- #1
aychamo
- 375
- 0
Hey guys
I don't understand how physicists arrive at equations that describe things.
Even Newton's equations, which look very simple, I don't see how he came up with them.
I can't imagine dropping a ball, observing it and then making a formula. I assume that took a lot of measurements, etc, and I know the units probably helped. When I am working physics problems and forget my equations I can write a unit style equation and help me remember it, but he had to damn invent the units too (ie, force.)
And those were so simple. I saw some program on Discovery channel and this physics guy was looking through an old math book and saw a formula and he realized that forumla perfectly described whatever he was looking to describe. How in the hell? :)
An enamored biologist,
Aychamo
I don't understand how physicists arrive at equations that describe things.
Even Newton's equations, which look very simple, I don't see how he came up with them.
I can't imagine dropping a ball, observing it and then making a formula. I assume that took a lot of measurements, etc, and I know the units probably helped. When I am working physics problems and forget my equations I can write a unit style equation and help me remember it, but he had to damn invent the units too (ie, force.)
And those were so simple. I saw some program on Discovery channel and this physics guy was looking through an old math book and saw a formula and he realized that forumla perfectly described whatever he was looking to describe. How in the hell? :)
An enamored biologist,
Aychamo