Eclipses have been predicted EXACTLY!! Where and when TO THE METER AND TO THE SECOND going out 100 YEARS or more. Can only be done with computers programmed with RE math.
You might want to learn what exact means (and associated words like exactly).
To the meter and to the second is not exact.
Loads of things are done far more "exact", like to the mm or ms.
Try predicting it to the plank length and plank time. Then I might believe you have it exact.
Exactly right. And, was accurate to within ≈0.2 seconds of the predicted time and within a few arc seconds of longitude and latitude. Pretty danged accurate.
Maximum eclipse :
Predicted time of greatest eclipse - 18:25:31.8, 36° 58.0' N, 87° 40.3' W
Actual time of greatest eclipse - 18:25:32.0, 36° 57.98' N, 87° 40.254' W
Mike
Nope, still wrong.
≈0.2 seconds is still not exact.
Do you know what the ≈ means?
Approximately equal to. Does approximate sound exact?
Does getting it wrong by 0.2 seconds sound exact?
Does a 10th of an arc minute really sound exact?
For the roughly 40 000 km circumference Earth, 1 degree is roughly 111 km.
That means 1 arc minute is roughly 1.85 km.
That means 1 tenth of an arc minute is a massive 185 m.
Does 185 m sound exact?
No, none of that is exact.
In all cases you have inexact approximations.
None are exact.