| ▲ | Joker_vD 4 days ago | |||||||
> If you didn't have vectors, Maxwell's equations would spill all over the place. What do you mean, "would": they did! :) The original equations had 20 separate equations, although Maxwell himself tried to reformulate them in quaternions. But if you look e.g. at works of Lorentz, or Einstein's famous 1905 paper, you'll see the fully-expanded version of them. The vector form really didn't fully catch until about the middle of the XX century. | ||||||||
| ▲ | lioeters 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
This sounds like an interesting thread to follow. From a cursory search, it seems vector calculus was being used by the early 1900's to reformulate Maxwell's equations, then later with notations like differential, integral, and matrix forms. I'll read more and see if I can understand the gist of each major step of the process over the years, how the notation affected the way mathematicians thought about the equations, and "made them easier to work with". And how Fortran has unique properties that make converting math equations into code "more natural". Intriguing, I'll to dig deeper for intellectual curiosity. | ||||||||
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