Dear Mr. Professor Strang, I do not express in words the deep and honest gratitude and appreciation I have for you for sharring this amazing content online. You are enabling really quality learning for many of us, that did not get the chance to study at MIT. Refreshing my capabalities of solving ODEs, that I forgot since finishing university, is so much more pleasurable with your lectures. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
These lectures are perfect for people who want to brush up on DEs and Linear algebra. Its quick and straight to the point, he even explains some of the things all the way to the last detail which is a good thing especially if you forget the basics.
If im not mistaken its the degree of the equation. See it as the zeros of a polynomial where we know that the number of those is equal to the degree of the polynomial
ruclips.net/video/xCCeV-glFdM/видео.htmlm59s link copied to clipboard regarding blackboard. Could the sounds of the shaking blackboard be analyzed by equations on the blackboard?
The solution to F = ma depends on F and its two initial conditions. Using the video’s notation, ma - F = 0 → my’’ - F = 0 Professor Strang set F = -ky. This leads to a Hooke’s Law solution that’s a linear combination of a sine and cosine. Their coefficients are determined by y(0) and y’(0). Suppose he had set F = -mg (gravity near the Earth’s surface). Then: my’’ + mg = 0 y’’ = -g y = - (1/2)gt^2 + y’(0)t + y(0)
Everything which matters, including matter, can be represented by trig functions, which can be represented by series expansions as polynomials. Try to get away from the basic idea of trig functions only describing circles, triangles and oscillations.
Dear Mr. Professor Strang,
I do not express in words the deep and honest gratitude and appreciation I have for you for sharring this amazing content online.
You are enabling really quality learning for many of us, that did not get the chance to study at MIT.
Refreshing my capabalities of solving ODEs, that I forgot since finishing university, is so much more pleasurable with your lectures.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!
This is Gilbert's genius...the Legendary Mathematician... feeling comfortable to watch videos of"The Father of Linear Algebra"
Dr. Strang thank you so much for your contribution to all mathematics. You are the grand father of all mathematics.
"Not the tomota ketchup guy...oh that is Heinz"
These lectures are perfect for people who want to brush up on DEs and Linear algebra. Its quick and straight to the point, he even explains some of the things all the way to the last detail which is a good thing especially if you forget the basics.
Sir, you understand second order differential equations as I understand adding and subtracting between one and ten. Genius. Thank you.
that's the best example, the simplest example, and the first example - Prof. G. Strang
Not the ketchup guy lol
Thank you Professor. You're the best !
"For frequency, probably"
What a fantastic lecture
how can you know there are 2 null solutions?
If im not mistaken its the degree of the equation. See it as the zeros of a polynomial where we know that the number of those is equal to the degree of the polynomial
Nice
ruclips.net/video/xCCeV-glFdM/видео.htmlm59s link copied to clipboard regarding blackboard. Could the sounds of the shaking blackboard be analyzed by equations on the blackboard?
so why Newton's 2nd law is 2nd order differential equation if the law is dealing with matter which can't be described by cos and sin
The solution to F = ma depends on F and its two initial conditions.
Using the video’s notation, ma - F = 0 → my’’ - F = 0
Professor Strang set F = -ky. This leads to a Hooke’s Law solution that’s a linear combination of a sine and cosine. Their coefficients are determined by y(0) and y’(0).
Suppose he had set F = -mg (gravity near the Earth’s surface). Then:
my’’ + mg = 0
y’’ = -g
y = - (1/2)gt^2 + y’(0)t + y(0)
Everything which matters, including matter, can be represented by trig functions, which can be represented by series expansions as polynomials. Try to get away from the basic idea of trig functions only describing circles, triangles and oscillations.
Nice series for an engineer, not for a matematician though.
Rude
For both, definitely. And don't forget physicists!
i think a mathematician would be already beyond this before high school
Dr. Strang thank you so much for your contribution to all mathematics. You are the grand father of all mathematics.