I think that that you may be thinking about this too hard. Instead of thinking of P=V^2/R use the other definition of P=VI, which may be more intuitive. Also remember Ohm's law is V=IR. Remember that I is the current going through the resistor and V is the potential across the resistor. The...
Vanadium, I agree with what you said about the game being over, but I wasn't clear in my first post. I realize that my professors probably won't write strong letters. My question is really 'how do I make my application stronger after graduating', and not 'how do I get my old profs to write...
Okay, so I graduated in May with a B.S. in EE and want to attend graduate school for EE with a concentration in solid state devices. I had around a 3.6 GPA and over 160 quantitative and verbal on the GRE. I took a device physics graduate course in my senior year (did well in it too) and after...