Does anyone know how to take the inverse Laplace transform of Y(s)= 4/(s+(3+J6)) + -4/(s+(3-J6))
6/14/2006 5:06:00 PM
I'll get you started...4(s+(3-J6)) - 4(s+(3+J6) The whole thing divided by (s+(3+J6))(s+(3-J6))= -j48/((s+3)^2 + 6^2) Take the Laplace transform of that.[Edited on June 14, 2006 at 6:25 PM. Reason : a]
6/14/2006 6:23:30 PM
hahah.I can tell my job doesn't require any of this stuff. I just called it "lap lace" and was like wtf is that
6/14/2006 11:20:51 PM
grrrrr... electrical engineers and their cursed "J"
6/14/2006 11:47:37 PM
that shit pisses me off to no end
6/15/2006 12:00:49 AM
damn, i just took ma 341 in the spring, but i cant remember a damn thing. i liked it at the time though.
6/15/2006 12:16:42 AM
fucking laplace and his transforms... Him and Fourier too....
6/15/2006 1:53:29 AM
if we used i we'd get it confused with current.
6/15/2006 1:56:10 AM
I'm more of a math person than engineer and I don't see how two lowercase letters can piss so many people off. Next to that, pronouncing Euler (you-ler and oil-er).
6/15/2006 8:04:26 AM
im so used to seeing j, ill often get confused when i see an imaginary i. i have to do fourier and laplace stuff every day. who ever would've thunk that power engineering would require that stuff
6/15/2006 11:59:03 AM
kidding aside, the whole Laplace transform idea is really amazing. How in the world did he think up that stuff. It's really bizarre compared to other math, maybe it's just a French thing...
6/15/2006 12:48:51 PM
Note that traces of mercury in a hair sample from Newton was something like 40x the safe amount. Makes you think, hm?
6/16/2006 1:09:56 AM
ya, maybe the "safe" level of mercury is not correct.
6/16/2006 2:24:19 PM