Theodorus stopped his spiral at the triangle with a hypotenuse of \sqrt{17}. If the spiral is continued to infinitely many triangles, many more interesting characteristics are found.
Growth rate Angle If \varphi_n is the angle of the nth triangle (or spiral segment), then: \tan\left(\varphi_n\right)=\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}. Therefore, the growth of the angle \varphi_n of the next triangle n is: \varphi_n=\arctan\left(\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}\right). The sum of the angles of the first k triangles is called the total angle \varphi(k) for the kth triangle. It grows proportionally to the square root of k, with a
bounded correction term c_2: \varphi\left (k\right)=\sum_{n=1}^k\varphi_n = 2\sqrt{k}+c_2(k) where \lim_{k \to \infty} c_2(k)= - 2.157782996659\ldots ().
Radius The growth of the radius of the spiral at a certain triangle n is \Delta r=\sqrt{n+1}-\sqrt{n}.
Archimedean spiral The Spiral of Theodorus
approximates the
Archimedean spiral. Just as the distance between two windings of the Archimedean spiral equals
mathematical constant \pi, as the number of spins of the spiral of Theodorus approaches
infinity, the distance between two consecutive windings quickly approaches \pi. The following table shows successive windings of the spiral approaching pi: As shown, after only the fifth winding, the distance is a 99.97% accurate approximation to \pi. ==Continuous curve==