• Gordon Calhoun@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      e = π = σ = ε = µ = Avogadro’s Number = k = g = G = α = i = j = 3

      (at least that’s how they all look when viewed from ∞)

      • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Shouldn’t have i in there, or j if you’re using that to represent the imaginary number. The complex plane is separate.

        Let epsilon be substantially greater than zero…

          • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Imaginary numbers are best understood as symbolizing rotation. If we’re imagining a number line here, “looking back from infinity” - at a scale where Grahams number looks like the mass of an atom expressed in kilograms, i would not be in that infinite set of numbers, it would be a point above that line and creating a perpendicular plane to it.

            I hate the term “imaginary” because it’s misleading. Most high school algebra teachers don’t understand what they are either, so people learn about these things called “imaginary” numbers, never learn any applications with them, hopefully graph them at best, and then move on understanding nothing new about math.

            Students also tend to get really confused about it as possibly a variable, (it’s really annoying with in second year algebra courses, where e and logs also show up). We say “ah yeah, if you get a negative sign, just pull it out as an i and don’t worry about it. or just say no real solutions.”

              • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                Feynman has so much great stuff to plagiarize.

                I think in precalculus at least, something like this is not too hard to show and explain to a student. This would be a fine “final” thing to end the typical high school math career on - showing how all of the different concepts you’ve explored come together.