+++ TO MOBILE USERS +++ If some equations and/or explanations look weird on your end, turn mobile mode on. (tap the yellow button at the bottom) +++ CONTROLS +++ • Click/tap the L/R arrows to go to the next/previous equations. (or use the L/R arrow keys if you have a keyboard) • Hover over the blue info icon to view the equation description. • Click/tap the Stage to show/hide the interface. • Click/tap the purple button to jump to another equation. • Click/tap the orange button to jump to a random equation. • Hover over the square icon in the upper-left, below the date, to show the field in which this equation appears! • Click/tap the light bulb button to turn dark mode on/off. • Click/tap the sound button to mute/unmute the sound. • Click/tap the mobile button to turn mobile mode on/off.
Many people do stuff like 'question of the day', or 'quote of the day', or whatever. But as an enthusiast for mathematics, I decided to do something more suited to my liking — an 'equation of the day', where I show you equations I've learned from various fields of math and science... This project contains mathematical and physical equations that I have studied at high school, YouTube videos, and a few other online sources. Equations come in all shapes and sizes. They could the Pythagorean Theorem, the volume of a sphere, or maybe Newton's law of universal gravitation! For millennia, equations have helped scientists, engineers, mechanics, all those geniuses out there to shape our understanding of the universe. It is thanks to them that you are able to view this project on an electronic device. And that's beautiful, in my opinion. We should admire equations for what they are. Not to mention they helped me achieve my A's. How many of these are you familiar with? Share your thoughts in the comments! :D Music: John Boswell (melodysheep) – "Symphony of Science: We Are Star Dust" (instrumental) Original share date: May 10, 2020 #math #mathematics