
Math B Term 2
... Students will be able to 1. simplify radicals with a numerical index of 2 or 3. 2. simplify radicals involving literal radicands. 3. explain the procedure for simplifying radical expressions. 4. explain how to determine when a radical is in simplest form. Writing Exercise: The irrational numbers wer ...
... Students will be able to 1. simplify radicals with a numerical index of 2 or 3. 2. simplify radicals involving literal radicands. 3. explain the procedure for simplifying radical expressions. 4. explain how to determine when a radical is in simplest form. Writing Exercise: The irrational numbers wer ...
... contributions from different NOA mechanism and nonlinear rotation of polarization ellipse takes place and therefore we cannot distinguish between these contributions. In some cases polarization tends to become circular, the sign of rotation depending on the orientation of initial polarization with e ...
Integral Tables and Integrals Using CAS
... Our textbook contains more than 100 integral patterns in a table (see Reference Pages 4 through 8 at the back of the book), a small number compared to reference books devoted solely to integral tables. Integral tables provide yet another way to help evaluate integrals. Using the tables, your goals s ...
... Our textbook contains more than 100 integral patterns in a table (see Reference Pages 4 through 8 at the back of the book), a small number compared to reference books devoted solely to integral tables. Integral tables provide yet another way to help evaluate integrals. Using the tables, your goals s ...
Partial differential equation

In mathematics, a partial differential equation (PDE) is a differential equation that contains unknown multivariable functions and their partial derivatives. (A special case are ordinary differential equations (ODEs), which deal with functions of a single variable and their derivatives.) PDEs are used to formulate problems involving functions of several variables, and are either solved by hand, or used to create a relevant computer model.PDEs can be used to describe a wide variety of phenomena such as sound, heat, electrostatics, electrodynamics, fluid flow, elasticity, or quantum mechanics. These seemingly distinct physical phenomena can be formalised similarly in terms of PDEs. Just as ordinary differential equations often model one-dimensional dynamical systems, partial differential equations often model multidimensional systems. PDEs find their generalisation in stochastic partial differential equations.