- #1
- 18,994
- 23,950
No, sorry. There is only one proper 3D picture which I took from a lecture note. The pictures I made myself used graphjedishrfu said:What software did you use to generate the 3D plots? Matlab / Julia / Python plots?
Jedi
I like the insight format. You can tell in a couple of pages the basic ideas and facts without having to write a novel. There is an (?) insight article I wrote because some kids have asked me about an overview of "differentiation". It resulted in five parts!jedishrfu said:Have you thought of writing a popular or college math book?
I remembered that I had read an article about timber management in some Asian country, Indonesia, Vietnam, or somewhere there. Unfortunately, I don't remember the country so I couldn't find it again. Instead, I found a dissertation about regional timber management and I was totally amazed and intrigued by the sheer size of the system: 221 coupled non-linear integral and differential equations, 182 parameter functions, and 371 single parameters! Just wow!jedishrfu said:I'm also amazed at how well math describes the universe we observe. You article is great in its survey of differential equations. I recall taking a couple of courses, always amazed at the solution strategies used. Some made sense with deeper understanding of Calculus but others just mystified me.
No. Wrong continent and IIRC also wrong language, however, yes, along these lines. Seems timber management and forestation is a much better example for differential equations than Lotka-Volterra. But a horror to draw, I guess. The paper I quoted in the article was a dissertation in Switzerland based on 200 years of data! I just checked, and CC was apparently not of as much interest in 1998 as it is today. At least the word didn't appear in the thesis.jedishrfu said:Was one of these the forestry article you mentioned?
https://www.researchgate.net/public...al_Equations_in_Sustainable_Forest_Harvesting
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0377221786902122
If science is the observation of nature, then math is the explaination of those observations; can we always be sure of our observations and explainations? The need to be inquisitive is the answer.fresh_42 said:
... and being inquisitive is literally what scientists do.ebg said:If science is the observation of nature, then math is the explaination of those observations; can we always be sure of our observations and explainations? The need to be inquisitive is the answer.
Thank you, I added the reference and a reference to the reference. You were right, it wasn't specifically important, but - to be honest - I am a fan of my list of sources and every additional source that is meaningful is highly welcome. Those articles are overviews by their nature, so the list of sources is not only a good scientific habit people should get used to early, but also helpful in the rare case that someone is inspired by such an article and wants to dig deeper. I can say for myself that my juvenile curiosity in STEM fields (and the history of them) was mainly triggered by reading books and articles like the ones we have in the insight department and I was always looking for more.PAllen said:If you are going to reference the priority dispute early in your document (no need to reference it at all), are you aware of:
https://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~sastry/hs323/calculus.pdf