I just got accepted into Texas A&M university to do Mechanical Engineering. Your channel has made me so excited to learn physics and take supplemental physics courses. Keep it up 👍
It's good to have friends like Papa Flammy, they keep your neurons firing on all cylinders when they put you through the throwback maths ringer with stuff like this. Love to see it.
There’s nothing more I love when I wake up at 6am with a notification, reading the title of the video, looking at the thumbnail and thinking to myself “damn Pewdiepie did a flammable maths meme review”
Papa: "But do you think there's really a correlation between laughing at something and finding it funny?" hahaha this cracked me up more than any other part of the video xD
Hi Andrew, you and Flammable Maths doings here are revolutionary for education. It combines humor with math which in it of itself is uncommon. Maybe cool math games or random math shows have made the same the effect. The effect here is very reachable and funny. Thank you.
Yeah they're just using all kinds of different symbols than x as a joke. Cause technically, you can use 3 as a variable for example. But it's really confusing since you'll keep thinking 3 means the number 3 rather than a variable
e is a constant Using the limit definition of df/dg: df/dg= lim h -> 0 : [f(x+h)-f(x)]/[g(x+h)-g(x)] If g=e, then the denominator is 0 In other words, you are saying that the derivative is just a vertical line at x=e, which is undefined
yes you're right if "e" is a variable, yet if "e" is a constant, the answer is zero, YET the joke is that for engineers / physicists e = 3, so at the end he interpreted it as a constant
How does weather impact radio Wave communications and which other EM light waves can be used for communications in a procces used for precision and environmental protection
Can't imagine why people would run away from Landau and Lifshitz books. They have some really good explanations. The downside is they didn't have practice problems. I actually used them to help prepare for my written qualifiers.
Hi guys, thx for the nice videos. Could you tell what are the tablets/secondary screens you both are writing on ? It seems to be tactile monitors connected to your pc but I can’t see the model or brand. Thx again for your help, cheers from France 👍😉
Andrew like a true Madlad, like me just straight away assumes oh, dcos(theta) yeah i could write that as the differential of cos(theta) while Papa Flammy is giving justification for the arguments Lol, why you(and me, Physics students in general), gotta be like that? LOL.
Hey Andrew, this is unrelated but I’m a freshman in college intending on majoring in physics. It seems like you were familiar with how to do tensor stuff by the end of your undergrad (although I’m not really one to assess familiarity in that given my low level of knowledge). For my school, however, according to the professor of my mechanics class last quarter, tensors will be sparingly encountered and even less often used in the undergraduate physics curriculum. However, he said that a graduate course in general relativity is most certainly going to teach año tensors. I have some questions for you. First, should I self-study tensor analysis during my undergraduate years after having gone through the obvious prerequisites (linear algebra, multivariable and vector calculus), or should I wait to encourager tensors in my classes? Also, if you recommend self-studying tensor analysis, are there any other math concepts or topics that you’d recommend learning before? Cheers to a new year.
Can’t wait for the next new challenge “integrate or disintegrate”
That is the question
@@ericpraline To integrate or to disintegrate, that is the question -- Albert Gandhi Einstein, writer of _The Art of War_ .
dude I love that! "integrate or disintegrate"
what a phrase…. 💐💐💐💐💐, congrats you are hired. by no one. -- 😭♌️ leo knock-out jokes
You know you’re a theoretical physicist when you use Mathematica so much that you forget basic math 😂😂
N[2-1]
Plot twist: They are voluntarily laughing, because they have to finish their homework.
Putting the circles like that on percent? That's fine
The slash however
2nd? I set my alarm and everything 😫. Merry Christmas Andrew & Kelly! Love you guys ~ Mom 💕
Iam fourth 😂 lol ~fan
Happy Christmas mam!!
@@meowwwww6350 - Merry Christmas!!
Happy Christmas Mom 🙏🙏🙏🙏
Merry christmas momma dotson 🎄🎄
15:02 What on earth was that percent sign Dr. Andrew?
i was absolutely triggered by that one
I just got accepted into Texas A&M university to do Mechanical Engineering. Your channel has made me so excited to learn physics and take supplemental physics courses. Keep it up 👍
Best of luck with your degree!
Congrats!
Can anyone tell me difference between engineering physics and applied physics ?
@@darkseid856 one will get you an engineering job, the other won't.
go study composite mechanics, there is the best professor in the world at texas a&m
Papa flammy's German accent +Andrew Dotson's American accent = best combination to hear or listen a lecture
Checking the derivate of h^3 on python was the funniest thing
fr lmfaoo even the little celebration
Merry physmas! May the theorist stockings be stuffed with mathematica activation codes and new knobs or something for the experimentalists out there🎄
Did you get anything cool for Christmas?
@Edwin Thomas e
damn, now I wish I asked Santa for knobs :(
th-cam.com/video/O1puRnV6gwE/w-d-xo.html
Hey andrew you need to listen this with kelly
wat goanga onda?!
papa did you have a stroke halfway through this comment?
@@ammyvl1 I dot is thenk he do too sor evel we
@@ammyvl1 xbfcgvjhbknlmöäkjhzgtrztj
14:58 that is the most horrible % I have seen in my life
“It’s not even close to funny” as he’s laughing his ass off
14:40 the way he did that first percent sign reminds me of how I approach 2021: It's a complete mess and I don't know what I'm doing
6:33 was funnier than all the memes 🤣
9:47 - Are we all just going to ignore that he rounded e to 3 and called it a day????
ikr i thought i was the only one that saw that
Yooo using pascal's triangle at 6:10 for expanding brackets like that is genius! Why have I never seen/thought of that before
It's the binomial theorem
It's good to have friends like Papa Flammy, they keep your neurons firing on all cylinders when they put you through the throwback maths ringer with stuff like this. Love to see it.
You put your circles on your percent THAT way?!
It’s the imperial percent sign
After the seeing the percentage sign of andrew i forgot how to write it normally 😂😂😂
he is called meme men and he has feelings, not just "mEmEHeAd"
I laughed
I can't do differentiation
*Loophole*
14:59 Hahahahaha I laughed so hard when I saw that percent sign on the denominator WTF
IKR
Better than all the memes combined
There’s nothing more I love when I wake up at 6am with a notification, reading the title of the video, looking at the thumbnail and thinking to myself “damn Pewdiepie did a flammable maths meme review”
Very cool as always man! Hope you all have a great and Happy Holidays!
Papa: "But do you think there's really a correlation between laughing at something and finding it funny?" hahaha this cracked me up more than any other part of the video xD
I laughed my ass off of 6:32
I can't! 😂
9:43 is Andrew still wrong? If so then lol
p.s: also love the "sPeCiAl" % sign he used
Wouldn’t it be x*e^(x-1) by his notation? 🤔
@@Loathe_As_One yeah, that's what I think
@@Loathe_As_One Yeah... Andrew did some illegal stuff
Happy Christmas! I really enjoyed this series :) I also got Griffiths E&M today, which is exciting.
Hahaha....I literally have forgotten how to do inductive proofs and the fucking notation that papaflammy uses gives me PTSD Merry Christmas Andrew.
My pain when Andrew draws the % sign backwards
5:25
- How do you come up with these, that sounds so horrible?
- I have no idea, took me haitches!
7:05 is when you're making absolutely sure you get all the method marks
andrew's % sign means 100, instead of 1/100
18:51 best bromance in stem community
Hi Andrew, you and Flammable Maths doings here are revolutionary for education. It combines humor with math which in it of itself is uncommon. Maybe cool math games or random math shows have made the same the effect. The effect here is very reachable and funny. Thank you.
Sitting here alone on Christmas morning watching people differentiate. Beautiful
gg xD
10:01 ah yes, by the fundamental theorem of engineering, e=3
You make the best videos my dude
if the other guy doesnt have the germanest german accent to ever exist, im killing myself
I thought he's French
I hope to see more future collaborations
12:47 This meme made me literally die of laughter!
Would have loved to see zach in these challenges the engineer mindset is superior
Hey, would you share what is the digital notebook / tablet / whatever that thing is that you use???? 😎😁
3 uploads in two weeks? It’s a Christmas miracle
Radio Wave Differentiation and reciever Security
8:52 The realisation xD
Well it has been a truly "fugacity" year 2020!!!
the h stuff in the limit defination was lmao
Live measurements of weather electrical storms versus comms electrical behavior. . .
I’m in Calc AB in high school and I was expecting like d/dx but I have no clue what’s going on lmao
Yeah they're just using all kinds of different symbols than x as a joke. Cause technically, you can use 3 as a variable for example. But it's really confusing since you'll keep thinking 3 means the number 3 rather than a variable
Physicists who can solve wave functions of hypothetical particles in a jiffy need Mathematica to differentiate a polynomial. Pain.
I can't believe i fell asleep to this video, my life is so terrible.
