blike Posted February 26, 2003 Posted February 26, 2003 My teacher allows us to turn in a paper for extra credit on a practical use of calculus. I'm looking to do a paper on how calculus can be applied in medicine and/or life science. Anyone have any suggestions on topics?
NSX Posted February 26, 2003 Posted February 26, 2003 Here's a site: http://hilbert.dartmouth.edu/courses/course-syllabi/syllabi/m4-syllabus.pdf
fafalone Posted February 26, 2003 Posted February 26, 2003 Just think of motion. Say you have an equation for velocity. Then you also have an equation for position (the integral) and acceleration (the derivative).
ringmaster Posted April 3, 2003 Posted April 3, 2003 If you haven't already written your paper, chemistry also has many uses for calculus. I will find them by tommorow and let you know. So if you have any interest in chemistry, this topic might be a good essay topic for you.
blike Posted April 3, 2003 Author Posted April 3, 2003 Thanks! I havn't written it yet, its due in a couple of weeks (before semesters end). I'm still looking for topics so you're post is much appreciated
ringmaster Posted April 3, 2003 Posted April 3, 2003 Yeah then I will definatly talk to my teacher about the calc of chem for you. But as someone said before, calc is more prominent in college physcis, since Issac Newton came up with calculus(some uncertainty about that, but most books seem to accept it), but whatever he did, he was definatly a pioneer in Calculus.
Dave Posted April 3, 2003 Posted April 3, 2003 Originally posted by ringmaster Yeah then I will definatly talk to my teacher about the calc of chem for you. But as someone said before, calc is more prominent in college physcis, since Issac Newton came up with calculus(some uncertainty about that, but most books seem to accept it), but whatever he did, he was definatly a pioneer in Calculus. Newton invented calculus to solve the problem of gravitational attraction and gravitation force in general, which, on a sidenote is quite astounding. To invent a completely new area of mathematics (and such a diverse branch at that) to solve a problem and then use it to the breadth that he did is a sure sign of genius.
fafalone Posted April 3, 2003 Posted April 3, 2003 Newton's genius is quite underrated. Most people see the formula F=ma and think "big deal, thats simple." They should look out how he derived that relationship. Very interesting. They way he did it is completely different from techniques everyone else uses too.
exchemist Posted May 7, 2021 Posted May 7, 2021 42 minutes ago, Superkidsavee said: Wow all of you were talking before I was born Some of us were talking before your mum and dad were born, I imagine. But you are replying to an 18 year old thread, with a rather pointless post. If you do that, people will think you are an internet robot or something.
joigus Posted May 7, 2021 Posted May 7, 2021 1 hour ago, Superkidsavee said: Wow all of you were talking before I was born That's nothing. The iron in your blood carrying oxygen to your brain, so you can type, was born before the Sun was born. 1
beecee Posted May 7, 2021 Posted May 7, 2021 3 hours ago, Superkidsavee said: Wow all of you were talking before I was born Some of us are what could be described as old farts. But remember, us old farts are there! You have yet to get there! 😉
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