You probably already knew it, but now science has backed it up.
George Clooney has the world’s most handsome face.
The 56-year-old actor’s face was found to be about 92 percent accurate, according to the Greek golden ratio of beauty.
The measuring tool is thought to hold the secret formula for the perfect face.
Computer mapping technology using the theory also found that Ryan Gosling has the perfect nose, Harry Styles has the most beautiful eyes and best chin, while David Beckham has the most perfectly shaped face.
Clooney, who last month became the father of twins Ella and Alexander with his lawyer wife, Amal, had his looks put to the test with facial mapping techniques by plastic surgeon Dr. Julian De Silva.
His eyes, eyebrows, nose, lips, chin, jaw and facial shape were measured and came closest to the Greeks’ idea of perfection.
Bradley Cooper came in second with 91.8 percent, Brad Pitt was third with 90.51 percent, One Direction singer Styles was fourth with 89.63 percent and Beckham was fifth with 88.96 percent.
The world’s 10 most handsome men according to the Golden Ratio
De Silva, who runs the Centre For Advanced Facial Cosmetic And Plastic Surgery in London, said: “George Clooney has been feted as the world’s most beautiful man for decades — and it is great that his status has now been proved by science.”
“He has beautiful facial symmetry and gets closer than any other man to having what the Greeks considered the perfect face.”
“George had a near-perfect ratio of nose-to-lip dimension of 99.6 percent, and his chin and eye spacing were almost perfect as well.”
“Across the 12 key markers, he had the highest combined score.”
“These brand new computer mapping techniques allow us to solve some of the mysteries of what it is that makes someone physically beautiful.”
The Golden Ratio was a mathematical equation devised by the Greeks in an attempt to measure beauty.
But the ratio can be applied to anything and was used by Leonardo da Vinci for the perfect human male body in his famous work the Vitruvian Man.
The premise behind this is that the closer the ratios of a face or body are to the number 1.618, known as the Phi ratio, the more beautiful they are.