I'm playing around with tracking metrics on my writing activities today. Clearly I need to enhance my charting presentation skills, but the information here is kind of interesting to me. It's about me, so of course it is, but it's interesting to think about in terms of why a writing log is useful as well. Here's what I learned As the semester has ramped up, I've been doing more writing on EM homework and less on EM notes in preparation for class. That's not a sustainable model. Work on the hray presentation an proposal has been ramping up nicely. I need more detail on what aspects of each project I'm working on and more tracking towards defined goals.
Now available as a Kindle ebook for 99 cents ! Get a spiffy ebook, and fund more physics The following is a pretty lengthy procedure, but converting the divergence, (nabla, del) operator between coordinate systems comes up pretty often. While there are tables for converting between common coordinate systems , there seem to be fewer explanations of the procedure for deriving the conversion, so here goes! What do we actually want? To convert the Cartesian nabla to the nabla for another coordinate system, say… cylindrical coordinates. What we’ll need: 1. The Cartesian Nabla: 2. A set of equations relating the Cartesian coordinates to cylindrical coordinates: 3. A set of equations relating the Cartesian basis vectors to the basis vectors of the new coordinate system: How to do it: Use the chain rule for differentiation to convert the derivatives with respect to the Cartesian variables to derivatives with respect to the cylindrical variables. The chain ...
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