When the circle showed up on the integral sign - this is the defining point where I stopped caring about math during my engineering degree and just mailed it in for a 50. 😄
Hahaha Not sure how you know Bolsonaro, but your name is quite interesting. I would suggest to you take Jerry out of the name to make It a better joke for brazilians. Hahaha
If you Physics, can you answer this pls? A horizontal shaft rotates in bearings at its ends. At its midpoint is keyed a disk weighing 40lbs, whose center of gravity is 0.1 inch from the axis of rotation. If a static force of 200 lbs deflects the shaft and disk through 0.1 inch, determine the critical speed of rotation of the shaft.
6:37: should be Qx - Py instead of Qy - Px
Stoke's Theorem proof revisited. Most of Multi-variable Calc. students should enjoy this video. Thank you Michael Penn.
When the circle showed up on the integral sign - this is the defining point where I stopped caring about math during my engineering degree and just mailed it in for a 50. 😄
Thats funny, I got more psyched when "fancy" notation starting showing up in problems!
You're the best math channel. Love your vector Calculus videos
Nice, clear, concise 👍
Surface(cos(u/2)cos(v/2),cos(u/2)sin(v/2),sin(u)/2),u,0,2pi,v,0,4pi
Single sided or not? The missing Klein?
Very good videos, despite me not understanding everything!
Hahaha Not sure how you know Bolsonaro, but your name is quite interesting. I would suggest to you take Jerry out of the name to make It a better joke for brazilians. Hahaha
@@MrRenanwill I'm Portuguese so I'm acquainted with the man. I went with Jerry because it just sounds funny.
Now do the full Stokes' Theorem, with manifolds and the exterior derivative and all that jazz.
loving the lack of numbers😍😍
If you Physics, can you answer this pls?
A horizontal shaft rotates in bearings at its ends. At its midpoint is keyed a disk weighing 40lbs, whose center of gravity is 0.1 inch from the axis of rotation. If a static force of 200 lbs deflects the shaft and disk through 0.1 inch, determine the critical speed of rotation of the shaft.
what are inches and pounds?
14:25, dx is missing, by the way i love this videos
Good stuff
The last 10 seconds of this video are really fishy: how did dA, a scalar, gets transformed into dS, a vector? Thanks!
So what must we do to proof the general case?
I'm on a plain, I can't complain
Hey the equation on the thumbnail is probably wrong
fixed!
#GUCCI
Stoke's Theorem proof revisited. Most of Multi-variable Calc. students should enjoy this video. Thank you Michael Penn.