it is worth a debate whether we should not consider allowing well-formulated, thought-through, well-written homework questions showing work put in on the site then ... although that might of course quickly make the numbers explode
I actually don't think it will be popular either - I have to admit though that my personal dream would be that the homework question gets replaced by low effort
This is how the 10k tools currently looks like on Physics, more specifically the migration tab.
Are those Google Plus icons intentional? 'cause I smell a bug =).
I found a couple of textbooks online (goldstein, landau/lifshitz) that I think with youtube and google will be able to get me through =) my one debate is whether or not to get an actual copy of either.
@ACuriousMind Do you maybe understand the definition of formal linear combinations given in the question? I don't see how he gets $F = \sum_{i=1}^{m}a_ix_i$?
@heather as much as I hate myself for saying this, but my experience is that the books you can not find as pdf cost enough to make buying the ones you actually have as pdfs seem pretty unattractive
@ACuriousMind Yeah I know that is the usual definition but I don't see how gets from defining the formal linear combinations as mappings from a set $S$ $\to \mathbb{R}$ and then ends up with that definition. Do you see how he gets that?
@trilolil $\omega$ should be the frequency, $\varepsilon$ the permittivity, $j$ might be a current, but I'm not sure without having looked closer at the context
this is the source: it is on the first page, you won't have to read a lot. That is what I thought as well but was not sure. I am just not sure whether j=current... http://whites.sdsmt.edu/classes/ee382/notes/382Lecture32.pdf
@Alex You define a map from those functions to the formal linear combinations in the usual sense by $f\mapsto \sum_{s\in S} f(s) s$, and dropping all the terms with $f(s) = 0$. This is a bijection.
@heather this must be the german habit of too long sentences. What I meant is - in my experience, I need to spend enough money on the books that I cannot find as pdf anywhere already. Therefore, I feel that buying the books that I do have as pdfs is a luxury I can't really allow myself. I hope that was better :|
@Sanya, oh, that makes sense. because books that you can't find as pdfs cost so much, you shouldn't buy books you already have, because that's even more money?
@DanielSank did you ever contact a publishing company? Springer offered us a laughable amount for an estimated 250-300 pages book - so not like the author is going to suffer. Not that I want to defend it - the ebooks I have are usually ebooks I am allowed to have.
@DanielSank never, of course. I'm just saying that it isn't really the author who suffers big time from that - on the other hand, I won't say that stealing is good, of course
@ACuriousMind I'm studying independently hence I lose some of the usual methods. So is the general result: If $\{ f : f: s \to \mathbb{R}~~~ \text{where} f(s) \neq 0 ~~\text{ for finitely many } s \}$ then we can define a bijective mapping $\Phi$ on that set $$\Phi(f) = \sum_{s \in S}f(s)s$$?
Admittedly, this seems like a very simple question. The word mode pops up in every field of physics, yet I can't remember ever having read what I felt was a precise and sensible definition.
After having searched fruitlessly on this site as well, I feel that even though it seems like a trivial qu...
Summary
I made a week-long list of all the questions closed due to the homework flag and tried to gauge whether they were showing any effort at all. This idea came up during a chat session when we were talking about the new physics Q&A site proposal and our homework policy. The hope is to give a...
@trilolil In one case, $X$ is a scalar, in the other, a vector. I wrote $\cdot$ purposefully there - if you think of $\nabla$ as $(\partial_x,\partial_y,\partial_z)$, those should make sense to you
@Alex Well...the $\sum_{s\in S}a_s s$ is really just a notation for a tuple of numbers $(a_s)_{s\in S}$ indexed by elements of the set $S$. If you want to be really precise, you should probably just start with the functional definition of the free vector space and define writing "$s$" for the function that's 1 at s and 0 everywhere else. Then clearly you can write every function as $f = \sum f(s) s$.