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basic_tools:vector_calculus [2017/11/05 17:21]
162.158.88.71 removed
basic_tools:vector_calculus [2018/04/25 17:30]
jakobadmin
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 ====== Vector Calculus ====== ====== Vector Calculus ======
  
-===== Why is it interesting?​ ===== 
  
-===== Layman ===== 
  
-===== Student===== 
  
-==== Recommended Readings ====+<tabbox Intuitive> ​
  
 +<note tip>
 +Explanations in this section should contain no formulas, but instead colloquial things like you would hear them during a coffee break or at a cocktail party.
 +</​note>​
 +  ​
 +<tabbox Concrete> ​
 +  * [[http://​www2.eng.cam.ac.uk/​~alj3/​vc.pdf|A Survival Guide to Vector Calculus]] by Aylmer Johnson
 +
 +**Recommended Textbooks:​**
 + 
 +
 +  * Vector Calculus, Linear Algebra, and Differential Forms: A Unified Approach by John H. Hubbard and Barbara Burke Hubbard - Extremely student friendly, lots of margin notes that talk about the "​soft"​ stuff that's so crucial to the actual practice of math. Reading just the margins jumps your mathematical maturity by 2 years.
 +  * http://​mathinsight.org/​thread/​vector_algebra
 +  * A nice introduction can be found in Section 3 of Vol. 2 of Feynman'​s Lectures on Physics, which are available [[http://​www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/​II_03.html|here]]
 +  * A Student'​s Guide to Vectors and Tensors by Daniel A. Fleisch
   * DIV, Grad, Curl, and All That: An Informal Text on Vector Calculus by H. M Schey   * DIV, Grad, Curl, and All That: An Informal Text on Vector Calculus by H. M Schey
 +  * [[http://​www.physics.miami.edu/​~nearing/​mathmethods/​|Mathematical Tools for Physics]] by James Nearing
 +<tabbox Abstract> ​
  
-===== Researcher=====+<note tip> 
 +The motto in this section is: //the higher the level of abstraction,​ the better//. 
 +</​note>​
  
-===== Examples =====+   
 +<tabbox Why is it interesting?> ​
  
-===== History ​=====+Vector calculus is an important tool, whenever we want to understand systems where directions play a role. A vector is an arrow that points in some direction. Thus, a vector is a tool to denote a direction. 
 + 
 +This is needed, for example, to describe in which spatial direction a ball moves or how a fluid flows. 
 + 
 +<​blockquote>​A vector is the mathematical representation of a physical entity that may be 
 +characterized by size (or “magnitude”) and direction. In keeping with this definition, speed (how fast an object is going) is not represented by a vector, but velocity (how fast and in which direction an object is 
 +going) does qualify as a vector quantity. Another example of a vector quantity 
 +is force, which describes how strongly and in what direction something is being 
 +pushed or pulled. But temperature,​ which has magnitude but no direction, is not 
 +a vector quantity<​cite>​A Student'​s Guide to Vectors and Tensors by Daniel A. Fleisch 
 +</​cite></​blockquote>​ 
 + 
 + 
 +<​tabbox ​History
  
 https://​en.m.wikipedia.org/​wiki/​A_History_of_Vector_Analysis https://​en.m.wikipedia.org/​wiki/​A_History_of_Vector_Analysis
 +
 +</​tabbox>​
 +
 +
basic_tools/vector_calculus.txt · Last modified: 2022/09/07 01:15 by laserblue