I would REALLY love some sort of brief explanation of why making u this strange definition rather than something intuitive like the arc length is useful. It has been on my mind ever since I was introduced to this topic
I had to really dig around to figure out what "u" is supposed to be, and I figured out: r dy = du = a/r dx With "y" being the actual physical angle, and x being the angle you plug in sine and cosine, with "u" being something inbetween.
Very clear explanations on an often overlooked topic !
Keep up the good work :)
Thanks a lot!
Plz provide all the topics. Because it is a rare term to be mentioned in youtube and you are the person who has this bravity
I would REALLY love some sort of brief explanation of why making u this strange definition rather than something intuitive like the arc length is useful. It has been on my mind ever since I was introduced to this topic
I had to really dig around to figure out what "u" is supposed to be, and I figured out:
r dy = du = a/r dx
With "y" being the actual physical angle, and x being the angle you plug in sine and cosine, with "u" being something inbetween.
Nicely motivated approach!
Glad you liked it!
What would dn(u,k) equal if b wasnt set to 1 but just another unfixed constant like a?
Nicely generalized
Reference?