I am a chemistry student who has completed Calculus 1, 2, and 3 and will be advancing to the second year. My dream is to investigate conditions under which a monopole magnetic field is possible, from a thermodynamic perspective, by using physics and mathematics to study electromagnetism and its effects in the subatomic world through various sensory methods. My university will open in one month, and I need to improve my mathematics skills during this period and beyond because the research I aspire to conduct is not a simple chemistry or physics investigation. However, I am struggling with which topic to focus on-should I study tensor calculus or something else? Which areas of mathematics will be helpful for me? In the upcoming term, I will be taking differential equations.
You must study all the courses and carry the linear curriculum. Study what interests you. Don't forget to study art. It seems you consider the discrete and continuous, it's super-classical. Learn the linear and classical, then also about the super-classical, like absolutes, dualities, and infinities. The CRC Press has a book called Sensory Evaluation Techniques. Consider that mostly all there is would be the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, it's the modern picture of the data.
I am a chemistry student who has completed Calculus 1, 2, and 3 and will be advancing to the second year. My dream is to investigate conditions under which a monopole magnetic field is possible, from a thermodynamic perspective, by using physics and mathematics to study electromagnetism and its effects in the subatomic world through various sensory methods. My university will open in one month, and I need to improve my mathematics skills during this period and beyond because the research I aspire to conduct is not a simple chemistry or physics investigation. However, I am struggling with which topic to focus on-should I study tensor calculus or something else? Which areas of mathematics will be helpful for me? In the upcoming term, I will be taking differential equations.
I don't know which area of mathematics would be beneficial for me to learn; I am open to your recommendations on this matter
You must study all the courses and carry the linear curriculum. Study what interests you. Don't forget to study art. It seems you consider the discrete and continuous, it's super-classical. Learn the linear and classical, then also about the super-classical, like absolutes, dualities, and infinities. The CRC Press has a book called Sensory Evaluation Techniques. Consider that mostly all there is would be the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, it's the modern picture of the data.