Recent content by JXayph

  1. J

    UofT or McMaster: Which Engineering Program is Right for Me?

    I haven't really looked that far into the potential earnings of engineers that much, engineering has just always been a natural career goal for me. Could 60k more really be paid off that fast? I wouldn't even mind living a bit rough for a couple years, just to take care of the debt before it...
  2. J

    UofT or McMaster: Which Engineering Program is Right for Me?

    I think I probably will just do Mac. 60k is definitely more than I can afford to spend on something as arbitrary as that, to be honest. I don't want to be paying off debt until I'm in my forties or fifties.
  3. J

    Derivative of displacement with respect to time

    Right. My bad. The magnitude of velocity is the antiderivative of position, while the vector of velocity is the antiderivative of displacement. I wasn't really thinking with what I said about the integral of sin(x), oops. Fortunately, the general idea was still conveyed, I believe (That the...
  4. J

    UofT or McMaster: Which Engineering Program is Right for Me?

    Im a high school student in Hamilton, Ontario, and on the second round of admissions I received conditional offers from McMaster for general engineering and University of Toronto for chemical engineering. I intend to do engineering right after undergrad, but everything is subject to change, I...
  5. J

    What is the connection between math, physics, and engineering?

    Hi. My name is Joshua, and I'm a high school kid in Ontario with an interest in math (Especially calculus!) and physics. I'm an aspiring engineer, was screwing around on the internet, found this site, thought it looked pretty cool, and decided I wanted to stick around. Maybe I'll learn...
  6. J

    Derivative of displacement with respect to time

    I'm a high school student, so correct me if I'm wrong, but this is my understanding: In terms of integrals, taking a velocity graph and integrating it to find the net area under a graph will yield displacement, since where velocity is negative (the opposite direction), it will count as negative...
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