I was scrolling through Twitter over the weekend and saw this pic:
Yes! It took me a while to decrypt this (then I had to
resort to google) but this is the mathematical expression of a Jerk.
No, not that kind of a jerk, not the kind the witty
Twitter user was referencing. This kind of a jerk is what you’d experience if
you were speeding up the highway and suddenly a force, say a huge gust of wind,
pushes your vehicle quickly and unexpectedly to one side.
Now, “speed” here is a relative term. In physics, it’s
called “velocity” because direction is generally though not necessarily indicated.
Velocity is distance per time. It can be expressed in an equation relating
these two variable. Throw some Calculus 101 in the mix, and you can obtain
what’s called the second derivate of this equation. Since velocity is the
change in distance over time, the second derivative represents the change in
velocity over time. It’s called acceleration. Now, the third derivative (if you
apply the derivative-obtaining technique to the second derivative) represents
the change in acceleration over time. This is called “jerk.”
Like the beard-second, like the jiffy, math and physics has some interesting and humorous * terms. I had known about jerk from my calculus classes back in the early 90s, but had forgotten. However, I have never heard the technical terms “snap,” “crackle”, and “pop” in mathematics. Now I have and now you, if you have followed me up to this point, have also.
For the layman,
Acceleration is
the change in velocity over time
Jerk is the change in acceleration
over time
Snap is the change in jerk
over time
Crackle is the change in snap
over time
and
Pop is the change in crackle
over time
And this is the Euler’s-honest truth!
Edit: After writing and publishing this, I see that I
had done a similar blog post on it, here, on January 14, 2011, over thirteen
years ago! It’s a great exhibit about the fickleness of memory. If you have a
mathematical bent, I’d recommend reading that short post, ’cuz I particularly
like the analogy used way back then.
No comments:
Post a Comment