Recent content by Zinggy
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Other Recent Grad with Job market Questions
Hello, I recently graduated from my university with a B.S in Astrophysics, and a minor in Mathematics. Through my undergrad I have done undergraduate research on pulsars, and even developed and coded an app to help catalog and database pulsar candidates, with the help of graduate students and a...- Zinggy
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- Grad Job Job market
- Replies: 25
- Forum: STEM Career Guidance
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[Work check] Parametric frictionless wire
Assignment is due tomorrow, would really appreciate another set of eyes!- Zinggy
- Post #3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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[Work check] Parametric frictionless wire
If anyone could take the time to check my work I would appreciate it!- Zinggy
- Post #2
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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[Work check] Parametric frictionless wire
for my formatting, (dot) implies a single time derivative with respect to the variable Kinetic Energy = T = (1/2) m (x(dot)2 +y(dot)2 + z(dot)2 Plug in respective values for x y and z -> T= (1/2) m (a2 α2sin2(αλ) λ(dot) +a2 α2cos2(αλ) λ(dot) + b2λ(dot) After canceling out Sin and cos ->...- Zinggy
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- Frictionless Parametric Wire
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Show that this Equation Satisfies the Schrodinger Equation
Ah yes, those were just typos, sorry I didn't do a great job of representing my equations.. Would the question use an equation like this?- Zinggy
- Post #5
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Show that this Equation Satisfies the Schrodinger Equation
I may have not gotten my formatting correct, this is what I'm using as my Schrödinger equation I found this equation in my Harmonic Oscillator section in my textbook, is this wrong?- Zinggy
- Post #3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Show that this Equation Satisfies the Schrodinger Equation
I apologize for the bad formatting: To start off, I'm trying to use the Schrödinger Equation in the form: (ħ/2m) d^2Ψ(x,t)/dx^2+V(x,t)Ψ(x,t)=EΨ(x,t) I couldn't remember if I need to also take the partial derivative with respect to T as well, but I started off with just X. I plugged in my...- Zinggy
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- Schrödinger Schrodinger equation
- Replies: 5
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Differential Equation with an Initial condition
Homework Statement x(dy/dx) = 3y +x4cos(x), y(2pi)=0 Homework Equations N/A The Attempt at a Solution I've tried a couple different ways to make this separable, but you always carry over a 1/dx or 1/dy term and I can never fully separate this. I've also tried to do a Bernoulli differential...- Zinggy
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- Calculas Condition Differential Differential eqautions Differential equation Initial Linear algagbra
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Thermodynamics with use of Zusammenstand and probability
Sorry if anything is confusing, I'm not use to posting in this format. Here is the question verbatim My group and I are only assuming you have to use Zusmenmenstand because the lecture notes we have. Unfortunately this is all we're given.- Zinggy
- Post #3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Thermodynamics with use of Zusammenstand and probability
Homework Statement Three-state system. The nucleus of the nitrogen isotope 14N acts, in some ways, like a spinning, oblate sphere of positive charge. The nucleus has a spin of lft and an equatorial bulge; the latter produces an electric quadrupole moment. Consider such a nucleus to be spatially...- Zinggy
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- Probability Quantum machenics Thermodynamics
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Kinematics in Cylindrical Coordinates
This is the diagram that goes with the question. The bead is sliding along the outside of the cylinder. When I'm missing gravity, does it go in the first derivative? The position vector is given without gravity present. Thanks for your time.- Zinggy
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Kinematics in Cylindrical Coordinates
Homework Statement A small bead of mass m slides on a frictionless cylinder of radius R which lies with its cylindrical axis horizontal. At t = 0 , when the bead is at (R,0), vz = 0 and the bead has an initial angular momentum Lo < mR sqrt(Rg) about the axis of the cylinder where g is the...- Zinggy
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- Calculas Coordinate Coordinates Cylindrical Cylindrical coordinates Kinematics
- Replies: 4
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help