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Your favorite equations.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-11 19:41

(Yay! Nerdiest thread evar!)

My personal fav. is Minkowski's "c = i".  I.e. the speed of light is equal to \sqrt{1} as a dimensioned constant.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-11 21:38

De Morgan's laws:
\neg(p\vee q)\iff(\neg p)\wedge(\neg q)

\neg(p\wedge q)\iff(\neg p)\vee(\neg q)

Name: 4tran 2009-04-12 13:23

>>1
That's a rare/antiquated view of special relativity.  Nowadays, people prefer pseudoriemannian manifolds over complex riemannian manifolds.  ie instead of making time imaginary, one just has a metric that is not positive definite.  I can't think of any other reason why one would want c to equal i.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-12 18:42

>>3
'Cuz it's fucking cool, that's why.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 10:01

0.999... = 1

And that's all there is to it.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 10:15

lets get some e^{\pi i} + 1 = up in this mofo....

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 10:58

>>6
You must mean
e^{\pi i}-1 = 0
I must say, it is one of the most elegant equations I know.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 11:27

>>7
Best be trollin' nigger.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 13:08

>>8
Please don't bring this /b/ crap in here.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 13:42

>>9

>>7 is /b/ crap.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 18:57

quadratic.  everyone has a special bond with the quadratic equation, just because it's probably the first one they've ever really had to wrap their minds around.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-13 21:11

P = NP ?

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-14 0:56

>>7
yeah, stupid fucking 4chan fucked up my latex. stupid shit.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-14 12:37

>>11
Seconding this. My true favorite, though, is the general solution to the quartic.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-14 23:56

I thought about this a bit and figured e, i, pi, and all that would automatically be covered, so...

One of my very favorites is a simple result of calculus 1: the integral from zero to pi of the sine of x, is equal to two.  This blew my mind at the time; that a function, with a graph, having a relatively complex definition, resulting in a nice curved shape, should have a natural number's worth of area in each of its humps.  It was a thing that I earnestly worried over in high school before learning calculus, and I was deeply gratified to learn the answer.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-15 0:59

>>15
PROTIP: If you graph abs(sin(x)), it looks like boobies! :D

(.)(.)

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-15 10:44

The generalized Stokes theorem is a beautiful, simple and powerful statement.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-15 20:52

>>12
Can you prove this?

Name: T3P 2009-04-17 0:29

C^2 = A^2 + B^2
i proved it with LEGO when i was little, then discovered Pythagoras had done it a shitton years before ;_;

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