Greenpeace #clickclean Campaign GIFs ‘Wind Turbine Likes’

Greenpeace #clickclean Campaign GIFs ‘Wind Turbine Likes’

Greenpeace #clickclean campaign GIFs ‘Wind Turbine Likes’

More Posts from Mrvmt and Others

9 years ago

Wow, “ For a photon, its entire existence is instantaneous. “ , that put things in perspective! 

Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?
Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?
Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?
Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?
Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?
Ask Ethan #109: How Do Photons Experience Time?

Ask Ethan #109: How do photons experience time?

“[L]ight takes about 8 minutes to travel from the sun to earth. Light travels at the speed of light. If you do that relativity kicks in. So my question is, how much time passes for the photons traveling? In other words, how much have the photons aged when the reach the earth? Thanks for considering this.”

Travel at any constant speed, at rest, slowly, or near the speed of light, and you’ll experience time passing at the same rate it always does: one second per second. If someone else is moving relative to you, they’ll see your clock run slow (and you’ll see theirs run slow) depending on how quickly you move relative to one another. But what about a photon, which moves at the speed of light? From your point of view, no matter what your motion is, you won’t see time pass for it at all, and it won’t even experience time! For a photon, its entire existence is instantaneous.


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9 years ago
So I Just Finished My CALC 2 Class With The Highest Marks In The Class And I Wanted To Put Together A “guide”

So I just finished my CALC 2 class with the highest marks in the class and I wanted to put together a “guide” on how to study for calculus. It doesn’t matter if you are taking AP Calculus or Calculus in college, this guide should be a general overview but I will mention some specifics to AP Calc. *Picture from my Calculus lecture. 

General Tips

Buy the AP CALC review books. Regardless of whether you are in college calculus or actually in AP Calculus, the review books are great in condensing materials and having good examples. 

Create your own cheat sheet. Every time you learn a new formula or theorem, write it down in a cheat sheet. This forces you to recall the information constantly.

Know your common derivatives and common integrals like the back of your hand.

Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, Part I & II? Yeah, it’s fundamental. Need to know that. 

Common limits? Yep, that too. 

Know your pre-calc and algebra by heart. The hardest thing about calculus is not the formulas and theorems, but recalling past materials to solve a problem. If you could easily recognize trigonometric identities, you would be well set for the class.

Know what trig graphs look like and what they approach, etc. 

Learn how to do the math without a calculator. Some professors don’t let you use calculators on the tests and when you are become too dependent on the calculator, you tend to forget how to do simple addition/subtraction and multiplication/division. Also, there is a non-calculator portion to the AP Calculus Exam, so don’t make your calculator your crutch.

Practice every day + do your homework. A little practice everyday goes a long way and doing your homework (even if it doesn’t count as a grade) can be a drastic way of improving your grades because chances are, your teacher knows you probably aren’t going to do the homework and will have test questions very similar to the homework questions. 

Show all your work. Write all the steps out. If you make a mistake mentally, your whole answer will be wrong. To decrease the chances of loosing points for careless errors, label everything, even if it tedious. Also, work shown can count towards partial credit on tests. 

Practice the problems from your textbook + problems outside your textbook.

Understand and review old tests. When you get your tests back, redo the whole test on another sheet of paper. Try to understand where you went wrong. Was it a simple math calculation error? Did you do the derivative wrong? Was the theorem wrong? Did you forget a step like checking for conditions to apply L’hopitals Rule or Alternating Series Test for Convergence? Whatever it is, go through the entire test (yes, even the ones you got right) and re-do it. 

Ask for help when you don’t understand something. Solving tough calculus problems are easier when working with a group on a white board because you get a fresh set of eyes and a new mindset/approach to a problem. If you cannot tackle a problem, regardless of how many ways you have tried, it’s best to ask someone who already knows how to do it. 

Resources for AP CALC

Buy review books. Honestly, this is self-explanatory. I usually would go with a Barron review book, but hey, what ever works with you. 

Do the previously released AP Calc exams. If you are a BC student, do the release exams for both AB and BC for more practice. 

Previously released AB Exams

Previously released BC Exams

Step-by-step explanations for free response questions release

AB Study Guide

Cheat Sheets + Other Resources

I advise you to print out the cheat sheets and place it in the front of your calculus binder/notebook or where it can be easily accessed. 

Cheat Sheets

AP Calculus Stuff You Must Know Cold 

This 2-page cheat sheet is honestly god gifted and I advise you to print it out and laminate or something and put it in the front of your calc binder/notes. Will definitely save your life. 

