Recent content by fresnelspot
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Undergrad When were Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac statistics first defined?
Hi everyone I need the historical articles that bose and fermi integrals were defined for the first time. Can anyone help me?- fresnelspot
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- Bose einstein Dirac Einstein Fermi Fermi dirac
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter
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Graduate Answers of the following integrals
hi. Why don't you just open the polylogarithm functions in a sum, integrate termwise and than examine whether the resultant serie members lead to a converging serie or not?- fresnelspot
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus
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My confusion about the copyrights
thanx choppy. I guess you are right. Publishing a manuscript is more difficult than finding a subject to write.thanx- fresnelspot
- Post #5
- Forum: STEM Academic Advising
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My confusion about the copyrights
thanx. I can't see my abstract on my created .html pag. I says it is suppoused to be seen. Do you have any idea?- fresnelspot
- Post #3
- Forum: STEM Academic Advising
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My confusion about the copyrights
Hi I am a first timer and i am about to send my first manuscript. I can't figure out if i have to send the copyrights agreement via mail?Can i send it via email too? ( i don't know if this is the related section of the forum. If not my apologies :)) thanx- fresnelspot
- Thread
- Confusion
- Replies: 4
- Forum: STEM Academic Advising
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Graduate Understanding Power Series Derivatives: A Question
thanx- fresnelspot
- Post #8
- Forum: Calculus
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Graduate Understanding Power Series Derivatives: A Question
I am very sorry for my verbal skills .The problem is confusing for me so it becomes more difficult to explain it in words. My problem is this : The concept is clear when we see the relation between f and g and reflect this relation to the series terms. What if we know there is a...- fresnelspot
- Post #6
- Forum: Calculus
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Graduate Understanding Power Series Derivatives: A Question
:) by "big " functions i mean the sum of all terms . by "equal labelled" i mean they both will be the nth terms of the series expansions they belong.- fresnelspot
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus
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Graduate Understanding Power Series Derivatives: A Question
Hi My confusion is about this power series. If derivative of a function (f(x)) is another function(g(x)) then, this holds for the series terms of the functions. My question is If one knows this derivation relation Just two equal labelled series terms of two other functions. And one...- fresnelspot
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- Derivatives Power Power series Series
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Calculus
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Graduate Phonon Condensation in Solids: Sources for Research
Hi , i need some scientific source (book, article etc.) on phonon condensation in solids. Google scholar seems to fail in this topic. Can anyone advice me some source ?- fresnelspot
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- Condensation Phonon
- Replies: 5
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter
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Graduate How cant EM wawe escape from a black hole?
Thank you dude. I got a point while i was thinking about it later. Can you say if i thought the right way? It can't escape because it is not about the particle , because of the bending of the spacetime . So if there is no exit, it doesn't matter if you have mass or not- fresnelspot
- Post #3
- Forum: Cosmology
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Graduate How cant EM wawe escape from a black hole?
i need to have some scientific papers about this. I understand the massive ones but i can't understand it when it comes to a EM wawe. Can anyone advice me a book or a paper ?- fresnelspot
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- Black hole Em Escape Hole
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Cosmology
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The Golden Rule versus the Platinum Rule
I know another golden rule : "the one who keeps gold , he rules "- fresnelspot
- Post #45
- Forum: General Discussion
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Graduate Why is a plasmon ocsilation considered a longitudinal wave?
Thank you for the formula writing tip. I mean that ,the solid (possibly an ionic one)Has a dielectric function that responds to the external electric field. When it comes to plasma oscillations , The dielectric function should be zero (i mean the function 10.1.17 in Kittel). My question...- fresnelspot
- Post #17
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter
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Graduate Why is a plasmon ocsilation considered a longitudinal wave?
Thank you for the formula writing tip. I mean that ,the solid (possibly an ionic one)Has a dielectric function that responds to the external electric field. When it comes to plasma oscillations , The dielectric function should be zero (i mean the function 10.1.17 in Kittel). My question...- fresnelspot
- Post #16
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter