2nd Law Equation
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2nd Law Equation
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I plan to go back to school next fall, so I have a little ovet fourteen months to master all seven subjects. I won't need two full months for algebra 1; cracking open the first chapter, it's all stuff like "here's what a plus sign means" and "variables look like letters, but they really stand for numbers!"
It won't hurt to brush up on factorization, but I think I can bang this one out in a week or two. All the better, because calculus kicked my ass in high school and it's not gonna be any easier now that I'm my own teacher. I passed it once (by the skin of my teeth), but have forgotten almost everything about it in the last decade, so I'll need the extra time to really get it down pat. I have to be able to derive and integrate in my sleep if I'm to stand half a chance at earning an astrophysics major. Astronomy would be slightly easier, but not by much, so I may as well go for gusto. The very first class astrophysics requires is calc 2, so I can't enroll until I'm 100% sure I know calc 1 forwards and backwards. Physics too, but physics and calc feel like two sides of the same coin, so I'll try to work on them at the same time (again, I managed to pull it off once, I'm sure I can do it again).
Chances are these Dummies books will be insufficient for me to grok all this math in one year, so I'll end up buying more textbooks, workbooks, study guides, SAT and AP prep, etc. I had plenty of cram sessions in my first go around at college, but nothing quite like this. This will be a herculean undertaking compared to the easy-A humanities program I coasted through originally. I had no motivation back then, no drive, no goal for "the real world" upon graduating. I went to college because it was expected of me, and I was told I needed it to get a good job. What I wasn't told is that not all majors are created equal; there's not a lot you can do with an English degree besides, well, teaching English. I just hope 14 months is enough time, because I would really prefer not to take another year off; 2024 is the ten year anniversary of when I started college the first time, so it would mean so much more to me if I started again that August rather than put it off until 2025.
I guess it doesn't matter in the end. If I'm not ready, I'm not ready. I can't force myself to start an extremely advanced program before I've mastered the pre-reqs. If I need to start later, so be it. As long as I'm consistently working towards my goal, it shouldn't matter how long it takes.
Holiday Science Book Recommendations
Looking for science books for the holidays for yourself or others? Here are some that Iāve loved that I donāt see often recommended
Basic Optics and Optical Instruments By Naval Education and Training Program Development Center
Might not look like much but this is perhaps the single best book Iāve ever read about optics. If you have even a passing interest in lasers, rainbows, lens, telescopes (or submarine maintenance) Iād highly recommend giving this book a read. It definitely the best written book Iāve encountered for the topic, significantly better than most textbooks on the topics
A lot of books written by and for the navy are some of the most comprehensive and well-written books on a given topic
Get a copy
The Cartoon Guide to Physics by Larry Gonick and Art Huffman
A book for all ages, I read this book when I was in elementary school and again recently and it remains as charming and informative as ever. Great for children or just anyone more inclined to learn visually
Get a copy
A Man on the Moon by Andrew Chaikin
America has landed on the moon not once, but many times with multiple Apollo Missions. Ever wonder what the astronauts were doing up there?
Get a copy
Have a lovely holiday season! āļø āļø
My physics professor had two volunteers do tug of war with scales to measure force and he's like "Pull harder Tyler!" And Tyler goes "okay" and practically yeets the other volunteer
Book Cracking the AP Physics 1 Exam 2018 pdf Book Cracking the AP Physics 1 Exam 2018 pdf : Pages By staff of The Princeton Review Series: The Princeton Review Publisher: Penguin Random House, Year: 2018 ISBN: 152471061X,9781524710613,1524710644,9781524710644 Search in Amazon.com (The Princeton Review) staff of The Princeton Review ā Cracking the AP Physics 1 Exam-Penguin...
Ah, yes. Chapter one. Where we make sure we understand that things in this world move.
Just some physics notes from the first week of school (Aug 24). Whoops Iām so late at postingš
AP Physics 1 StudentsĀ š„
hello! so i know you probably are studying away right now, or are curled up in a blanket scrolling through the tags and trying to forget about the test, but have i got something for you:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gFfL4Ps3DHtqmvafku_L0xCBv8p9wpGgmkMGCTnzkts/edit?usp=sharing
iām compiling a study guide of definitions, equations, methods, and clarifications for topics on the test.Ā
these are mainly things iām just reinforcing as iām reading through the Crash Course study book. a lot may seem like basic stuff but our teacher taught us jack sh*t on concepts and as if the whole class was a math class (when the guide says this is specifically NOTĀ a math test) so if you too also learned jack sh*t, this might help.
(I am constantly updating bc I got two more sections to read through so stay tuned for Energy and Momentum)