Algebra Cheat Sheet 

Trigonometric Cheat Sheet

Calculus Cheat Sheet

Derivatives and Limits

Integrals

Online Tutorials + Videos

Khan Academy

Differential Calculus

Integral Calculus

Paul’s Online Math Notes

HippoCampus

Online Calculators

Symbolab’s Calculus Calculator

The most beautiful thing to ever exist when you are checking your answers or looking for the steps on how to do a problem.

Don’t rely on it too much. Actually learn how to do it. 

Wolfram Alpha

Implicit Differentiation Calculator

Desmos Online Graphing Calculator

Bet you don’t know how to graph an x-function on that TI-84 without solving it out for y. But it’s cool, neither do I. That’s why I rely on Desmos’ Online Graphing Calculator.

8 years ago
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle
I’ll Post More Here: Instagram.com/nathanwpyle

I’ll post more here: instagram.com/nathanwpyle

Take a deep breath. 

9 years ago

How the f could a human do something like that? I want to see a video of that guy in action.

His Name:  Achim Leistner.

His name:  Achim Leistner.

He is the master optician of the Avogadro project, an international effort to define the Avogadro constantwith maximum precision. He was asked to join the project from retirement as it was deemed that his expertise and craftsmanship were essential for the success of the project.

Here is a video: [x]

(Fact Source) For more facts, follow Ultrafacts

8 years ago
Regolo’s Square Fractal
Regolo’s Square Fractal
Regolo’s Square Fractal
Regolo’s Square Fractal
Regolo’s Square Fractal
Regolo’s Square Fractal

Regolo’s Square Fractal

Inspiration: http://regolo54.tumblr.com/post/150627614707/fractal

Code as is.

Interactive code. Up/down/left/right mouse controls the size and placement of the squares. Up/Down arrows control how many squares are in each ring. Any other key will save the frame as a picture!

9 years ago

I just love nerds like this! Wow, you amaze me!

Here’s a time-lapse I took of my friend and I wrapping copper wire around our radio telescope antenna. 

If any of the other stages of the build process would make for interesting videos, I will try to post them as well.

7 years ago

Hey IBM,  Always loved your posts. BUT THIS, you want people to drink milk from a cow? The milk is for the calf! Shame on you for spreading the lie that milk is good for the body. It’s proven that milk is not good for humans after the age of 12. Stop treat animals like they are made for us humans to abuse! There is no humane way to kill or inseminate another living creature! Hope this is your first and last post propagates for animal abuse!

Dairy DNA

Dairy DNA

Milk, it does a body good, and we want to make sure it stays that way. In order to help protect the safety of this ingredient found in so many foods, IBM and Cornell University are working on a way to monitor raw milk straight from the source. By sequencing the DNA and RNA of milk and its surrounding microbes, they hope to be able to instantly detect food safety hazards so they don’t have a chance to make it into your glass or onto your plate.

Learn more ->

8 years ago

This slide is really something! :)

Video of my talk last week at ICERM, where I discussed a bit of my process for making GIFs. You can also access my slides here.

8 years ago

Master of geogebra helped me out with this! Thanks!

Table Saw
Table Saw

Table Saw

@mrvmt requested a table saw sketch, and this is the first draft. In GeoGebra here.

9 years ago

Does this post explain this aswell? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uENITui5_jU

The Strobe Light Conundrum

The Strobe Light Conundrum

The post - Illusion of Perception obviously confused a lot of people since I have been getting a lot of requests to explain it again.

Let me try it again with another animation.

The setup

The illusion of falling droplets is created by a pump which is pushing out the water droplets at a fixed rate. ( call it X ) - Does NOT change.

Changing the frequency of the strobe light ( call it Y ) is the integral part of the illusion.

image

The flow is similar to that of your shower head. The water droplets are continuously falling down. With the strobe light, we are just illuminating the droplets at different instances of time.

When  X = Y  —>  The droplets appear stationary.

Imagine yourself to be sitting on top of the hose and watching every drop fall through. Whenever the droplet of water is about to leave the hose, the light flashes. This renders the droplet as stationary.

Let us call the distance between the droplets as L.

image

When Y > X  — > The droplets appear to move up.

Now, the strobe light flashes a little too quickly than the rate of the drop falling. This gives us the illusion of droplets moving up since you are flashing the light before the droplet has traversed the distance L.

image
image

When Y < X  — > The droplets appear to move down.

Now, the strobe light flashes a little slower than the rate of the drop falling. This gives us the illusion of droplets moving down since you are flashing the light after the droplet has traversed the distance L.

image
image

Thank you so much for expressing your concerns and I apologize if it had confused you. I hope this post made it up

Have a good day :)

EDIT - Here is the actual gif from the illusion of perception post.

image
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mrvmt - Math enthusiast
Math enthusiast

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