Path Independence: Difference between revisions

From Physics Book
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


State, in your own words, the main idea for this topic
State, in your own words, the main idea for this topic
Electric Field of Capacitor
 
Sinusoidal is a mathematical curve that describes a smooth repetitive oscillation (think the sin curve). This topic covers how a charge can be moved sinusoidally and how it will continuously emit radiation. By observing a charge moving sinusoidal we can find the amplitude, period, frequency, wavelength and speed which we will soon discuss.
 


===A Mathematical Model===
===A Mathematical Model===

Revision as of 02:19, 4 December 2015

PLEASE DO NOT EDIT THIS PAGE. COPY THIS TEMPLATE AND PASTE IT INTO A NEW PAGE FOR YOUR TOPIC.

Short Description of Topic

The Main Idea

State, in your own words, the main idea for this topic

Sinusoidal is a mathematical curve that describes a smooth repetitive oscillation (think the sin curve). This topic covers how a charge can be moved sinusoidally and how it will continuously emit radiation. By observing a charge moving sinusoidal we can find the amplitude, period, frequency, wavelength and speed which we will soon discuss.


A Mathematical Model

What are the mathematical equations that allow us to model this topic. For example [math]\displaystyle{ {\frac{d\vec{p}}{dt}}_{system} = \vec{F}_{net} }[/math] where p is the momentum of the system and F is the net force from the surroundings.

A Computational Model

How do we visualize or predict using this topic. Consider embedding some vpython code here Teach hands-on with GlowScript

Examples

Be sure to show all steps in your solution and include diagrams whenever possible

Simple

Middling

Difficult

Connectedness

  1. How is this topic connected to something that you are interested in?
  2. How is it connected to your major?
  3. Is there an interesting industrial application?

History

Put this idea in historical context. Give the reader the Who, What, When, Where, and Why.

See also

Are there related topics or categories in this wiki resource for the curious reader to explore? How does this topic fit into that context?

Further reading

Books, Articles or other print media on this topic

External links

[1]


References

This section contains the the references you used while writing this page