07 NOV 2013 by ideonexus

 Fourier Transformations

So what was Fourier’s discovery, and why is it useful? Imagine playing a note on a piano. When you press the piano key, a hammer strikes a string that vibrates to and fro at a certain fixed rate (440 times a second for the A note). As the string vibrates, the air molecules around it bounce to and fro, creating a wave of jiggling air molecules that we call sound. If you could watch the air carry out this periodic dance, you’d discover a smooth, undulating, endlessly repeating curve that’...
Folksonomies: mathematics
Folksonomies: mathematics
  1  notes

It's like prism that breaks apart the components of a sound wave or image into it's smaller parts.

12 SEP 2011 by ideonexus

 Physics Demonstrates the Principle that Everything has a ...

At first sight nothing seems more obvious than that everything has a beginning and an end, and that everything can be subdivided into smaller parts. Nevertheless, for entirely speculative reasons the philosophers of Antiquity, especially the Stoics, concluded this concept to be quite unnecessary. The prodigious development of physics has now reached the same conclusion as those philosophers, Empedocles and Democritus in particular, who lived around 500 B.C. and for whom even ancient man had a...
Folksonomies: physics philosophy classics
Folksonomies: physics philosophy classics
  1  notes

From the lecture 'Development of the Theory of Electrolytic Dissociation' by Svante Arrhenius.