the GardenGnome Posted April 10, 2003 Posted April 10, 2003 I would like to become a physicist. But you need to know calculus in physics. Is it really all that hard?
fafalone Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 The calculus is far from the hardest part of physics.
the GardenGnome Posted April 11, 2003 Author Posted April 11, 2003 Originally posted by fafalone The calculus is far from the hardest part of physics. What is the hardest part of physics?
blike Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 Originally posted by the GardenGnome What is the hardest part of physics? Probably classical mechanics Fafalone's favorite! Faf told me last night the calc used is pretty basic, which is encouraging. I plan I taking physics w/ calculus, but I've only been through calc1.
fafalone Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 One you get into upper level physics the calculus is pretty intense, but you'll have to have the required calc courses as a prerequisite. but you won't have trouble learning it if you get through the early levels.
Ryoken Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 Good, because calc is a mystery to me too. What is the basic consept of calc that makes it so important/useful?
EvilMind Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 algebraic geometry, Lie groups, operator calculus, manifold theory. calculus is nothing, its just a small step.
Dave Posted April 11, 2003 Posted April 11, 2003 Originally posted by Ryoken Good, because calc is a mystery to me too. What is the basic consept of calc that makes it so important/useful? it's the concept of a limiting value that's key to calculus. it enables us to find gradients of graphs at any given point exactly and to find the area defined under a graph (which is useful for velocity-time graphs, to quote a simple example). it's a key role in more or less any part of mechanics and if you deal with motion in general then you're going to run into it at some point.
Dave Posted April 12, 2003 Posted April 12, 2003 In fact, to further expand on this, take for an example (in a simplified case), a rocket being launched, which loses mass over a period of time. ignoring changes in gravitational field strength, relativistic effects etc, the problem stands that you effectively have a particle with changing mass. in order to create the mathematics behind this, you have to consider the change in mass of the rocket over a "small" period of time. in this case, you then take the limiting value of this small period of time. this enables you to solve the equation that you perform. without the limiting values and calculus in general, you wouldn't be able to do this problem or anything like it. same thing applies for things like shock absorbers (damped harmonic motion), springs, coils, etc. basically, calc is good and kindof essential
JoeDaWolf Posted May 8, 2003 Posted May 8, 2003 Also, a hard part about physics is applying mathematics to problems that exist in the world. most people aren't good at applied mathematics becuase their brains don't think like that ~Wolf
JaKiri Posted May 8, 2003 Posted May 8, 2003 Calculus is dead easy for the most part. The difficult bit in physics is the algebraic manipulation of equations.
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