other measurement units they use on their island.

Then I learned they are in fact United States customary units but in the USA, they actually name those Imperial Units, implying that the UK still has a very strong influence on the USA. In reality, there are differences³ between Imperial Units and United States customary units to keep things in the USA practical (or lazy if you want), so I will keep calling their system Empirical Units as it is more fit for purpose (can’t name them Freedom Units any more given their Project 2025 regime).

Anyway, quite a while ago there was this cool XKCD “The Maritime Approximation” (image on the right) including only Imperial Units holding for Empirical Units as well: π mph ≈ 𝑒 kn (let’s use ISO unit symbols here, shall we) which is correct to < 0.5%.

Recently, I learned that with the same accuracy, there is a golden ratio between metric and Imperial/Empirical Units: 𝜙 km = 1 mi, also correct to < 0.5%.

Kevlin Henney wrote two great blog posts on these explaining way more background information:

  1. [Wayback/Archive] The Maritime Approximation. A transcendent measure of coincidence… | by Kevlin Henney | Jan, 2025 | Medium
  2. [Wayback/Archive] The Golden Mile Conversion. An aesthetic and coincidental alignment… | by Kevlin Henney | Jan, 2025 | Medium

Recommended reading!

Further reading

Unicode code points used based on Mathematical operators and symbols in Unicode – Wikipedia -> Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols – Wikipedia:

XCKD 3023:

Via

[Wayback/Archive] Kevlin Henney on X: “New essay on the blog: The Golden Mile Conversion “This time I want to dive into the delightful and coincidental relation that ϕ km ≈ 1 mi, i.e., the ratio of statute miles to kilometres, 1 mi:1 km ≈ ϕ:1, is approximated by the golden ratio.” …”

--jeroen


¹ many people refer to this as single sided deafness or unilateral hearing loss, but I like monaural hearing more, not just because it describes what I can’t versus what I cannot, but also now that binaural recording having become popular this century and that a query for it returns way more good research than the other terms, for instance [Wayback/Archive] Understanding sound direction estimation in monaural hearing | ScienceDaily.

² Apparently, I am not alone in this: [Wayback/Archive] Empirical units?

3 Comparison of the imperial and US customary measurement systems – Wikipedia

Queries:

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.