I forgot how to draw percentage signs while watching
yo you should do 'you laugh you laplace transform' next
Isn't d/de of e^x equal to x e^(x-1) or is it a joke that I just ruined...
you were supposed to forget the basics of calculus :(
That upset me more than the usage of "e" as a variable
e is a constant
Using the limit definition of df/dg:
df/dg= lim h -> 0 : [f(x+h)-f(x)]/[g(x+h)-g(x)]
If g=e, then the denominator is 0
In other words, you are saying that the derivative is just a vertical line at x=e, which is undefined
@@michaellin4553 that why e here is not a constant but variable, thus Ian is right
yes you're right if "e" is a variable, yet if "e" is a constant, the answer is zero, YET the joke is that for engineers / physicists e = 3, so at the end he interpreted it as a constant
I like how Andrew keeps taking the shorter route to emphasize that he's the Physicist in the discussion.. well done haha
The Landau Classical Mechanics book is like the one you take if you are into theoretical Physics.
How does weather impact radio Wave communications and which other EM light waves can be used for communications in a procces used for precision and environmental protection
Can't imagine why people would run away from Landau and Lifshitz books. They have some really good explanations. The downside is they didn't have practice problems.
I actually used them to help prepare for my written qualifiers.
I don't think Andrew has ever seen a percent sign before, wrote it wrong 50 times in a row
14:57 Andrew what the hell is that, it's worse than the differential itself
What kind of touch screens are those? Im looking for a better way to take notes outside of paper.
6:35 lmao I love that
Santa clutched up this year
Next up is if you laugh, you solve an unsolved hypothesis
I bet these guys did all the homework weeks in advance.
fugacity...which replaces the mechanical partial pressure in an accurate computatio...oh shit we've been lied to!
14:58 Andrew is making it hard for himself with the mirror writing
there were infact 100 of the operators the wave function
lol Andrew used his computer to check whether he gets d h^3/dh correct and seems pretty excited after doing so
Next challenge: You laugh you factorize numerically
me who understood nothing but still watched the whole video.
What is the tablet you are using. Also what software. I'm sick of using my whiteboard because its unoptimally placed in my room.
He really said check out his tinder account.🤣
What screen do you use for notations?
Landau Lifshitz Mechanics book starts with least action principle. Top down v.s. bottom up principle, that was the point of the meme.
What is this screen you are both using to write on??
Merry Christmas and Newtonian day
9:55 it's actually xe^(x-1) lol
9:47 was't the substitution y=e and not x=e ?:D x_X
Oh god. What am I getting myself into by studying this.
This videos are great . merry christmas .
Limit look like a line yup he is mathematics student
I had to look up the percent sign again after watching the video.
I don’t know what you’re talking about, I’m just here for the memes
Hi guys, thx for the nice videos. Could you tell what are the tablets/secondary screens you both are writing on ? It seems to be tactile monitors connected to your pc but I can’t see the model or brand. Thx again for your help, cheers from France 👍😉
did anyone else just see the h^3 as a simple differential like d/dx x^3 = 3x^2? Still loved it haha
Ur percent slash is disturbing
Hope ur okay 😂😂
You put your percents on your circles that way!?
Dude I just got an A in Diff EQ and honestly I barely have a clue what’s going on.
At 9:44 you first replaced e with y, but then while substituting again you replaced x with e
Shouldn't the answer be xe^(x-1) instead of ey^e ??
Im laughing at Andrew struggling when i dont even know whats going on thats so lame from me 😂
I was about to comment about how the e^x differential was wrong but then I remembered I'd forgotten the basics of calculus
Proof by congestion: I have the proof but it won't fit in the margin
Andrew like a true Madlad, like me just straight away assumes oh, dcos(theta) yeah i could write that as the differential of cos(theta) while Papa Flammy is giving justification for the arguments Lol, why you(and me, Physics students in general), gotta be like that? LOL.
3:37 wut r u saying ?
Didn't quite catch that symbol
Your writing = language of God dude
6:37 so you can't calculate a derivative of h^3 with respect to h heh
Can we get the file? I wanna practice so I can go on duels against that one dude in my neighborhood and I wanna beat him.
Hey Andrew, this is unrelated but I’m a freshman in college intending on majoring in physics. It seems like you were familiar with how to do tensor stuff by the end of your undergrad (although I’m not really one to assess familiarity in that given my low level of knowledge).
For my school, however, according to the professor of my mechanics class last quarter, tensors will be sparingly encountered and even less often used in the undergraduate physics curriculum. However, he said that a graduate course in general relativity is most certainly going to teach año tensors. I have some questions for you. First, should I self-study tensor analysis during my undergraduate years after having gone through the obvious prerequisites (linear algebra, multivariable and vector calculus), or should I wait to encourager tensors in my classes? Also, if you recommend self-studying tensor analysis, are there any other math concepts or topics that you’d recommend learning before?
Cheers to a new year.