or with a 500 digit one at: http://www.alpertron.com.ar/BIGCALC.HTM 148 510 660.497 909 375 712 660 817 278 160 601 501 594 984 633 334 721 455 423 352 088 237 779 808 449 464 423 286 991 637 246 079 567 330 691 005 192 385 803 385 513 901 846 435 632 573 488 950 301 963 753 981 588 397 948 635 158 464 990 306 717 898 943 110 495 973 659 318 378 106 079 310 313 582 357 152 703 521 030 532 183 485 596 053 658 363 798 877 890 623 121 935 151 079 133 475 441 073 088 562 099 022 025 265 640 041 141 122 644 552 121 443 248 070 222 856 442 538 408 172 321 149 526 329 556 055 064 841 365 672 598 307 830 076 908 974 948 147 000 725 468 954 696 066 034 930 416 379 244 379 112 012 849 194 437 714 251 648 085 255 564 229 525 651 496 34 arcmin^2 On Feb 9, 2009, at 11:04 PM, Dave Bennett wrote:
Or 148,510,660.49790943 arcmin^2 with an online 15 digit scientific calculator at: http://www.creative-chemistry.org.uk/alevel/ calculator.htm
lol
Dave
On Feb 9, 2009, at 10:20 PM, daniel turner wrote:
Kurt:
Our numbers disagree by the ratio 3.141 / PI. I used a nine digit version of PI on a scientific calculator.
DT