Guest Lambus Posted February 25, 2007 Report Posted February 25, 2007 Greetings, 'Hypographicans' Hypography [n.] A combination of "hyperlink" and "bibliography", i.e. a list of links to electronic resources related to any topic.I am a senior physics major at a local college University.[math]\frac{ds}{dt} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}} = c[/math] ;) Reference:Speed of light - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia :) Quote
infamous Posted February 25, 2007 Report Posted February 25, 2007 Please take a time out Lambus and explain your math for those of us with limited math skills. Provide us with some text to read and tell us what your thouhts are. Posting only equations with no text to support your ideas is ill advised.................................Infy Quote
CraigD Posted February 25, 2007 Report Posted February 25, 2007 [math]\frac{ds}{dt} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}} = c[/math] ;)It’s comforting to see that Physics majors continue to remember Maxwell’s equations. (As an old Math major, I only dabbled in the stuff, but still know it when I see it ;)) Knowing how to post in LaTeX and link to wikipedia – you seem like the ideal hypographer – if you can keep in mind that (except for the language forums) this is an English language site, and surround any pretty LaTeX with plenty of well-formed English sentences :thumbs_up. Watch out for post padding – nothing attacts negative reputation around here quite like it. I believe you can link to wikipedia before you reach 10 posts by enclosing a successful search string in links (eg: [wiki]Maxwell's equations). Better still, post some science in the forums, or a bit about yourself and your interests (in English) in this thread, which should take care of the anti-spambot-10-posts-before-linking requirements and get your rep up at the same time. Quote
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